Melody Ballroom, 615 SE Alder St., Portland

Wednesday, October 1st, 7:00 pm

Members always Free – Non-members $3.00

Opening Acoustic Set – Tess & Patrik Barr

Second Electric Set – Lisa Mann & Her Really Good Band

 

You’re definitely going to want to attend the October General Membership Meeting for the Cascade Blues Association as we present performances from two of the region’s premier blues women in what is sure to be one smokin’ night of great music.

Opening the night, heading into town for this meeting from the Columbia River Gorge will be the duet of Tess & Patrik Barr. This is a very rare performance as they usually do not play in a duo format.

Tess and Patrik Barr - press photoTess is a vocalist, songwriter and guitar player who has been singing her entire life, who went through phases of country and rock music before discovering the blues in the 70s. Influenced by the likes of Koko Taylor, Katie Webster, Janis Joplin, Elmore James, Junior Wells and Hound Dog Taylor in her writing and singing style, she has recently been creating her own original material, many of which can be found on her outstanding release from earlier this year, Do What You Want.

Joining Tess for this set will be her husband Patrik, best known for his electric slide work, he also plays harmonica, banjo and fiddle along with guitar. A one-time member of the Seattle old time music scene, he has also spent time in Ireland where he took up playing Irish music. He has been playing with Tess’ bands now for the past twenty years as well as co-writing much of her material.

Aside from playing the blues, Tess & Patrik also own and operate Hood Crest Winery and have been working on a follow-up recording to Do What You Want, titled Trouble’s Comin’.

For the second set of the night, we will feature one of the most popular acts in the Portland area, Lisa Mann & Her Really Good Band. A multiple

Lisa Mann

Lisa Mann

recipient of the Muddy Awards, including Hall of Fame status as bassist, Lisa is also a nominee in this year’s Blues Blast Awards for the Sean Costello Rising Artist Award. The band has been busy this last summer working the release of the latest recording Move On, taking Lisa all the way to New England and the Big Blues Bender in Las Vegas.

The Really Good Band will feature a slightly different line-up for the meeting as regular drummer Michael Ballash works during the week teaching and Brian Harris will be on tour with Curtis Salgado, so the ever reliable Dave Melyan will be handling the drum position alongside the extraordinary guitar skills of Jeff Knudson. Though not known for certain at press time, Patrick McDougall may be joining the band for the night on keyboards.

And as always, make certain to pick up your free ticket at the door for a chance to win CDs, concert tickets and other prizes. There will also be a winner take all raffle for a $1.00 per ticket chance to win a multi-CD package put together just for the meeting.

Hope to see you all there for another night of good friends and great blues.

 

 

It’s a couple months away, but we want to give ample notice that deadlines for our November issue will be a week early. Instead of the normal, 15th of the month, the deadline will be Wednesday, October 8th. Thank you in advance for your help in getting your items in early. For calendar submissions, CascadeBluesCalendar@gmail.com and for all other CBA and BluesNotes business,CascadeBluesStaff@gmail.com. Thank you for your continued support.

CBA SALE 2014The Cascade Blues Association Rummage Sale returns this September on Saturday 6th, 9:00 am – 4:00 pm, once again being held at The Bomber Restaurant, 13515 SE McLoughlin Blvd. in Milwaukee. There is great food at The Bomber, so grab some breakfast or lunch while at the sale. And we’ll have live music happening throughout the day, too (bands TBA).

Last year Thanks to You, the annual CBA Rummage sale made over $2,000!  This year will be bigger and better.  There are three ways you can help again!

  1. Clean out your garage, your closets and your neighbor’s closets!….make sure they are home.  This is a great way to organize your home while giving back to your CBA.  Save your items at home and bring to the sale before 9:00 am on September 6th.  Smaller non furniture items can be brought to the September CBA general meeting.
  2. Help at the sale.  People needed to help unload items from a truck in the morning and load a charity truck after the sale.  Also, people to help during the day where needed.
  3. Spread the word!!!

This is a fun event where you get a chance to listen to some live music, browse some great deals, meet some new blues fans AND help make a difference!

Have you ever thought about getting more involved? Well now is the time!!  You can choose to be a part of the CBA Board or a volunteer – whatever you choose – we welcome (and need) your help.

We have open At-Large Board positions available for those who would like to get in behind the scenes and make our events happen.  Just think – you can take part in shaping and influencing this great organization.  You can help us keep it running on a monthly basis. We really do rely on you – our members – to continue to make the CBA better and better.

Yes, it’s fun and games – because if it isn’t fun – why do it!  But don’t be fooled – we do work! Board members attend the monthly board meetings where we discuss budget, membership, merchandise, sponsorships and events.  We do ask that each board member take a turn at the merchandise booth at our monthly membership meetings at least once a year and help out at various events – but actually – that’s the fun part!

Do you have a special skill or talent – like managing databases or financial statements?  Running the CBA takes skill (we are a non-profit business) sometimes above and beyond just loving the promotion of blues.  We have a need for help in a variety of areas and I bet there’s something here for you!!  Officer positions naturally take more time – when considering running for either the Membership Secretary or Treasurer positions, we require that you have sufficient background to fill the needs of the Cascade Blues Association. The Membership Secretary maintains the membership information, renewals and address changes that require the ability to keep up an ever-changing spread-sheet and a knowledge of mailing is also preferred. The Treasurer must be able to balance the CBA’s bank accounts, pay due bills on time and keep funds at the Post Office readily available for BluesNotes mailings. The Treasurer is also responsible for maintaining all business filings for annual taxes. These are the two positions that require the most knowledge to keep up, so consider the expectations if you select to run for these officer spots.

Do you just want to be a volunteer with no board commitment – well guess what – we have things you can do! Some options are maintaining merchandise, working with a volunteer list, BluesNotes distribution, writing for the BluesNotes. These functions do not have to be handled by board members. If this interests you please let someone on the current board know!

Every year we put out a request for members to get involved. This year is no different other than we really REALLY do need your help.  Please consider this great opportunity and if your schedule and interests allow – then come join us!  Get involved.

You are welcome to attend one of our monthly Board meetings at 2020 SE 7th (about four blocks south of the old Duff’s Garage), the third Tuesday following the monthly General Membership Meeting.

By John Rumler

Ringo Starr got it right when he said, “You know, it don’t come easy…”

One of Portland’s more durable and versatile blues-roots bands, The Reverb Brothers, is celebrating their 10th anniversary, and nothing came easy for them either. With all members born in the 1950s, The Reverbs have been around the block in music as well as in life. Most of them have been in and out of different bands for several decades.

“They’ve been through a lot, had a number of personnel changes, but they’ve had a solid core for a while now,” said Emory Wilson, a Portland area bass player who recently performed with The Reverbs.  “I love playing with them. They know each other very well, they’re loose and fun and they are firing on all cylinders.”

Holding a band together isn’t easy. Different personalities and musical styles and the day-to-day demands of work, family, bills, and the additional time needed for practicing can grate on the nerves. This, combined with the roller-coaster of touring and performing live—along with the jostling and sometimes colliding egos has tolled the death knell for many a good band.

For the survivors, such as The Reverb Brothers, who avoid crashing on the shoals of ego, discontent, and burnout, the bonds often become close.

“We’ve had healthy differences of opinion, sure, but not a single big argument or blow up since we started,” said Doug Marx, 64, co-founder and rhythm guitarist.  “In many ways we really are like a family, one that respects and cares about each other.”

The other co-founder and the leader of The Reverb Brothers, Claes Almroth, 59, grew up in the Bay area. His mom played piano dabbling in boogie woogie and he avidly listened to everything from Slim Harpo and Johnny Cash, to Buck Owens, Marvin Gaye and the Rolling Stones. He began piano lessons at 12 and picked up his first harmonica a few years later. At the age of 13, Almroth visited the Jazz Preservation Hall in New Orleans seeing some of the original creators of jazz. “It changed my life. These guys were all born in the 19th century and were in their 70s, but they rocked the house like you couldn’t imagine.”

Almroth’s musical landscape was expansive and colorful early on. Thanks to Bill Graham, who booked such diverse artists such as Moby Grape, Ravi Shankar, and Albert King on the same bill at the Fillmore West, he was exposed to a wild kaleidoscope of music.

Clae’s musical influences include Little Walter, Slim Harpo, Sonny Boys I and II, Charley Musselwhite and Kim Wilson on harmonica and Ray Charles and Otis Spann on piano. A few of the other the artists that shaped his music include JJ Cale, Memphis Slim, Peter Green, Herbie Hancock, the early Stones, Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, and Willie Nelson.

When the Almroths moved to Eugene in the mid-70s, Claes studied music at Lane Community College and formed Acme Rhythm & Blues Jug Band.  He also played in several local blues bands before moving to Portland in 1982 and helped form Electric Bill and the Killerwatts, an edgy blues band that lasted10 years and morphed into The Blueprints, a 5-piece blues band still active.  He also played in Johnny Ward’s Eagle Ridin’ Papas, a good-time jug band and the acoustic trio Nobody’s Sweethearts before starting up The Reverbs in 2004.

His piano playing style ranges from caressing the keys ala Charles Brown, to boogieing like Roosevelt Sykes or Champion Jack Dupree. His harmonica playing isn’t muffled or distorted for that dirty sound; it’s clear, clean, and sweet. His singing is gritty and growly with a slight Southern lilt, strange because he is of Swedish descent.

Claes also plays in the New Iberians, a Cajun-Zydeco-Blues band and in the eclectic-Blues Claes Almroth Trio featuring guitar maestro Whit Draper and Reverb mate J. Michael Kearsey on bass.

Each of The Reverb Brothers is worthy of an entire story of their own.  For example, electric bassist Kearsey grew up in Massachusetts and formed the Boston-based-band Under Milkwood (with pre-Cars vocalist Ric Ocasek. Moving to Portland in 1972, he was a founding member of UPEPO, a jazz/Latin/rock band that performed all over the West Coast for 11 years and he produced their sole LP, International Ties. In 1982 he formed the Rockin’ Razorbacks and produced their first album and in 1989, Kearsey joined the Brothers of the Baladi and produced eight of their 12 CDs. He’s also produced CDs for Lee Blake, Reunion Jazz Quartet, The Millionaires, and his own CDs: Suite for the Columbia Gorge and Silverthaw.

Kearsey composed the scores for five OPB programs including Oregon Portraits I and II and produced upwards of 300 folk music shows for Berkshire Snow Productions and also hosted the KBOO weekly jazz program, Music for Sore Ears for 11 years.  He’s served as vice president of the Portland Musical Association, board member of the Portland FolkMusic Society, board member of the Oregon Music Hall of Fame and is a 35-year member of National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences.

He greatly respects the fact that The Reverbs dig deep to find the original versions of many of the blues, rags, hokum, and standards they want to play.  “That’s so much more satisfying than learning the same song from a Clapton album,” he explains. “We go to the original LPs and 78s and also study the biographies of the composers.”

Coronet player Dave Duffield grew up in Iowa and Missouri where he became steeped in Kansas City’s rich musical history. He began playing coronet—which is similar to trumpet, but with a richer, mellower tone–at the age of 9 and eventually joined the legendary Memphis Horns and performed with them on Garrison Keillor’s Prairie Home Companion in 2001 and 2002. He also played with KC Brass & Electric, a smoking jazz/blues band that had a huge regional following.

Duffield, who is affectionately called “Gutbucket” and “Duffy,” moved to Oregon 11 years ago and met Almroth and Marx when they were playing in the Eagle Ridin’ Papas. He sat in with them on a few occasions and when they formed The Reverb Brothers he was invited to join them and did in 2006.

“I had to reinvent my style,” Duffield said. “They were used to playing together in small blues or jug bands, while I played in horn sections. It took me a while to feel musically comfortable with them.”

The Reverbs figured Duffield’s coronet playing would spice up their band, but Almroth says his impact has been truly profound. “Dave opened up new avenues for us. He brings that old-time jazz flavor and extended our roots, soul, and country capabilities. We’ve added songs such as ‘St. James Infirmary’ and put a different take on others. We now can do blues with almost no boundaries.”

Lead guitarist and vocalist Allan Lemley, 58, grew up on a wheat ranch in Eastern Oregon in a musical family. He bought a Hofner bass in 1971 and hooked up with a few amateur bands in his college days. He later switched to lead guitar and played with Almroth in the Killerwatts, and when Claes and Marx began appearing as The Reverbs Lemley joined them a short time later.  Lemley, who owns an advertising agency and a film production company, also had to change his style.  The bands he played in were dominated by fast, loud electric guitar, while The Reverbs were blues and roots oriented. “I had to tone it down and play more subtly and learn to pick my spots,” Lemley said. Now the crisp, stinging guitar licks on his Fender Telecaster are eerily reminiscent of a Keith Richards or Steve Cropper.

Through a combination of talent, focus, and hard work, Marx had climbed to the upper level of Portland’s literary community as a poet, feature writer and teacher. He was a board member of Northwest Writers and several other organizations and seemed to be cruising along when he suddenly took a detour to pursue a lifelong dream of playing in a jug band.

At the age of 42 he began taking lessons from guitar standout Whit Draper and continued for 7 years. It so happened that Marx lived across the street from Almroth for nearly 25 years in southeast Portland. “Claes is a great guy. Besides being my best friend, he also became my musical mentor,” Marx said.

The two played in several bands before co-founding The Reverb Brothers 10 years ago. “Doug, as rhythm guitarist, is the heartbeat of The Reverbs,” said Almroth. “His sound drives the band, we all play off of that and he’s also a talented song writer.”

Marx’s joy in performing is contagious. He is the most engaging and kinetic of The Reverbs, resplendent in a vest, slacks and wide brimmed fedora. Throughout a typical set, he banters with band mates and frequently harpoons friends in the audience. His encyclopedic knowledge of vintage blues and roots is an asset to the band and he is a strong vocalist, more shouter than crooner and well suited to up-tempo jug band tunes.

Setting the groove for The Reverbs since 2010, drummer Fred Ingram performed with Sheila and the Boogiemen, Bill Rhoades and the Party Kings, the Sportin’ Lifers, Jon Koonce, Wingtips (Dover Weinberg’s new quartet) and other bands. A few years ago he sat in as a sub for The Reverbs and clicked so well he joined. Ingram uses a stripped down kit and comes up with grooves for a lot of obscure rural blues and jug tunes that didn’t even have drums on the original recordings.

A native Portlander, Ingram’s skills as a graphic designer are as much in demand as his drumming. Clients include Rita Mae Brown, Nike, Pepsi, and he did the artwork for the New Iberians CD.

Ingram, who also sings, initially felt a little overwhelmed by the catalog of songs Almroth and Marx amassed, but now he savors the variety. “We roll all over the deck musically and hop from decade to decade with some original material thrown in,” he said. “This is likely the only band I’ll be in that will play Papa Oom Mow Mow, Witchi Tai To, Claudette, and Columbia Stockade Blues in the same set.”

The Reverb Brothers have produced one CD, For the Festival. and another, Live at the White Eagle, will soon be released. They play every Friday at the White Eagle, 836 N. Russell St., from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Families/children are welcome. For more info go to www.facebook.com/ReverbBrothers

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What they say about The Reverbs:

“They’re great guys, kind and dependable and they play fun, energetic music. They’ve been jiving at the White Eagle for much longer than any other band. I’ve been here for six years and they go back way before me! I look forward to seeing them and their fans every week.” White Eagle bar manager Stacey Graham

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The Reverbs are a bunch of excellent, fun-time musicians. They’re lively, humorous, easy-going and you can never guess what they will play next.”  Jacob “Sax Man” Potter, Portland area musician

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“They are a positive, upbeat band that provides musical therapy”  Bob Tatone, longtime Reverb Brothers fan

If you would like to have your CD considered by the Cascade Blues Association for submission in The Blues Foundation’s Best Self-Produced CD competition, please send your disc to BSPCD c/o Cascade Blues Association, PO Box 14493, Portland, Oregon 97293. You may also turn your submission in at the September or October Cascade Blues Association General Membership Meetings. No discs will be accepted later than October 1st.

All discs submitted must have been released after November 1, 2013. A committee set up by the Cascade Blues Association’s Board of Directors will listen to each submission and like the Journey To Memphis will rate each on a series of categories (blues content, instrumentation, vocals, art work and liner notes). Entries are only accepted by acts within the Pacific Northwest (Oregon, Idaho and Washington). We must receive your entry no later than October 1st. Please note, the entry that we submit to The Blues Foundation will require that we send them four copies of the disc for their judges. We will notify the appropriate act for the extra copies needed to send.

Brad Weeks - Guitar Raffle Winner - photo by Greg JohnsonCongratulations to Brad Weeks, this year’s winner of the Cascade Blues Association’s autographed guitar drawing. The drawing was held at the Membership Summer Picnic from tickets purchased throughout the past year. Among the blues artists who had signed this year’s guitar were: Taj Mahal, Joe Louis Walker, Pete Anderson, J.P Soars, Damon Fowler, Jonn Del Toro Richardson, Laura Chavez, Tim “Too Slim” Langford and Matt Hill

02 IMG_1742By Laurie Morrisey

Nico Wind Cordova is a Native American who honors her heritage through her music. “I have very thick Native American roots in Montana and I am considered a song carrier among my tribe. I also sing traditional and contemporary native songs.”

In addition to native music, Nico describes her music as founded in blues, folk, jazz, soul, funk, and rock–not necessarily in that order. “Today I would be considered Indy blues or adult contemporary. I’m pretty diverse since I worked in top 40 a lot. My original music could play alongside with anyone from Bonnie Raitt to Aretha Franklin, Otis Redding to Amos Lee, to Native American artists, Ulali.”

Nico said she always wanted to perform. “I had the bug pretty bad, but I also loved animals and always had them in my life. I thought I would become a veterinarian before I would ever become a musician. Fate had her way with me because I didn’t choose the music path, music just came to me and fell in my lap. I got paid for my first performance on stage at age nine.”

Currently music is her full time job. “I have worked several different jobs throughout my career as a way to stay on my path as an artist, but not for any real longevity. I had my own Karaoke retail business that was very successful. I worked for North Clackamas School district as a bus driver for five years–that was fun.

She sings and plays guitar with a little percussion and flute. When discussing musical training, Nico says she’s like a sponge picking up stuff from people she has met along the way. “I did have formal voice lessons in Seattle with George Peckham. He taught me about breathing and thinking the notes.”

Early life

Nico was born March 20, 1960, in Portsmouth, Virginia–her father was in the Navy. Two years later her mother left her father and they moved to Lake Oswego to live with her maternal grandfather, who was an Episcopal clergyman. They lived there until her mom became a full time student at Portland State University. “I went to several schools but most of my grade school education was at Metropolitan Learning Center. For high school I attended John Quincy Adams in Portland. I finished my education on my reservation in Fort Belknap area Montana,” Nico said.

“My mom (Anne Morin) graduated with honors and became a high school English teacher for Portland Public Schools. She accomplished raising me as a single parent, working part time jobs, and with no real help from family until her sister, my Aunt Lucy, moved out here with us in 1966 to help with parenting and making ends meet. My Aunt Lucy was a classical guitarist who had studied under Segovia in New York. She was my greatest influence as a musician.”

Musical Influences

“I was surrounded by college students as a kid so I was hanging out with people a lot older than me. PSU had a good music department. Some of the people who gave me my first chances on stage included Upepo, Oregon, The Holy Modal Rounders, Carl Smith, Pleasure, then later Paul Delay, Jim Mesi, Curtis Salgado. I opened as a solo act for Ray Charles in the 1981 tour out of Seattle. He and some of his band members were the biggest influence on me.”

Nico won 2nd place in the 2nd annual Portland Music Association Song Writers Contest with her song “Purely Sexual.” She said, “They deemed it ‘latex rock’ because it was about safe sex and using condoms.”

CD’s

She has a CD out called Feather To Fly By, but it’s an old one and she’s not sure you can even find it anymore. She has also worked on a project with Ed Neumann and the Chameleons. She sang back up with Lily Wilde for DK Stewart’s title track Don’t Call Home album. She also wrote the theme song for NPRs Wisdom Of The Elders radio program and Discovering Our Story TV.

Nico is working on a CD project with a trio, Full Circle, (which includes Gordon Hermanson and Ray Davis). They hope to have a release later this year.

Experience

She has performed with artists such as Ray Charles, The Coasters, Roger Fischer, The Seattle Horns, Beau Kelly, Bobby Torres, Curtis Salgado, Jay “Bird” Koder, Jim Mesi, Joe Plass, Roger Sauce, Norman Sylvester, Ed Neumann, and many more.

Nico has had several different incarnations of her band: Nico Wind & Fyre; Nico Wind & The Barbarians; Nico Wind & Topaz; Nico Wind & Out of the Blue; Nico Wind & Ghost Riders; Nico Wind & Sky Skraper; Nico Wind & Inner G+; Nico Wind & Incognico; Nico Wind & Wall Street; Nico Wind & the Pedestrians; Nico Wind & Arrow; Nico Wind & Cedar Rose; and there may be more to come.

Currently she plays with three groups: Cedar Rose (Nico Wind and Karen Kitchen), a Native American traditional and contemporary duo; Nico Wind & Full Circle trio (Nico Wind, Gordon Hermanson, and Ray Davis), an acoustic guitar trio; and Nico Wind & Free Rein is (Nico Wind, Gordon Hermanson, Kirk Bryant, Rob Nelson, and Seth Cordova), a 5 piece band.

Conclusion

According to her website, “Nico always tries to honor the spirituality of her culture with her music. She believes in giving something back to the universe for the blessings and wisdom she has received as a human being. As an artist, song carrier, and animal advocate, Nico feels that our existence depends on what beauty we share and leave behind when our time here has come full circle. Nico Wind Cordova lives on the horizon and sings to the moon and stars.”

You can find some of Nico’s music at www.reverbnation.com/nicowindandfreerein. Visit her web site at www.nicowind.com.

If you would like to have your CD considered by the Cascade Blues Association for submission in The Blues Foundation’s Best Self Produced CD competition, please send your disc to BSPCD c/o Cascade Blues Association, PO Box 14493, Portland, Oregon 97293. You may also turn your submission in at the August, September or October Cascade Blues Association General Membership Meetings. No discs will be accepted later than October 1st.

All discs submitted must have been released after November 1, 2013. A committee set up by the Cascade Blues Association’s Board of Directors will listen to each submission and like the Journey To Memphis will rate each on a series of categories (blues content, instrumentation, vocals, art work and liner notes). Entries are only accepted by acts within the Pacific Northwest (Oregon, Idaho and Washington). We must receive your entry no later than October 1st. Please note, the entry that we submit to The Blues Foundation will require that we send them four copies of the disc for their judges. We will notify the appropriate act for the extra copies needed to send.

Dave Fleschner = photo credit included in shot

Dave Fleschner – photo by mirifoto

Jimmy Mak’s, Portland’s premier jazz and blues venue, presents The Blues Cabaret on Thursday, August 21st. This is a program featuring all original blues compositions by Dave Fleschner, which will feel right at home in the classic supper club environment of Jimmy Mak’s. This show will include one of the West Coast’s finest blues vocalists Earl Thomas, along with soloists from the Portland Gay Men’s Chorus singing music that brings the classic blues themes of love, lust, fear and betrayal to an off-Broadway atmosphere.

Earl Thomas - photo by Greg Johnson

Earl Thomas – photo by Greg Johnson

The show combines the grittiest elements of the blues with the nuance of jazz. The deep, understated grooves of Carlton Jackson on drums and Bill Athens on upright bass combined with the erudite nastiness of Alan Hager on guitar and Dave Fleschner on piano will make this an evening that takes the blues to its dirtiest lows and its most exhilarating highs.

Jimmy Mak’s is located in the heart of The Pearl District at 221 NW 10th. Showtime is 8:00 pm and admission is $12.00. This is a Cascade Blues Association co-sponsored event, so show your membership card at the door for a $1.00 discount. Reservations are highly recommended and can be made by calling 503-295-6542.