Blues Under the Bridge Festival, Colorado Springs, CO 7/20/13

Justus League, DB Reilly, the Slide Brothers, and Blues Caravan– Blues Under the Bridge Festival

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That’s no backdrop behind the Justus League, but a line of boxcars moving north within spittin’ distance of the drum kit!

” I hear that train a-comin’, it’s rollin’ round the bend …” – Johnny Cash, ” Folsom Prison Blues”

While DB Reilly sang those words, a conductor hit ” that lonesome whistle”  in recognition of the Blues Under The Bridge crowd, as the line of boxcars passed by the makeshift flatbed trailer stage under the Colorado Avenue bridge, marking the return of the summer’s finest moment in the Springs. Throughout the day at this fest,  a band blithely plays on while a freight train passes just behind the stage, as if the drummer or a guitar tech might hop on board like the wayward kid in Merle Haggard’s ” Mama Tried”, and roll on to some place unknown. No doubt many stuck in Colorado Springs’ tarpit of evangelical organizations and Paleolithic politicians have entertained similar thoughts! But every summer Blues Under the Bridge brings a cultural oasis to this barren desert, and once again, the festival team and promoter Amy Whitesell of A Music Company had assembled a terrific lineup of up-and-coming acts and deserving veterans of the blues scene at this smooth-running, hardly-known-outta-town event.

The Justus League is a mash-up of local Colorado Springs musicians infused in blues/rock. Despite an all-star lineup including Austin Johnson on guitar, Sean Pyrtle on bass, and Matthew Taylor on keys, they are virtually unknown to the public save their fine guitarist, Jake Loggins,  a perennial winner of local blues awards. The guys tackled the opening slot with enthusiasm, leaving many patrons nodding in approval as they roared through their set. I notice that Jake still has shows booked for his eponymous band, so this assemblage may be a side project for all, but it shows promise, particularly Loggins and drummer/vocalist Dean Woodward. Locals can catch their CD release party at Stargazer’s on August 23.

DB Reilly shakes a tail feather while squeezing the box!

DB Reilly shakes a tail feather while squeezing the box!

The versatile DB Reilly and his talented band play a blend of country, blues, Cajun, and even Zydeco, ” underwhelming audiences across the country “, as the self-deprecating Reilly cracked onstage. The amiable Reilly kept up a stream of humor throughout the set–” I just heard from Billboard..my CD went plywood “– ” we were named Indy Band of the Year in New York City… by my mother and her friends… they were high at the time ” — and breezed through a set of clever originals and timeless covers like the aforementioned ” Folsom Prison Blues”.

Setting up for the Slide Brothers

Setting up for the Slide Brothers!

When you are promoted as Robert Randolph’s favorite band, there’s gonna be some pedal steel involved, and I don’t mean some drippy cornpone country tearjerker, but jumpin’ gospel-based ” shoutin’ “, as Calvin Cooke of the Slide Brothers described his introduction to the Sacred Steel tradition in the Church of the Living God. Calvin and Aubrey Ghent whipped the crowd into a dancing frenzy in front of the stage time and again with foot-stompin’ rock that had one foot in the sanctuary and the other in the juke joint. Their twin-pedal steel attack moved smoothly from slow gospel to Elmore James’ blues and the Allmans’ rock, with Cooke’s handling of Gregg’s vocal on ” Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’ ” a highlight of the set.

Aubrey Ghent and Calvin Cooke: two pedals or a life of crime!

Aubrey Ghent and Calvin Cooke: two pedals or a life of crime!

The engaging Cooke kept the crowd involved with tales of church services and good times past, and seemed thrilled with the gig: ” I’ve never been up under the Bridge before. I didn’t know the hobos had it so good!”

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Blues Caravan’s Bart Walker shreds through his set Under the Bridge!

The Blues Caravan 2013 brings together outstanding musicians  showcasing their own material in mini-sets while backed by their mates. This year, guitarists Joann Shaw Taylor and Bart Walker are joined by guitarist/bassist CJ Wilder and hard-working drummer Austin Curcuruto. The full band opened with John Fogerty’s ” Proud Mary”, with Taylor, Walker, and Wilder trading verses and sharing choruses. To the crowd’s apparent dismay, Taylor stepped offstage, prompting cries of ” Bring back that woman” and ” Where’s Joann?” from the heretofore compliant VIP section, prompting Walker to explain the format and promise that Joann would return. Walker switched to bass for a fine set of originals by Wilder, who is a pleasant singer and competent guitarist in his own right. The return of Bart Walker to guitar kicked the tempo and volume considerably, as he amazed the crowd with blistering runs and tasty licks, eerily resembling the burly Warren Haynes with the current Allmans lineup.  His originals ” Took It Like A Man ” and ” Waitin’ On Daylight ” were well-received, and anybody hollerin’ for Joann at that point was truly missing out.

Joanne Shaw Taylor rockin' the Gibson Les Paul!

Joanne Shaw Taylor rockin’ the Gibson Les Paul!

I’d seen Joanne Shaw Taylor and her band twice at Springing The Blues in Jax Beach, where she rocked out the electric blues that went worldwide from England in the late 60s with John Mayall, the Yardbirds, and early Zep, tearing into war horses like ” Killing Floor ” with great enthusiasm and plenty of chops. Seeing her share the stage in the Blues Caravan, you wonder how long Girls With Guitars like Joanne Shaw Taylor, Samantha Fish, Ana Popovic, and ( no relation) Cassie Taylor will have to wait to headline fests like this? Hopefully not until they’re John Hammond’s age! Shaw returned to the stage, tag-teaming Bart Walker like they were in the WWF, and wowed the fans with her striking looks, roaring guitar, and rockstar moves. In contrast to Walker, she eschewed intricate solos for power chords and tornado-level blasts that truly ” sounded like a train ” , as Patterson Hood says, and left the crowd stunned but roaring in her wake. Her vocals are mostly shouted, and the lyrics are barely intelligible below the guitar din, but as Muddy Waters told Mick Jagger of the blues, ” the words don’t matter”. By the time Bart Walker returned, the crowd was nearly spent, though the full-band finale of Stevie Ray Vaughan’s  ” If the House Is Rockin’, Don’t Bother Knockin’ ” brought the fans to their feet and the dancers down to the front.

With my pockets emptied by the great vendors– chickpea frittata from locals!– and no freight train to hop back to the unit, I bade farewell to the fest, passing on headliners John Hammond and Watermelon Slim for another time. To paraphrase W.C. Fields, my tombstone won’t read, ” I’d rather be in Colorado Springs”, but for one day a year, the Blues make it bearable.

Your erstwhile Mountain correspondent, Nanker Phledge

Cassie Taylor

Cassie Taylor unplugged at the Yukon 8/18/12

CONCERT REVIEW- Cassie Taylor at Yukon Rock and Roll Bar, Colorado Springs, CO 8/18/12

We interrupt our planned review of Joe Walsh’s Hudson Garden show to send Mr. Phledge’s dispatch from the front lines:

The little city of Colorado Springs is not known for tolerance, diversity, or any noticeable support of the arts. The Springs is the national headquarters for Focus on Family and over one hundred other right-wing evangelical groups, as well as the home of the Air Force Academy and the Army’s Fort Carson, neither of which has distinguished itself with any leadership on civil rights issues. Few national bands bother to book shows in the city, other than acts that play well to a rodeo crowd or a convention of holy rollers. A telling sign is a search of city bookings on pollstar.com. The search between now and April, 2013 is only two pages long; a similar search of Denver occupies 18 pages. The biggest “rock” act booked in the Springs in that time is Jackson Browne; nice, but not a rocker, and not even a bit edgy. The city has no memorable museums, galleries, or even a hip neighborhood to speak of. But it continually foists pulpit-pounding reactionaries like Ted Haggard upon the rest of the country, at least until their foibles become public. Meth and prostitutes, anyone? Is that you, Rev?

So it was with some surprise that I read the email from local blues promoter Amy Whitesell announcing that rising blues/rock singer and composer Cassie Taylor would be playing a Springs date on Saturday night. The daughter of noted Chicago bluesman Otis Taylor, Cassie gained some notoriety with her role in the “Girls With Guitars” project and CD, along with distaff rockers Samantha Fish and Dani Wilde, and is now based in Boulder, CO, a city ruled by intellectuals, hippies, and artists. Cassie probably felt like a newly arrived Martian, with her Noel Redding in 1967 hairdo, self-designed ( she has her own line of clothing) cloaked miniskirt stage attire, and take-no-prisoners attitude, as she boldly strode to the Yukon’s stage in the shadow of Peterson Air Force base and the front range of the Rockies. The venue itself might be daunting to some; walls adorned with encased Stratocasters and Flying Vs purportedly played by bands like Poison and Motley Crue, as if the Yukon were a time warped exhibit curated by the Hair Band Hall of Fame, probably located in Fort Lauderdale. Who knew that Whitesnake was still huge?

Flashing charm, defiance, and stage presence beyond her years, Cassie did several originals accompanying herself on electric piano and organ, two with only her Fender bass, then added her guitarist and drummer for the “party” portion of the set.On blues-based rockers and jazz-tinged ballads, she displayed a smooth, pliable voice that varied tone and volume easily, and she played keyboards and bass with equal aplomb.

It takes no small measure of confidence and hutzpah to play unknown original blues/rock  tunes to a skeptical crowd in a redneck town, and thankfully, this girl has no shortage of either.  Cassie quickly won over the crowd, even pulling off a re-configuration of the seating — ” there’s too much space up here, bring your chairs down front”- and the attendant audience participation that can often fall flat on its face. I ordinarily can’t stand that sort of thing at shows, and often resist on principle. Hey, I bought a ticket, drove down here, tolerated some kid who can’t grow a mustache asking me for i.d. to get a beer, and waited for you to tune up. Don’t tell me when to clap, sing along or stand up. If you can move me to do those things without prompting, great. But this isn’t Romper Room, you’re not Mister Rogers,  and I don’t need you telling me what to do at the rock show!

(Memo to Phledge’s physician- might want to titrate the dosages- Editors.)

Cassie’s winning performance in this town and venue was quite impressive. Her originals shone brightly, and appeared to be lyrically worthy of further contemplation. The stripped-down, “Unplugged”-like set break seated amongst the fans was wildly received, including her take on Hendrix’ version of Billy Roberts’  “Hey Joe” and a blistering solo by her guitarist Steve LNU, not otherwise identified and not the guitarist named on her web site. Not surprising, perhaps; she doesn’t appear to suffer fools gladly and probably goes through sidemen like most women go through shoes.  On break, Cassie breezily greeted fans and hawked wares – “we’ve got the cheapest merch around”- and appeared genuinely surprised at the positive response. The second set was delayed by the action at the merch table, and Cassie remarked that she had never sold so many CDs at a show-         ” thank you, Colorado Springs!”- a tribute to her committed performance and the stacked-house of blues fans guided to the Yukon by Amy’s tireless campaigning for blues artists. A memorable night of unexpected musical bliss in the cultural hinterland!

Due to Mr. Phledge’s walkaway, err, unauthorized furlough on Saturday evening – yes, Nanker, those photos on Cassie’s web site were pretty hot – facility rules did not permit him to attend the Joe Walsh show on Sunday. We are currently searching post-concert arrest records and ER admissions to find a suitable replacement correspondent for that review.- Editors