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On May 12th, Smokestack Lightnin' honored the passing of a great blues icon and harmonica player, Carey Bell with this 4 song set. He will be missed.
Carey Bell/So Hard To Leave You Alone/Heartaches & Pains/Delmark
Carey Bell/Lonesome Stranger/Down Deep/Alligator
Carey Bell/Hard Workin’ Woman/Good Luck Man/Alligator
Carey Bell-James Cotton-Jr. Wells/My Eyes Keep Me In Trouble/Harp Attack!/Alligator
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Early life Despite Bell's mentorships with some of the greatest
blues harp players the genre has ever known, he came into Chicago at an
unfortunate time. The demand for harp players was decreasing in Chicago
as bands were on the lookout for hot electric guitarists. To pay the
bills, Bell continued to play bass and joined several bands as a
bassist. Bell scored a gig as
Big
Walter's bassist, during the time of which he furthered his
passionate study of the Mississippi saxophone with Big Walter himself.
Soon after, Bell cased up his bass and polished his harp, returning to
the scene with his beloved instrument. During the 1980s Bell continued to record, but he was
mostly preoccupied with live performances. In 1990, Bell teamed up with
fellow harpists Junior Wells, James Cotton and Billy Branch to record
Harp Attack! A modern Blues classic, Harp Attack! became one of
Alligator Records's best selling albums.[citation needed] In 1997, Bell released the second album on the label Good Luck Man, which was less raw than its predecessor but nonetheless highly listenable. Second Nature followed in 2004, a duet album with his guitarist son, Lurrie Bell (who shared the guitar duties with Carl Weathersby on Deep Down). The overall appeal of Second Nature is that the entire album is a single take with no overdubs. In 1998, Bell was awarded the Blues Music Award for Traditional Male Artist Of The Year. His final work In 2007 Delmark records released an astounding live
set by Bell accompanied by a stellar band . The band included son
Lurrie Bell's guitarist Scott Cable as
well as Kenny Smith, Bob Stroger and Joe Thomas. The set is a stunning
display of Chicago Blues at its purest and finest. The final chapter of
a career to often overlooked. |