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 Our SEVENTH EVENT of the YEAR...FALL BLUES BLAST I




Rick Estrin & the Nightcats
'
"Twisted" is their HOT, new debut CD,
available from

 Order Now at Amazon.Com!
 


Check out the great video below from
Blues Blast I of the Nightcats doing their song "U-B-U" from their new CD. 
Then Rick gives us his philosophy on that most human of conditions:  DIVORCE. 
The video will begin momentarily.

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

            

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




Rick meets with the Sound Techs prior to the show


Sonny manning the door for this rare
Thursday night DSBS event.


Rick arrives ready to jam!


Nightcats drummer J. hanson warming up.


Lorenzo Farrel with his furniture.


New Nightcats guitarist Kid Anderson showed that
he's got his own thing going on!  Little Charlie fans
were NOT disappointed after Kid lit the stage up.
This man can really BURN!

AND WHEN ALL WAS SAID AND DONE,
Rick took the stage for a solo encore that was
both OUTSTANDING and BEAUTIFUL.  It was
OLD SCHOOL BLUES at its very finest!


 


A Series of THREE Outstanding Shows
to Kick-Off the Fall Season...
ESTRIN in Blast I; SLIM in Blast II; & ZITO in Blast III!

 

        First was...                                                          


a CD RELEASE PARTY in support of

the "new" Nightcats' first release...
TWISTED!


Thursday, September 24th, 2009
at 8pm--doing two 75 min. sets
 
 

at
     in New Castle, DE

Estrin is an amazing harmonica player, a soulful lead vocalist and a brilliant original
songwriter. Estrin's harmonica sings alongside blues tunes that entertain audiences
like no other in the genre."
- San Francisco Chronicle

Rick Estrin sings and writes songs like the brightest wiseguy in all bluesland and blows
harmonica as if he learned at the knee of Little Walter.
- DownBeat

These are serious musicians out to have a hotter than hot good time. It's tough to stay in your seat when Estrin and his musical cohorts get cooking."
- Chicago Sun-Times

Rollicking and raucous, super-cool and hip...saritical, sharp lyrics and killer solos. It just doesn't get any better than this.
- Blues Revue

Recently, when guitarist Little Charlie Baty retired from touring, Estrin recruited six-string whiz Kid Andersen. With this hot new combination, Rick has kept on creating and playing the smartest, hippest blues and roots music around, and taking it on the road to happy audiences everywhere.
- Blues Webzine, Finland

One day back in 1970, a 20-year old Rick Estrin had the opportunity to play harmonica with Muddy Waters and his band at the Sutherland Hotel on 47th and Drexel on Chicago's South Side. During the break, Muddy called Estrin over, shook his finger in his face, and shouted, "You outta sight, boy! You got that sound, boy! You play like a man, boy!"

Rick Estrin ranks among the very best harp players, singers and songwriters in the blues world today. His work on the reeds is deep in the tradition of harmonica masters Sonny Boy Williamson II and Little Walter Jacobs, while at the same time pushing that tradition forward. The Associated Press called his harp playing, "endlessly impressive." The great guitarist Robert Lockwood, Jr. (who was schooled by Robert Johnson and who played on most of Little Walter's Chess recordings) told Estrin, "Little Walter would be very proud of you." His award-winning original songs have been favorably compared with those of Willie Dixon and the team of Leiber and Stoller. And his hipster, street-smart vocals are the perfect vehicle for driving his songs home.

For more than 30 years and nine albums, Rick fronted the jumping, swinging Little Charlie & The Nightcats, featuring guitarist Little Charlie Baty. With Baty's recent retirement from touring, Estrin -- along with the Nightcats longtime rhythm section of J. Hansen and Lorenzo Farrell and a new member, fiery guitarist Kid Andersen -- takes the lead on his own. The band's debut album, Twisted, while still swinging the blues, is a harmonica-driven, rocking, guitar-fueled rave-up. Featuring 14 songs (including 10 Estrin originals, two by Kid Andersen, one by Hansen, and a superb band-created instrumental), Twisted showcases Rick's seemingly effortless command of the harmonica, his streetwise vocals and his remarkable original songs.

In addition to his harmonica and vocal skills, Rick Estrin is a songwriter of unparalleled talent. Critics have compared him to Cab Calloway, Louis Jordan and Willie Dixon. Blues Revue declared, "Estrin has created some of the finest blues songs of any artist on the planet. His carefully wrought lyrics penetrate human weakness with the precision of a boxer, though more often than not, he chooses to leave you laughing after the blow's been struck."

Estrin won the 1993 Blues Music Award for his composition My Next Ex-Wife and has written songs for a growing legion of famous fans. Three of his songs found their way onto Grammy-nominated albums: Don't Put Your Hands On Me (on Koko Taylor's Force Of Nature), I'm Just Lucky That Way (on Robert Cray's Shame + A Sin), and Homely Girl (on John Hammond's Trouble No More). Other artists who have covered Estrin songs include Saffire-The Uppity Blues Women, Little Milton, Rusty Zinn, Kid Ramos and Mark Hummel. "I like songs that tell stories," Rick says, "songs that are well-crafted and meaningful." Besides Dixon and Leiber and Stoller, Estrin cites Sonny Boy Williamson II, Percy Mayfield and Baby Boy Warren as his major songwriting influences. Billboard noted that Rick writes "fabulous, remarkable original material."

Besides Estrin's songwriting and musical skills, he is among the most entertaining and colorful showmen around. His quick wit and his signature look -- coifed hair, pencil-thin mustache and sharp attire - add even more color to his performances. "People don't go out to see people who look like themselves," says Rick. "They want to see something special. I was schooled in this business to be a showman, and that's what you get when you come to see me perform."

Estrin was born in San Francisco, California in 1949, and grew up following his own path. He discovered an entirely new lifestyle when, as a 10-year-old boy, he made his way to the tough Market Street area and befriended many of the neighborhood characters. He discovered another new world when his older sister gave him a copy of Ray Charles' The Genius Sings The Blues when he was 12. Albums from Jimmy Reed, Champion Jack Dupree, Mose Allison, Nina Simone and others soon followed. By the time he was a teenager, Estrin completely identified with the urban, African American culture surrounding him.

Estrin got his first harmonica at age 15, and by age 18 was proficient enough to begin sitting in at black clubs around the city. He first jammed with blues master Lowell Fulson and almost immediately was hired to open five shows for Z.Z. Hill. He worked five nights a week for almost a year with guitar legend Travis Phillips in a band fronted by famed pimp/bluesman Fillmore Slim (who was the centerpiece of the acclaimed Hughes Brothers documentary American Pimp). Phillips introduced Estrin to Rodger Collins, the man who would become Rick's first real musical mentor, and who schooled Rick on the finer points of songwriting and show business. He moved to Chicago and worked with Johnny Young, Eddie Taylor, Sam Lay and Johnny Littlejohn before meeting and jamming with Muddy Waters. In fact, Muddy wanted Estrin to go on the road with him, but due to nothing more than a missed phone call, it never happened.

Because of that missed connection, Rick eventually moved back to the Bay Area, met Little Charlie Baty and formed Little Charlie & The Nightcats. For the next 30 years, the band barnstormed around the globe, honing their skills and entertaining countless people. Now, as Rick Estrin & The Nightcats release Twisted and tour the country, they'll bring their raucous, rocking blues to fans both old and new. Clubs will be packed, dance floors will be filled and a guaranteed great time will be had by all.

This was an Outstanding Blues Event!

 
 

Venue for DSBS gigs


519 Basin Rd.
New Castle, DE
(302)322-4766



information:



$20 Members
$25 Non-members
 

(Money Orders or checks only for tickets by mail)

(TICKETS WILL BE AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR ON THE DAY OF THE SHOW)


Contact:

Keeping The Blues Alive Award
Diamond State Blues Society

P.O. BOX  863
MIDDLETOWN , DELAWARE  19709


Phone: DSBS
Gene - (302) 376-6298 or
Sonny - (410) 398-8334

Email: Gene or Sonny

 

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