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Event 

Title:
Battle of the Blues with Doctor of the Blues Marshall Lawrence and John Rutherford
When:
Wed, Jan 25
Where:
The Slice - Lethbridge
Category:
Blues

Description

Time: 8 p.m.

Cover: $10

 Two of Alberta’s best bluesmen go head to head at the Slice.

Marshall Lawrence http://www.reverbnation.com/marshalllawrencedoctoroftheblues

Home Page: http://www.doctorblues.com

CDBaby: http://www.cdbaby.com/Artist/MarshallLawrence

iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/marshall-lawrence/id5183571

Not many blues artists can call themselves “the Doctor of the Blues” without a whole stretcher-full of the idiom’s winking big talk. But Marshall Lawrence can, and with only the slightest bit of irony. The award-nominated Canadian bluesman actually holds a doctorate in psychology, and he knows how to use it—just as he knows how to use his slashing guitar, stinging, lightning-fast slide, and pleading, mournful moan: Marshall’s prescription for a maximum blues remedy.
“Psychology is about talking about the good times and the bad times, about dealing with it and getting it out there,” says Marshall, who recently retired after 10 years of counseling troubled teenagers to devote himself full time to playing the blues. “And that’s also what the blues are about—singing about the good and the bad. So there’s always been a parallel there for me.”
 
As festival, theater, and club audiences have been finding out, the best place to get a dose of Marshall’s medicine is right in front of the stage. Thanks to his jaw-dropping technique, moving delivery, and engaging persona, crowds of all walks and ages have been blown away. Of course while nothing can take the place of one of Marshall’s amazing live shows, his excellent studio albums are riveting calling cards, each one a shot of rough-edged, high-energy, Delta-style sounds with an acid twist sure to delight long-time traditionalists as well as newer, perhaps less-reverent converts.
 
Marshall’s newest release, Blues Intervention, is another stunning all-acoustic offering, following his 2008 Roots Music Report chart-topping The Morning After. A deep, soul-baring set of his self-described “acid blues”—a reference to the music’s alchemical mix of blues and Marshall’s background of playing everything from rock to soul, funk, bluegrass, and even punk—Blues Intervention is stacked high with one searing nugget after another: the dark, tell-it-like-it-is social commentary “Lay Down My Sorrow”; the truckin’ rip through Tommy Johnson’s “Travelin’ Blues”; the sage, slide-lashed “You’re Gonna Find the Blues”; and 10other down-home tracks fueled only by Marshall’s voice and guitar, Sherman Doucette’s harmonica, and bassist Russell Jackson’s acoustic upright. “Marshall plays the best acoustic blues in the Great White North,” raves Jackson, who’s toured and recorded with such legends as B.B. King, Charlie Musselwhite, Katie Webster, Kenny Neal, and Matt “Guitar” Murphy.
 
Born in a cabin in the woods, Marshall discovered the blues like many others of his generation did: through Jimi Hendrix. “I loved his freedom and expression,” he recalls. “When I heard him I knew I had found my direction and there was no turning back.” Marshall performed his first show in 1969 and continued playing with several other groups in the 1970s and ’80s. After studying birdsong and earning his Ph.D. in psychology he spent some time in California before returning to settle in Edmonton, Alberta. When Marshall came back to Canada he also came back to the blues, putting together an R&B outfit that eventually morphed into the electric blues-oriented Marshall Lawrence Band. Although Marshall’s taken more of a pure acoustic road since debuting with that band’s acclaimed 2003 disc Where’s the Party?, he hasn’t left an ounce of his inner electricity behind.
 
“For me, playing solo acoustic is the real deal,” says Marshall, who has his own signature-model guitar slide available from Rocky Mountain Slide Company and has a signature-model amplifier being developed by Pascal Vinot Custom Amps. “It’s just me, my guitar, maybe a harmonica or a stand-up bass, and the audience—that’s it. So it’s my job to entertain the audience and try to give them an escape from the bad patches in life. The blues are a healing music.”

 

 John Rutherford http://www.johnrutherfordmusic.com

John Rutherford is a singer/songwriter and guitarist based in Calgary, Alberta who's work, laced with the tonality, phrasing and spirit of the blues, fuses a broad and eclectic range of influences creating a sound distinctly his own.

Amidst a long and storied career Rutherford released his debut solo recording in 2010 called Echo Broadcast. Pulling together the various strands of his musical experience and artistic vision, Rutherford's recent work skillfully dove tails a roots/blues/folk/rock vibe with an imaginative and modern songwriters take on the stories, legends, vintage instruments and the soul and feel of the blues.

Echo Broadcast charted at campus and public radio across Canada reaching #1 on the Alberta wide CKUA Radio Network’s Top 30 Music Chart, #2 on the CKDU Top 30 in Halifax and #8 on the national Earshot Folk, Roots and Blues Music Chart. Echo Broadcast has received glowing reviews at press and radio both in Canada and the UK. The CD showed up on CKUA Radio Network's Top 100 for 2010.

Produced by fellow Calgary musician and record producer Lorrie Matheson, Echo Broadcast features Calgary rhythm section Scott Munro on bass and Chris Dadge on drums. Cedric Blary makes an appearance on several tracks playing clarinet as does Lorrie Matheson playing piano and organ.

John's beginnings include early exposure to blues music, lessons in blues guitar and attending countless concerts growing up in Toronto. These experiences spawned a lifelong fascination with vintage guitars, radio, blues history, pop culture, old records and the people and stories that opened his ears to an enchantng sound and world of music.

Moving to Calgary Rutherford emerged as a “King Eddy brat” during the late eighties heyday of the heralded east-end blues haunt; The King Edward Hotel.  During his King Eddy tenure Rutherford played with and learned from many of the great legends. His band The Hoodoo Sons performed there regularly.

In recent years the guitarist/singer/songwriter has championed several roots music projects touring and recording with many of the best roots and blues players in western Canada including the acoustic duo No Guff with guitarist Dan Tapanila and the all-star roots collective Highwater Jug Band with Tim Williams, Suitcase James, Mark Sadlier-Brown and Cedric Blary. Rutherford also continues to be a regular featured artist with the Edmonton based Front Porch Roots Revue and has recorded and toured extensively with upright bassist and singer/songwriter Ronnie Hayward. Other musical encounters include having worked with and recorded with Calgary blues singer Bill Dowey as well as Fort McLeod singer/songwriter John Wort Hannam.
 


 

Venue

The SliceMap
Venue:
The Slice   -   Website
Street:
314 - 8th Street South
ZIP:
T1J 2J6
City:
Lethbridge
State:
AB
Country:
Country: ca

Description

403-320-0117

Not only do we have the best pizza in town, we are also the center of Lethbridge's NightLife.

We are the only bar in town featuring live music every day of the week. Canadian touring artists, local legends and new emerging artists, everyone stops here.

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