The Butler Twins - Not Gonna Worry About Tomorrow (1995)
BAND/ARTIST: The Butler Twins
- Title: Not Gonna Worry About Tomorrow
- Year Of Release: 1995
- Label: JSP Records
- Genre: Blues, Modern Electric Blues, Detroit Blues
- Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
- Total Time: 01:11:30
- Total Size: 175/435 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. I Finally Found Me A Girl
02. My Baby's Coming Home
03. Not Gonna Worry About Tomorrow
04. I Know You Don't Love Me Baby
05. 1-900
06. You Don't Need Me
07. Going Down A Long Country Road
08. Crack House Baby
09. That Old Devil (Crossroads)
10. Bring It On Back To Me
11. Travellin' Down South
Clarence BUTLER - Harmonica, Vocals
Curtis BUTLER - Rhythm Guitar
Kenny Parker - Lead Guitar
Jeff Grand - Additional Guitar
Eddie Harsch - Keyboards
Buster Wylie Tatterson - Bass
Martin Gross - Drums
Clarence and Curtis Butler are two longtime beacons on the Detroit-area blues scene, and with two recently recorded albums for the London-based JSP Records, they may finally begin to garner a wider following outside of Detroit. The brothers' albums for JSP include Pursue Your Dreams (1996) and Not Gonna Worry About Tomorrow (1995).
Guitarist Clarence and harmonica player Curtis Butler grew up near W.C. Handy's birthplace of Florence, Alabama, about 30 miles from the Mississippi Delta. They took their earliest musical cues from their father, guitarist Willie "Butch" Butler, who was famous in the region but never recorded.
The twins moved to Detroit in the 1960 and quickly found work in Motor City auto plants. The club scene at the time was booming, with the music of John Lee Hooker, Little Sonny, Bo Collins, Bobo Jenkins and dozens of others spilling out of the city's juke joints. The twins continued working and sitting in as much as they could, but by the late 1960s, the blues scene in Detroit had dried up. Civil unrest and the rise of the Motown sound didn't leave much room for a flourishing blues scene, but by the early 1980s, when the blues began a resurgence again nationally, the Butler Twins were still on the scene. More importantly, they were celebrated as survivors and veterans.
The twins' two JSP releases may allow them to tour more extensively in the U.S., Canada and Europe.
Guitarist Clarence and harmonica player Curtis Butler grew up near W.C. Handy's birthplace of Florence, Alabama, about 30 miles from the Mississippi Delta. They took their earliest musical cues from their father, guitarist Willie "Butch" Butler, who was famous in the region but never recorded.
The twins moved to Detroit in the 1960 and quickly found work in Motor City auto plants. The club scene at the time was booming, with the music of John Lee Hooker, Little Sonny, Bo Collins, Bobo Jenkins and dozens of others spilling out of the city's juke joints. The twins continued working and sitting in as much as they could, but by the late 1960s, the blues scene in Detroit had dried up. Civil unrest and the rise of the Motown sound didn't leave much room for a flourishing blues scene, but by the early 1980s, when the blues began a resurgence again nationally, the Butler Twins were still on the scene. More importantly, they were celebrated as survivors and veterans.
The twins' two JSP releases may allow them to tour more extensively in the U.S., Canada and Europe.
Blues | Rock | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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