Log in to add to your wishlist
Blues Review ~ Dance if you want to.
Genre:
Blues: Juke Joint Blues
Release Date:
2008
Albums you will love
Walker T Ryan
Underdog American Music
Blues: Guitar Blues
Walker T Ryan
13
Blues: Acoustic Blues
Black Prairie Blues
© Copyright-Joe Shelton
(796873055208)
Record Label: ALT 45
No items available in your wishlist
Big Joe Shelton was born in the Black Prairie region of northeast Mississippi. Growing up in a small Mississippi town he was exposed to an African-American culture which still strongly reflected that of the early part of the twentieth century. He attended tent minstrel shows, bar-b-que picnics and heard street musicians performing authentic traditional blues. The Black Belt region is also the birthplace of blues legends Howlin’ Wolf, Bukka White and Big Joe Williams. As a young man he was fortunate in befriending Williams and this association greatly influenced his musical sensibilities.
As a child Big Joe sang in church and grammar school choirs. In his teens he began playing the harmonica and guitar. Songwriting soon followed and he found he had a wealth of experiences from which to draw. In the mid seventies he moved to Chicago and experienced the urban blues scene first hand. From Maxwell Street to the south side he sopped up the blues gravy served by the likes of Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Buddy Guy and many others.
He is a member of the Mississippi Arts Commission “Artist Roster” (http://www.arts.state.ms.us/artist-roster/index.php) and “Folk Arts / Folk Life Directory” (http://www.arts.state.ms.us/special-projects/folklife.php) and was honored by being included on the “Columbus / Catfish Alley” Mississippi Blues Trail Marker (http://www.msbluestrail.org/commission.html)
Big Joe has performed at numerous festivals and clubs throughout the southeastern United States including: King Biscuit Blues Festival, Howlin’ Wolf Memorial Blues Festival, Freedom Creek Blues Festival, Ground Zero Blues Club, and the Beal Street Mess Around. He has also toured England, France, Belgium, Bulgaria and the Netherlands.
He has played with blues legends Big Joe Williams, Furry Lewis, Son Thomas, Junior Kimbrough, Fenton Robinson, Living Blues 2003 “Artist Of The Year” Willie King, BMA Award nominees Blind Mississippi Morris, R. L. Burnside and Johnny Rawls as well as Daniel “Slick” Ballinger, the 2007 BMA” Best New Artist” honoree.
Among his many contributions toward perpetuation of the blues is his involvement with the Jazz Foundation of America and the Howlin’ Wolf Blues Societies “blues in the school” educational programs as well as performing in area personal care homes for the elderly.
Read more...
Please
log in to review the album.
Review in U.K. publication "Juke Blues
author: Juke Blues Magazine
JUKE BLUES MAGAZINE
U.K.
Issue # 66 Winter 2008
Now wait a minute, this is raw…Big Joe Shelton, straight from the Black Prairie region of Mississippi, home of Willie King, who makes a guest appearance on the title track. Energetic and exciting, there’s even some of King’s political edge creeping in too. “Black Prairie Blues” comes highly recommended, and guaranteed to get your toes tapping.
Read more...
Living Blues Magazine's review of Black Prairie Blues!
author: Roger Gatchet
Living Blues Magazine review of
Black Prairie Blues
December 2008
Issue # 198
Mississippi native Big Joe Shelton is one of the blues’ many unsung local heroes—while he may not be a well known name on the national scene, he has played the King Biscuit Blues Festival (now the Arkansas Blues and Heritage Festival) toured Europe, and jammed with legends like Junior Kimbrough, R. L. Burnside, Big Joe Williams, and Alabama bluesman Willie King, who make a guest appearance on Black Prairie Blues.
Shelton’s vocals and harmonica get the job done, but his real strength lies in his songwriting. All 15 tunes on the set list are original numbers, and even in the album’s weaker moments, Shelton performs with an unrelenting passion. He covers all the blues canon with a pen guided by years of experience playing in the deep south: promiscuity on Scratchin’ Yo Itch; booze on One’s Too Many; a relationship on the rocks on Nothin’ Can Save It; wild Saturday nights down in Cat Fish alley; and the ubiquitous disrespectful female on Be A Woman; a high energized rocker that closes the album. The timely Elmore James-style slide blues Hope We Live To See The Day delivers both a poignant critique of the war in Iraq and a call for peace, with Shelton reminding us that “Jesus don’t like killin’, no matter what for,” and the title track finds guest Willie King taking a break from the Liberators to contribute tasty lead guitar to the mix.
No doubt Shelton’s got the goods and Black Prairie Blues is a solid, enjoyable record that should broaden his fan base. The CD is available at www.bigjoeshelton.com.
Roger Gatchet
Read more...
author: Donna Handley
I would give this CD more than 5 stars if I could. It's currently in our top five rotation. Please....Please, Joe, make more CDs!
Read more...
Blues review Magazine
author: Tom Hyslop
BLUES REVIEW MAGAZINE
OCT / NOV 2008
Tom Hyslop
Harp player Big Joe Shelton should be named an auxiliary member of the Mississippi Chamber of Commerce for advancing his home state’s interest with Black Prairie Blues (Alt 45 records). The title cut, featuring Willie King on guitar, presents a hard-hitting roster of blues titans from the Mississippi-Alabama border; the hard-shuffling “In Mississippi” touts the local character. “Best I Can Tell” is a solid slow blues: “Devil Lives in Memphis” borrows from “Roll and Tumble”; and an Elmore James feel informs “Hope We Live to See the Day.” “One’s Too Many” and “Can’t Come Back” effectively blend humor with plainspoken truth. Shelton’s vocals are sometimes overly mannered, but he’s a strong songwriter.
Read more...