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michelej1 07-09-2012 06:36 PM

Blues Don't Change Release
 
Ultimate Classic Rock, July 9, 2012
http://ultimateclassicrock.com/forme...re-2001-album/

Former Fleetwood Mac Guitarist Peter Green to Release Rare 2001 Album ‘Blues Don’t Change’

by: Dave Swanson

A CD by the Peter Green Splinter Group, featuring former Fleetwood Mac guitarist Peter Green, which was previously only sold at live shows will now see the light of day as a standard release.

‘Blues Don’t Change’ was recorded in 2001 and until now has only been available at live gigs or via the band’s website. The disc, to be issued by Eagle Rock Entertainment on July 24, features Peter and band delivering their own renditions of classics by such blues legends as BB King, Willie Dixon, Albert King, John Lee Hooker and Freddie King, among others.

The Spinter Group, which formed in 1996, features Green along with Nigel Watson on guitar and vocals, Larry Tolfree on drums, Roger Cotton on keyboards, and Pete Stroud on bass. Among the songs tackled here are ‘Crawlin’ King Snake,’ ‘Little Red Rooster,’ ‘Honest I Do,’ and ‘Nobody Knows You When You’re Down And Out.’ This will be the band’s tenth release.

To fans of great blues, and rock and roll, guitarists, Peter Green needs no introduction. But, for those not familiar, Peter Green was a young guitar genius who rode into notoriety with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers in 1966 before heading off on his own a year later to form Fleetwood Mac. Green’s guitar playing and vision shaped the early years of the band, although he left the group in 1970.

Peter Green Splinter Group, ‘Blues Don’t Change’ Track Listing:

1. ‘I Believe My Time Ain’t Long’
2. ‘Take Out Some Insurance’
3. ‘When It All Comes Down’
4. ‘Honey Bee’
5. ‘Little Red Rooster’
6. ‘Don’t Start Me Talking’
7. ‘Nobody Knows You When You’re Down And Out’
8. ‘Help Me Through The Day’
9. ‘Honest I Do’
10. ‘Blues Don’t Change’
11. ‘Crawlin’ King Snake’

chiliD 07-10-2012 01:09 PM

I wonder if this signals a re-release of the other Splinter Group albums, as well? :shrug:

dansven 07-10-2012 02:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chiliD (Post 1057940)
I wonder if this signals a re-release of the other Splinter Group albums, as well? :shrug:

And with bonus material?:shrug:

Wouter Vuijk 07-10-2012 06:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dansven (Post 1057949)
And with bonus material?:shrug:

That would be nice.

dino 07-16-2012 03:39 PM

It's a good album desevering a wider release. My fave is probably Crawling King Snake.

librax2 07-17-2012 01:56 PM

It's available to pre-order on Amazon UK.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B...0833071_snp_dp

dino 07-21-2012 05:24 AM

Unsurprisingly no bonus tracks.

michelej1 07-23-2012 02:32 PM

Something Else Reviews, July 23, 2012
http://somethingelsereviews.com/2012...t-and-the-mgs/

PETER GREEN – BLUES DON’T CHANGE (BLUES): Peter Green, a key figure in the blues revival scene of the late 1960s, dives headlong into seminar recordings that shaped his sound — from Willie Dixon, John Lee Hooker, Albert King, B.B. King, Freddie King and Jimmy Reed, among others. Recorded in 2001, but only available before now at shows and through the band’s Web site, Blues Don’t Change speaks both to the timelessness of these recordings, but also to the still often-overlooked white-blues genius of Green — who replaced Eric Clapton in John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, and then co-founded the original, roots-rocking incarnation of Fleetwood Mac. His current Peter Green Splinter Group also features keyboardist Roger Cotton, bassist Pete Stroud, drummer Larry Tolfree and guitarist/vocalist Nigel Watson. Highlights include “Little Red Rooster,” “Honest I Do,” “Take Out Some Insurance” and “Honey Bee.” — Nick DeRiso

Wouter Vuijk 07-25-2012 02:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by michelej1 (Post 1059353)
Something Else Reviews, July 23, 2012
http://somethingelsereviews.com/2012...t-and-the-mgs/

PETER GREEN – BLUES DON’T CHANGE (BLUES): His current Peter Green Splinter Group — Nick DeRiso

Strange how this bloke Nick de Riso speaks of the CURRENT PGSG. They disbanded early 2004 (EIGHT years ago!!! Which is more than the band existed).
Maybe he should get his information straight.
:eek:

absinthe_boy 07-26-2012 04:47 AM

I am glad this is seeing a proper release. I bought it 'back in the day' and I've always felt it is one of the strongest PGSG releases.

I suppose it could be another example of making money from Peter's name, but this is a genuinely good CD and hasn't had a wide release prior to now. If you haven't heard it, do pick up a copy.

michelej1 08-12-2012 08:48 PM

Blog Critics.Org Author: Wesley Britton — Published: Aug 12, 2012 at 11:26 am
http://blogcritics.org/music/article...plinter-group/

Music Review: Peter Green’s Splinter Group - Blues Don’t Change


Back in 1968, I loved Fleetwood Mac, a debut album billed on the cover as Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac. I wore out the vinyl grooves for songs like “Shake Your Moneymaker,” “My Heart Beat Like a Hammer,” and “Long Grey Mare.” Then came “Albatross,” “Black Magic Woman,” and “Oh Well” before Green left his band in 1970. The Mac, of course, traveled down many forks in the road after that leaving the blues further and further behind. On his own, Green suffered his bouts with mental illness and drug use that built a legend, if not much recording or performing success.

In 1996, Green returned to his roots by founding his Splinter Group which included noted drummer Cozy Powell, Roger Cotton (piano, Hammond C3, rhythm guitar),Pete Stroud (fretless and fretted bass guitars, double bass), and the man credited with helping rehabilitate the reclusive Green, Nigel Watson (vocals, lead guitar, rhythm guitar). After Powell’s death in 1998, Larry Tolfree took over the drummer’s throne. This was the band that cut a series of blues albums mixing both standards with original material until Green departed in 2004.

One of these, Blues Don’t Change, was first released in the U.K. in 2001, became available as an import in 2006—the same year that a “Best of” compilation was issued—but it wasn’t commercially available in the states until July, 2012. Certainly, there are Green fans who’ve been keeping up with the Splinter Group catalogue and already have their copy, although the albums were primarily sold at live venues and through their website. But for many of us who’ve lost track of Green over the years, the new edition of Blues Don’t Change is a welcome reminder of what Peter Green once was and what he was doing when the new millennium dawned.

I admit, listening to the first half of Blues, I was filled with memories of the original Fleetwood Mac debut. Like the 1968 collection, Blues Don’t Change is stripped-down, straight-up blues with dark, haunting tones. For another matter, Blues Don’t Change opens with “I Believe My Time Ain’t Long,” an Elmore James song that was not only on the 1968 LP, it was Fleetwood Mac’s very first single in 1967. (The liner notes incorrectly credit Mac co-founder Jeremy Spencer with a composition credit. Not so.) Blues Don’t Change is filled with other covers of classics every British blues player must have cut their teeth on—“Take Out Some Insurance,” “Little Red Rooster,” and “Crawlin’ King Snake,” for but a few examples.

The principal difference is Green’s voice. Back in the day, his vocal delivery was rough, stark, and full of youthful exuberance. The original Mac was a band of white British musicians paying homage to Robert Johnson and Chicago blues masters, some of whom they’d get the chance to work with before Green’s breakdown. Thirty-some years later, Green sounds like an elder statesman of blues himself. His voice strains with age. Many of his notes are flat and cracked, but also soulful and seasoned with the conviction of experience. After all, as he tells us in the title track, he’s been singing the blues since 1957.

Of course, the main focus of Blues Don’t Change is the musicianship of the full Splinter Group. Green’s guitar interweavings are understated and short; we don’t get any of his trademark long-note instrumentals. The rest of the guys don’t sound young or exuberant either, especially in the second half of the album performing slow numbers like “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down And Out,” “Help Me Through The Day,” and “Honest I Do,” songs sharing the points of view of gents who’ve seen a bit of the world. They’re practiced players at home strumming the Delta blues, getting smooth with B. B. King stylings, or strutting their basic licks learned from Albert King, Freddie King, Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters...you know the drill.

So Blues Don’t Change is something of a blues primer with all the expected riffs, patterns, and in the pocket grooves. It’s not essential listening but is worth the time of anyone who liked the first Fleetwood Mac albums, likes the blues in general, or would like to catch up a bit with a man many consider one of the finest blues guitarists that ever was. There aren’t many demonstrations of six string virtuosity, but rather 11 songs defining what the blues was, is, and will be. It really doesn’t change, you know.

doodyhead 08-13-2012 05:41 PM

blues dont change
 
I hope people buy it
the royalties for these kinds of recordings are substantial

Wouter Vuijk 08-13-2012 07:15 PM

Nicely put by Wesley Britton.
:thumbsup:


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