Doug MacLeod - Come to Find (2024)
BAND/ARTIST: Doug MacLeod
- Title: Come to Find
- Year Of Release: 1994 / 2024
- Label: Sledgehammer Blues
- Genre: Blues
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 52:25
- Total Size: 267 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Bring it On Home (06:35)
2. Since I Left St. Louis (03:37)
3. Mystery Woman (05:01)
4. Come to Find (04:13)
5. Old Virginia Stomp (01:59)
6. Masters Plan (03:49)
7. Ain't No Grave (04:15)
8. Run With the Devil (05:21)
9. Lost Something This Morning (06:17)
10. Rollin' & Tumblin' (03:09)
11. Any Port in a Storm (04:40)
12. When I Left Missouri (03:24)
Personnel:
Doug MacLeod - Guitar and Vocals
Charlie Musselwhite - Harmonica
Bill Stuve - Acoustic Bass
Jimi Bott - Drums
Black Cherry - Back Up Vocals
1. Bring it On Home (06:35)
2. Since I Left St. Louis (03:37)
3. Mystery Woman (05:01)
4. Come to Find (04:13)
5. Old Virginia Stomp (01:59)
6. Masters Plan (03:49)
7. Ain't No Grave (04:15)
8. Run With the Devil (05:21)
9. Lost Something This Morning (06:17)
10. Rollin' & Tumblin' (03:09)
11. Any Port in a Storm (04:40)
12. When I Left Missouri (03:24)
Personnel:
Doug MacLeod - Guitar and Vocals
Charlie Musselwhite - Harmonica
Bill Stuve - Acoustic Bass
Jimi Bott - Drums
Black Cherry - Back Up Vocals
The sparseness of the arrangements make this album admirable and draw even more attention to the music both overall and in its subtleties. It showcases brilliantly Bill Stuve's upright bass work, and for Jimi Bott, how unusually placed but effective drumbeats prove him a blues drummer deserving greater recognition. "Since I Left St. Louis" has MacLeod reflecting on his early adult years of fast life, women, and drinking, and the lessons painfully learned from those experiences. The title track is a realization that making the most out of life is better than a life of abuse, whether it be child abuse, substance abuse, or any other kind. Always a master on the harmonica, Charlie Musselwhite blows on Willie Dixon's "Bring It On Home" and the MacLeod-penned "Lost Something This Morning." A great example of Piedmont-style blues is illustrated in "Old Virginia Stomp," dedicated to mentor Ernest Banks. Backup singers Black Cherry round the album out with the uplifting gospel feel of "Ain't No Grave," which tells of the triumph of the afterlife over death. © Char Ham
Year 2024 | Blues | FLAC / APE
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads