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Our SEVENTH EVENT of 2010...The 13th Annual "BLUES HARVEST" Show


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It was Vann Shaw's birthday, so Sonny produced an appropriate cake to celebrate!  Vann is Eddie Shaw's son and the very talented lead guitar player of the Wolf Gang.

 

Saturday, November 6th
at J.B. McGinnis Pub & Grill
2010 Blues
Harvest


Featured as the headliner...

 

Eddie
Shaw

& the
Wolf Gang


opening the show was: 

  Moon-Crescent06.wmfMidnight Shift
mnightshiftgroup.jpg
and their
"Rhythm Rockin' Boogie"

followed by

 

 

 

 

 

 

first up was the GREAT
Moon-Crescent06.wmfMidnight Shift


followed by

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

then came the Headline act from Chicago's South Side...

Eddie Shaw (vocals, sax) - Vaan Shaw (guitar, vocals) - Tim Taylor (drums) - Shorty Gilbert (bass, vocals)

Eddie Shaw on tenor and alto saxes and harmonica is a very talented singer, songwriter, musician, arranger, and band leader. He was Howlin' Wolf's personal manager for five years. Eddie is one of the most respected blues musicians alive today. Originally from Benoit, MS, Eddie now lives on Chicago's South Side. Band Members include Eddie Vaan Shaw Jr. , Eddie's son, is one of the best guitar players in the blues business. Vaan has music of his own , CD's, MORNING RAIN and THE TRAIL OF TEARS. Lafayette" Shorty" Gilbert, has been Eddie's bassplayer for over 20 yrs. Strong vocalist , his version of " Rainy night in Georgia" brings tears to your eyes. Tim Taylor on drums, is son of the late Eddie Taylor . Since Howlin' Wolf died in 1976, Eddie Shaw has kept the Wolf Gang name for his band, which currently features Shaw as lead vocalist and sax; Lafayette "Shorty" Gilbert, who's earned the most seniority in the band after 20 years; pianist and Chicago fixture Detroit Junior; drummer Tim Taylor, son of the legendary guitarist Eddie, who has eight years of his own in the Wolf Gang; and son Eddie "Vaan" Shaw on guitar. Shaw's family abounds with showbiz talent. Another of his sons, Stan, has acting credits in films diverse as Harlem Nights, Fried Green Tomatoes, Daylight with Sylvester Stallone, and Cutthroat Island, the Geena Davis pirate flick. Eddie Shaw can compose, arrange, and write music. He worked the Delmark studios managing weekly sessions for the label with fellow studio fixture Jimmy Dawkins in the '60s. In the '90s he recorded for European and Japanese labels as well as for Rooster Blues in Clarksdale, Mississippi, which released In the Land of the Crossroads. "On Land of the Crossroads I did mostly Mississippi bayou type blues because I stayed down in that part of the country," Shaw says. "Well, times change too. You go in with more modern equipment and you go with more up-to-date ideas. . . . Every time you do a new album, you're looking for better quality, you're looking for better compositions, you know, to upgrade everything. You want everything better than it was the year before, so hopefully that's the case now."

When the blues revival of the 60's and 70's were in full swing if was only natural that EDDIE SHAW was a focal point of the move­ment.  Most notably, EDDIE SHAW & THE WOLFGANG was the original back-up band for the legendary HOWLIN' WOLF until his untimely death in 1975. . .but it doesn't end there.  The band has performed in virtually every state in the U.S. and in over a dozen foreign countries.  They have played everywhere from Carnegie Hall to the small, intimate blues clubs in Chicago to J.F.K.'s inauguration.They are considered to be one of the premier Chicago blues bands performing today.

EDDIE SHAW on tenor and alto saxes and harmonica is a very talented singer/songwriter, musician, arranger and band leader. He was HOWLIN' WOLF'S personal manager for over five years and is one of the most respected blues musicians alive today.  His music has been recorded by JOHN HAMMOND, MAGIC SAM, OTIS RUSH, HOWLIN' WOLF, WILLIE DIXON and others.  He's responsible for all the arrangements on THE HOWLIN' WOLF LONDON SESSIONS '(Chess) featuring ERIC CLAPTON and on MUDDY WATERS' UNK AND FUNK (GRT) album.  In addition EDDIE did all the composing and arranging on the PACK DOOR WOLF (GRT) album and did much of the writing on WILLIE DIXON'S CATALIST (Ovation) album.  Originally from Memphis, Tennessee' EDDIE now lives on Chicago's South Side with his wife and daughter.

Eddie Shaw comes back from the crossroads with a new album

By Bill Dahl

On a Chicago blues landscape teeming with guitar masters and harmonica wizards, Eddie Shaw is in a class of his own. Shaw's main ax is the tenor saxophone, an instrument more commonly associated with jazz. But his unusual choice hasn't held him back.

"1 think it's an advantage for me, simply because I'm out there by myself," said Shaw, who also plays harmonica. "There's nobody really doing it now."

After spending more than a dec­ade backing Howlin' Wolf, Shaw has been a top Chicago blues act himself since the late 1970s. His new release on the Rooster Blues label, "In the Land of the Cross­roads," is a sizzling showcase for his blasting horn and commanding vocals.

The album was cut in the heart of the Mississippi Delta, not far from where Shaw grew up.

"I was really comfortable working down there, Shaw said over a snack of pastries and milk at a North Side Dunkin' Donuts (fit­ting, in that one of the set's stan-dout tracks is the rocking "Dunkin1 Donut Woman").

In ancient Delta blues lore, the role of secluded crossroads is signif­icant. Legend has it that the great Robert Johnson, among others, met old Beelzebub himself at such an intersection one dark night, and bartered away his soul to acquire his prodigious performing skills.

"We went out on the crossroads, in this area where all of the contro­versy has been about Robert Johnson and all the guys meeting the devil at the crossroads” he said "It's a different feel, man, like somebody's watching over you or something."

Shaw was playing professionally around Greenville, Miss., by the time he was 14, often jamming with pianist Ike Turner's combo in the early 1950s. Other local luminaries included guitarist Little Milton and saxophonist Oliver Sain.

"When you're a musician living in that same area, you have a ten­dency to cross one another's trail," Shaw said. "I met Ike before I got into high school because Ike had a band, and everybody would go sit in with Ike."

Chicago great Muddy Waters roared through nearby Itta Bena in the late '50s and changed the saxo­phonist's career plans.

"I sat in with him at a club, and he offered me a gig," he said. "I was about to get kicked out of school anyway. I needed the bucks, so I latched on to the gig."

Transplanted to Chicago, Shaw stayed with the blues legend for a year before switching allegiance to Waters' chief rival.

"One Friday night, we were play­ing on the West Side, on Roosevelt Road," he said. "Howlin* Wolf was playing two blocks west of where Muddy was working. So I stopped playing with Muddy about 10 o'clock that Friday night. I walked down the street and got a gig with Wolf the same night."

Although Shaw's association with Wolf endured until the ferocious bluesman's death in 1976, Shaw also broke loose to gig with West Side guitarists Freddy King, Otis Rush and Magic Sam.

Today Shaw's band remains sta­ble despite extensive touring, sparked by his son Vaan on guitar and anchored by bassist Shorty Gilbert and drummer Robert Plunkett. Another son, Stan, is a successful actor, with meaty roles in the films "Harlem Nights" and "Fried Green Tomatoes."

The elder Shaw's tenor sax sound remains gloriously bold and direct.

"I think playing the horn like I do is something like the old Baptist preacher," said Shaw, who will play Buddy Guy's Legends, 754 S. Wabash Ave., on Saturday. "When a Baptist preacher preaches in church, everybody listens. He shouts out what he wants you to hear, and he brings it to you in such a way that you're gonna listen.

"So that's the same way I try to do it with the saxophone. I try to have a good attack, don't try to play a lot of notes, try to stay with the basics and tell a good story."

Bill Dahl is a free-lance music writer

                http://www.myspace.com/eddieshawandthewolfgang#ixzz10UauKtlX

 


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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