Still, we got to taste the chowder and vote on our favorite–blind test, we liked #4–and listen to various blues groups, sample various beers, walk the dogs around the scenic little town. What's not to like?
Dunno who won the cook-off, we missed the announcement and nobody seems to have posted it. (EDITOR'S NOTE: Found it. Firehouse won the professional judge's award, ICM won the fans' tasting.)
One sour note: Our favorite restaurant on the coast, Feast, formerly Crave, had closed. Great food, but not enough local business to see it past the tourist season. We will miss that. I hope the husband and wife chef team found a good gig, they were terrific.
My favorite bluesman was Walker T. Ryan, out of Eugene. He's a guy who spent forty years on the road and is semi-retired these days, sticking close to home, Eugene being just up the road an hour and some.
He covered a lot of material–sets ran two hours–and he talked between numbers, giving us a little about the songs, his personal history, all like that, and I much enjoyed the patter. Music ranged from down-home blues to folk, covers and his own originals, and I particularly liked his "Black Velvet Elvis ..."
"Werewolf Blues" was kind of fun, too.
It was just him, his guitar, and sometimes his harp, and he sat in a chair to play.
There were groups with eight guys: guitars, bass, keyboards, drums, horns, and they were pretty good at it, but what I have found is that the wall-of-sound with the volume at eleven doesn't do it for me any more. I have catholic tastes in regard to the kind of blues–Delta, Memphis, Chicago, Texas, Swamp, all kinds–but I prefer acoustic or lightly amplified sound, and a more intimate setting. Pretty much, we've written off arena rock, unless Sir Paul makes another run our way. I mean, I love B.B. and Buddy and Eric and all, but sitting in a bar having a beer and listening to one player or two or three up close and personal, that's my preference these days. If I have to turn the hearing aids down, you know it's too loud ...
1 comment:
You may have heard them already but Bruce Cockburn's "Going to the Country" may be up your alley.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N2MfEqFrIME&feature=related
Or Otis Taylor's "My Soul's in Louisiana"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kLGXlHJ7F4c
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