Rev. Robert Jones in the Quad-Cities for Blues in the Schools, Feb. 24-28

For over 25 years Robert Jones has been a champion of American Roots music, with a special emphasis on traditional African American music. He is also a storyteller, a preacher, an artist, and a teacher.  The Mississippi Valley Blues Society presents Robert Jones as its February Blues in the Schools artist-in-residency for the week of February 24-28 for workshops at 10 area schools and two open-to-the-public performances:

  • Wednesday, Feb. 26:  Cool Beanz?1325 30th St., Rock Island IL;  6:30-8:30 p.m.
  • Thursday, Feb.27:  River Music Experience?2nd and Main, Davenport;  7:00-9:00 p.m.

Robert Jones says, "Stories, spirituals, blues, work songs, field hollers, country music, folk songs, gospel and original songs are all a part of fabric of America's culture. This is the music that gave the world blues, jazz, R&B, bluegrass, rock and even Hip Hop. They give insight into the way that we have lived and the ways that we continue to live together.  I feel it is the responsibility of the artist to pass along and to build upon that which has been learned from earlier generations."

Robert Jones  plays guitar, fiddle, harmonica, quills, banjo and mandolin.  He's played with John Hammond, the Holmes Brothers, Hubert Sumlin, Cephas & Wiggins, Keb Mo', Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady, Howard Armstrong, Nappy Brown, Roy BookBinder, David Bromberg, Chris Smither, Guy Davis, Pinetop Perkins, Saffire, and Willie Dixon.  This faculty member at Wayne State University, Port Townsend Blues Week. and Fur Peace Ranch is the recipient of the international Blues Foundation's  2007 Keeping the Blues Alive award  for Education and was the 2010 Teller-in-Residence?National Storytelling Center, Jonesborough TN.

Robert Jones was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1956. His father was from West Pointe, Mississippi and his mother hailed from Conecuh County, Alabama. Consequently, Robert grew up in Detroit in a very Southern household. Early on Robert Jones fell under the influence of his maternal grandmother's record collection. He grew up listening to and loving a wide variety of music, especially the blues.

By the age of 17 Robert had already amassed a record collection of early blues and begun to teach himself guitar and harmonica. By his mid-twenties Robert was hosting an award-winning radio show on WDET-FM, Detroit called "Blues From the Lowlands."  Concentrating primarily on traditional acoustic blues, Robert started performing at some of Detroit's best music venues including the Soup Kitchen Saloon, The Ark, and Sully's. Those early venues led to a touring career that included the Chicago Blues Festival, King Biscuit Blues Festival, Duluth Blues Festival and tours throughout Germany, Poland and the Czech Republic.

Influenced by legendary bluesman Willie Dixon, Robert developed an educational program called, "Blues For Schools". This program has literally taken him into classrooms all over the country, and for approximately the next 15 years Robert polished his craft as both as a performer and a music educator.

Still, Robert considers his greatest honor to be his call to the gospel of ministry.  Robert began to study under Rev. James Robinson, Sr. at the Sweet Kingdom Missionary Baptist Church in Detroit. Emphasizing the cultural, historical and educational aspects of blues, Jones began to think of his music as an outreach of his ministry. Essentially, he was a singer who preached. However, the death of his pastor in January of 1999 would change the direction of Jones' life and his music.

In 2002, with his home church in the fourth year of upheaval at the loss of its leader, and with no end to the confusion in sight, Robert was called by his church to become its next pastor. Over a period of a few months Robert started the process of becoming a preacher who sings instead of a singer that preaches. During this period Robert Jones gave up his highly rated radio program and essentially gave up performing. He reshaped is "Blues For Schools" program into "American Roots Music In Education" (ARMIE), a program that could encompass a wider variety of music including spirituals, gospel, and folk music.

2006 marked a decided return to performance. Especially influenced by sacred musicians such as Rev. Gary Davis, Blind Willie Johnson, Rev. Dan Smith, Joshua White, Blind Connie Williams and Rev. Robert Wilkins, Rev. Robert B. Jones now presents "Holy Blues" to new audiences. Whether he is performing alone, with his good friend Matt Watroba or with his wife of twenty years, Sister Bernice Jones, Rev. Jones is now enjoying, more than ever, the thrill of making music and spreading the blues gospel to ever expanding audiences.

New audiences have included the National Storytelling Festival (Jonesborough TN), the Just Stories Festival in Chicago, IL, MerleFest in NC, Wheatland Festival?Remus MI, and Manchester and Stamford, England, and workshop and school residencies in London, ON, Canada;  Fredricton, New Brunswick, Canada;  Summer Acoustic Music Week at Geneva Point, NH;  Jorma Kaukonen's Fur Peace Ranch in Pomeroy, OH; Swannanoa Traditional Song Week at Warren Wilson College inNC, Port Townsend WA Blues Week, and others.

Among Robert's new pursuits is a program that will combine storytelling, vocals, instrumental music and artwork to explore and showcase the earliest known aspects of African American music and culture. In other words, Robert is looking to explore and share the music and stories that came before the blues.  Robert continues to share his love and fascination for the roots and branches of the blues.

Robert Jones's weeklong residency for the MVBS Blues in the Schools program is made possible with generous support by the Riverboat Development Authority.  Other sponsors are The Lodge, the River Music Experience, the Moline Foundation, Alcoa, and KALA radio.

The Mississippi Valley Blues Society is guessing that by three days before Christmas, most music fans will have had their fill of sleigh bells, lords a-leaping, wassailing, figgy pudding and chestnuts roasting on an open fire, and might be ready to trade all that red-and-green for something more, well, blues.

After playing to much acclaim at the 2013 Blues Festival last July, the Scottie Miller Band returns to the Quad Cities at The Muddy Waters (1708 State Street, Bettendorf) on Sunday December 22.  Showtime is 6:00 p.m., and admission is $7 for MVBS members and $10 for non-members.

Minnesota Blues Hall of Fame inductee Scottie Miller started out on keyboards with fellow Minnesotan Big John Dickerson and Blue Chamber, and played with the legendary Bo Diddley.  He now tours with fellow Blues Fest musician Ruthie Foster when he's not out with his own band, with whom he's released seven CDs since 2001.

With an eclectic sound that is perhaps best described as "Dr. John meets The Band at Bruce Springsteen's house," the Scottie Miller Band's repertoire ranges from blues to soul to funk and jazz, and they've got Dr. John's funky New Orleans groove down tight, especially considering they're from the "wrong" end of the Mississippi River.  They've even been known to occasionally offer their audience a sampling of amazingly intricate Latin rhythms, as was evidenced at their show at Martini's in Rock Island a year ago.  When the question arose as to why a "blues" band would play Latin jazz, the best answer is "Because they can."  Many bands haven't developed the level of proficiency and tightness that the Scottie Miller Band performs, but that's just what happens when the same band members play together for thirteen years.

UK guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter Joanne Shaw Taylor is currently touring the US and will be making a stop at The Muddy Waters, 1708 State Street, Bettendorf, IA on Friday, November 15. This exceptional show is being presented by The Mississippi Valley Blues Society, a non-profit organization dedicated to educating the general public about the native art form of blues-related music through performance, interpretation and preservation. Joanne's performance will start at 9:00 p.m. with a $15 cover charge, or $12 for members of the Mississippi Valley Blues Society.

When Joanne Shaw Taylor was called to the Buckingham Palace stage by Annie Lennox, 17 million viewers were asking "who's that girl?" She was an unintimidated 16-year-old, played a savage Les Paul solo, and brought an attitude that indicated she was going to be a star. Soon enough, the buzz built and the new-girl-on-the-block soon became the "Best British Female Vocalist" at both the 2010 and 2011 British Blues Awards.

Joanne never imagined any of that at the start. She was just a country schoolgirl, bored with the music she heard on late-'90s pop radio, and decided to drop out of school and try her fate in the music industry. As destiny would have it, her demo tape landed in the hands of Eurythmics icon Dave Stewart. Stewart recalls that "she made the hairs on the back of my neck stand on end", and his phone call the following day proved the start of a lasting friendship. Joanne accompanied Stewart's supergroup across Europe in 2002.

Stewart offered Joanne her first deal, and once the dam broke, things moved fast. In 2008, she was working with veteran producer Jim Gaines (Carlos Santana, Johnny Lang, Stevie Ray Vaughan), bassist Dave Smith, and drummer Steve Potts on the songs that became her debut album, White Sugar. Since then, she's broken into the notoriously hard-to-crack US market, beaten the stereotypes of her age and gender, and won the respect of the guitar giants of today.

"There are a lot of great guitarists and singers in the blues today," says Joe Bonamassa. "What I see in Joanne Shaw Taylor that sets her apart from the rest is the ability to write a great song. Not only is she a killer guitarist and singer, but you find yourself walking away from her shows singing her songs as well."

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Zydeco musician and Grammy winner Terrance Simien will be in the Quad Cities the week of November 4 as part of the MVBS Blues in the Schools artists-in-residence series for the 2013-2014 school year.  This is the first time he has visited our area as an educator, and the Education Committee is excited by his Creole for Kidz & The History of Zydeco program.   Terrance will be visiting 10 schools and presenting 3 open-to-the-public performances:

·        Wed. Nov. 6, 11:30-12:30 p.m.?CASI, 1034 W. Kimberly, Davenport IA

·        Thurs. Nov. 7, 7:00-9:00 p.m.?River Music Experience, Redstone Room, 2nd and Main Streets, Davenport IA

·        Fri. Nov. 8, 9:00 p.m.?The Muddy Waters, 1708 State St., Bettendorf IA

Terrance Simien (born September 3, 1965 in Mallet, Louisiana), a zydeco musician, vocalist and songwriter, is an eighth generation Creole from one of the earliest Creole families documented to have settled in St. Landry Parish. He was introduced to music via the piano at home, the Catholic Church choir, and in school band programs where he played trumpet.

While in his teens, he taught himself to play accordion and formed his first band, Terrance Simien & The Mallet Playboys, and began to play the regional zydeco club and church hall circuit.  The early 1980s was a pivotal time in zydeco music history since the pioneers of the genre were aging and the music was in jeopardy of dying off without the critical presence of emerging artists perpetuating the traditions. In 1983 at the young age of 18, Simien began touring professionally and by 20 he was sharing the stage with Fats Domino and Sarah Vaughn at the Berne Jazz Festival. His career exploded after that, and he remains a pivotal part of zydeco music history. Simien was also vital to the "renaissance" of a genre that was becoming extinct with the passing of each pioneer, starting with Clifton Chenier in 1987. By the end of the 1990s, all of the other influential pioneers had departed. This placed Simien at the forefront of an exciting period of growth and popularity for his genre.

Simien and his band have toured internationally, presenting over 7000 live performances in more than 40 countries, and released dozens of solo recordings and collaborations. He has shared studio and stage with Paul Simon, Dr. John, The Meters, Marcia Ball, Dave Matthews, Stevie Wonder, Robert Palmer and the roots rockers Los Lobos.

In 2007, Simien helped establish a new Grammy voting category, Best Zydeco or Cajun Music Album. His group, Terrance Simien and the Zydeco Experience, were the first ensemble to win a Grammy in that same category in 2008.  Simien has appeared on screen and contributed to the soundtracks of multiple movies, television films and commercials. He appears on the soundtrack of the Disney film The Princess and the Frog set in the French Quarter of New Orleans, featuring authentic Louisiana music scored by Randy Newman. It was the first time Disney featured zydeco music in a film, but what really changed the game was when the word "zydeco" was actually spoken in the movie!   Simien has also contributed to the soundtracks of movies such as The Big Easy.

Simien and his business partner/wife, Cynthia, are active in Creole music education and advocacy. They created MusicMatters, Inc., a non-profit for education and advocacy.  They also created the "Creole for Kidz & The History of Zydeco" performing arts program, which provides informational performances to K-12 students, teachers and parents. Since it was created in 2001, Creole for Kidz has reached nearly 500,000 students, parents and teachers in more than 20 states, Mali, Dominican Republic, Brazil, Paraguay, Canada and Australia.

Creole for Kidz & the History of Zydeco is centered on the evolution of Simien's indigenous zydeco music: the traditional music of the black and mixed race, French speaking Creoles of south Louisiana. He also believes that the term Afro-Creole is very appropriate when referring to Louisiana Creoles.  The performance is accompanied by an 8-page study guide with glossary, available as a PDF download for students and teachers.  In-school exercises include making a frottoir (rubboard) from cardboard.

The MVBS Blues in the Schools artists-in-residence program is made possible by a generous grant from the Riverboat Development Authority.  Thanks to our sponsors The Moline Foundation, River Music Experience, Alcoa, The Lodge, and KALA radio.

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Get on the Party Bus!

Brews & Blues Cruise Sunday September 22

The Mississippi Valley Blues Society is sponsoring a Brews and Blues Cruise on Sunday September 22, 2013.

We will start at Martini's On The Rock (4619 34th Street in Rock Island), where the party bus will leave at 1:00 p.m.  First we'll head to Bent River in Rock Island, then to Great River and Front Street in Davenport.  At each stop, two free samples and $1.00 off pints will be available.

Everyone will receive a commemorative glass. Door prizes will be drawn between each of the microbreweries including, but not limited to, fest tickets and MVBS merchandise.  We will return to Martini's On The Rock around 5:00 for blues music by the Candymakers, and $4.00 blues burgers.

All this for only $25.00!!  Tickets are available at the Blues Society office (Harrison and River Drive in Davenport, next to Union Station) Tuesday or Thursday 11:30-5:30.   (Call first:  563-32-BLUES.)  Or you can call the office to use a credit card.

The bus only holds 34 people, so don't delay in getting your seat reserved!!

For more information, contact Andrea Vallejo at 309-737-6863.

Master blues guitarist Chris Duarte is touring from Florida to California, and the Quad Cities is fortunate to have him making a stop at Martini's on the Rock, 4619 34th Street, Rock Island, IL on Sunday September 15. Chris' performance will start at 6:00 p.m. with a $12 cover charge, or $10 if you are a member of the Mississippi Valley Blues Society.

Chris Duarte has been a perennial touring act since the 1990s, playing as many as 200 dates a year, and has developed a legion of loyal fans spanning across the United States, Europe, and Japan. Duarte's strong commitment to touring allows Chris to ply his trade and to work and rework melodic ideas. "I can practice all day in my basement but it's a totally different ballgame when I get on stage."

When the spotlight is on him, Chris Duarte's style of playing is intense blues-rock. He keeps it loud and heavy but still staying on the blues side. Duarte performance will bring to mind legendary artists such as Stevie Ray Vaughan, Robin Trower, Jimi Hendrix, and Eric Johnson.

Duarte has recently released two albums, Live by the Chris Duarte Group, and My Soul Alone, and he will be showcasing many of the songs from these recordings at the September 15 show.

This extraordinary occasion to see Chris Duarte perform at Martini's on the Rock is a fundraiser for the Mississippi Valley Blues Society, and is happening in conjunction with the East West Riverfest, a two-week celebration of arts, culture and heritage in the Quad Cities.

As part of the September 15th events, MVBS is hosting a Bikes and Blues Fun Run starting at The Muddy Waters (1708 State Street, Bettendorf) with check-in at 10:30 a.m. and last bike out at noon. The poker run route is approx. 110 miles. Last bike back in to Martini's by 5:00 p.m. To participate in the Fun Run there will be a recommended donation of $10 per participant and will include admission to the Chris Duarte show. All proceeds from the Fun Run will go to the Mississippi Valley Blues Society. All vehicles welcome.

# # #

Get tickets for the 2013 Mississippi Valley Blues Festival in advance and save some money!  Tickets for the three-day event, July 4-6 at Davenport's LeClaire Park, are $20 per day at the gate.  But through June 30, you can get advance tickets for $15.50 per day at Hy-Vee stores in the Quad Cities, Clinton, and Muscatine.  And, for the first time ever, advance tickets will be available online ($15 plus a service fee), through PayPal at the MVBS website:  www.mvbs.org.  Just go to the Festival tab.

Advance $15 tickets are also available at The Muddy Waters in Bettendorf, Rascals in Moline, Martini's on the Rock in Rock Island, and at the Blues Society office in Davenport (call first: 563-32-BLUES).

Active military personnel and veterans can get Fest tickets for only $10 (gate admission is $20) by showing official military ID at the R.I.A. Federal Credit Union locations listed below through June 30.  Tickets are limited to two per military ID.

·         Arsenal Island, Building #61?Rock Island IL

·         1522 46th Ave.?Moline IL

·         In the Hy-Vee at 750 42nd Ave. Drive?Moline IL

·         110 E. 10th Ave.?Milan IL

·         In the Hy-Vee at 2001 5th St.?Silvis IL

·         4217 Utica Ridge Rd.?Bettendorf IA

·         3509 Harrison St.?Davenport IA

This year's Blues Festival artists include Mighty Sam McClain, Walter Trout, Southern Hospitality, John Primer (who will receive the RiverRoad Lifetime Achievement Award), C. J. Chenier, W. C. Clark, The 44s, Anthony Gomes, Samantha Fish, and Davina & the Vagabonds?among a total of 27 acts on two stages. The gate opens at 2:00 p.m. each day and the music begins at 3:00 p.m. each day, July 4-6.  Free workshops by festival artists are scheduled for all three days, and BlueSKool for the kids runs Friday and Saturday.

Also this year the festival will see the first-ever Mississippi Valley Blues Challenge.  Three bands from within a 175-mile radius of the Quad-Cities will compete in the final round on July 5, with the winner playing a full set on July 6 at the festival and representing the Mississippi Valley Blues Society at the International Blues Challenge in Memphis in January 2014.

The Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band will close out the 29th Mississippi Valley Blues Festival on Saturday July 6 on the Bandshell in Davenport's LeClaire Park.  Sponsored in part by Wieblers Harley-Davidson of Davenport, Shepherd's set will show why Guitar World named him the world's #3 blues guitarist?right after B. B. King and Eric Clapton.

The MVBS and R.I.A. Federal Credit Union recognize the great contribution to our country's freedoms made by active military personnel and veterans, who should be celebrated on the most American of holidays, July 4, Independence Day?the first day of the Mississippi Valley Blues Festival.  To honor them, we are offering discount BluesFest tickets in advance;  these special tickets will not be available at the gate.

Active military personnel and veterans can get Fest tickets for only $10 (gate admission is $20) by showing official military ID at the R.I.A. Federal Credit Union locations listed below through June 30.  Tickets are limited to two per military ID.

  • ·        Arsenal Island, Building #61?Rock Island IL
  • ·        1522 - 46th Ave.?Moline IL
  • ·        In the Hy-Vee at 750 - 42nd Ave. Drive?Moline IL
  • ·        110 E. 10th Ave.?Milan IL
  • ·        In the Hy-Vee at 2001 - 5th St.?Silvis IL
  • ·        4217 Utica Ridge Rd.?Bettendorf IA
  • ·        3509 Harrison St.?Davenport IA

Now through June 30

Get tickets for the 2013 Mississippi Valley Blues Festival in advance and save some money!  Tickets for the three-day event, July 4-6 at Davenport's LeClaire Park, are $20 per day at the gate.  But through June 30, you can get advance tickets for $15.50 per day at Hy-Vee stores in the Quad Cities, Clinton, and Muscatine.

And, for the first time ever, advance tickets will be available online ($15 plus a service fee), through PayPal at the MVBS website:  www.mvbs.org.  Just go to the Festival tab.

Advance $15 tickets are also available at The Muddy Waters in Bettendorf, Rascals in Moline, Martini's on the Rock in Rock Island, and at the Blues Society office in Davenport (call first: 563-32-BLUES).

Get on the Party Bus!  Brews & Blues Cruise Thursday June 20

With the BluesFest only a few weeks away, it's time to start the pre-fest activities!!  The Mississippi Valley Blues Society is sponsoring a Brews and Blues Cruise on June 20, 2013.

We will start at Martini's On The Rock in Rock Island beginning at 4:30 p.m., where they will be offering a Blues Burger for only $4.00    At 6:00 p.m. we will leave Martini's on the party bus and head to the first microbrewery, Bent River in Rock Island, then to Great River and Front Street in Davenport.  At each stop, two free samples and $1.00 off pints will be available.

You will receive a commemorative glass. Door prizes will be drawn between each of the microbreweries including, but not limited to, fest tickets and MVBS merchandise.  We will return to Martini's On The Rock for blues music with Chris Avey and Detroit Larry till 11:00pm.

All this for only $25.00!!  Tickets are available at the Blues Society office (Harrison and River Drive in Davenport) Monday, Wednesday, or Friday from 11:30-5:30 to pay for the event. (Call first:  563-32-BLUES.)   The bus only holds 34 people, so don't delay in getting your seat reserved!!

For more information, contact Andrea Vallejo at 309-737-6863.

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