2009, Mojo Rodeo Records

A Night in Woodstock is just thatโ€”a live recording of Paul Rishell and Annie Raines ripping it up at the now defunct (again) Joyous Lake. The gig, and the subsequent album, came about by chance. Todd Kwait was looking to capture Rishell, Raines, and local boy John Sebastian on celluloid for his 2007 jug-band documentary Chasinโ€™ Gusโ€™s Ghost. But what started as a simple affair turned into something more, and, since the machines were running, the entire show was captured for posterity. Blues fans are all the luckier for it.

Rishell has a rich, malleable voice that seems comfortable quoting Blind Boy Fullerโ€™s delicious โ€œCustard Pie,โ€ echoing Tommy Johnsonโ€™s spooky โ€œCanned Heat,โ€ or grooving through the singerโ€™s own โ€œBlues on a Holiday.โ€ Heโ€™s also a nimble guitarist who can clang a National steel body with the best of them. Raines, for her part, is a wailing harp player who can easily keep up with, well, say, Sebastian. Thatโ€™s no mean feat. Unfortunately, as a vocalist sheโ€™s not as strong, which makes โ€œGot To Flyโ€ the albumโ€™s sole unconvincing track.

Rishell and Raines are also joined here by keyboardist Bruce Katz, guitarist Chris Rival, and the rhythm section of bassist Reed Butler and drummer Billy MacGillivray. At its best moments, particularly on Jerry McCainโ€™s โ€œBad Creditโ€ and the closing double-harp workout โ€œOrange Dude Blues,โ€ A Night in Woodstock comes awfully close to capturing the intangible raw energy of a sweaty, small-club show. www.paulandannie.com.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *