News Release
For release June 10, 2004
2004 Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival announces stellar
line-up
NEWS ALERT: MIDNIGHT MAMBO BLUES CRUISE ON SATURDAY NIGHT
IS SOLD OUT.
PORTLAND, Ore.—Grammy-Award winning bluesman Keb’ Mo,’
presented by CO-OP Network, and the young blues-rocker
Jonny Lang, presented by First Tech Credit Union, will
headline the 2004 Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival, presented
by First Tech Credit Union.
The 17th annual blues festival opens at noon on Friday,
July 2, and concludes at 9 p.m., Monday, July 5,
at Tom McCall Waterfront Park on the banks of the Willamette
River in downtown Portland.
The largest blues festival West of the Mississippi,
the Waterfront Blues Festival annually attracts more than
120,000 blues fans from across the U.S. The festival offers
close to 100 performances on four stages. This year’s festival
offers more workshops, more Blues Cruises on the “Portland
Spirit,” more films and special programming than ever before
and fabulous fireworks on July 4.
Special focus The 2004 Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival
will celebrate the late Howlin’
Wolf and spotlight the blues-based music of Louisiana
and Texas.
Admission
Admission is a daily donation per person of $5 plus two cans
of nonperishable food. The festival is the major annual fund-raiser
for Oregon Food Bank. All festival donations benefit Oregon
Food Bank’s work to eliminate hunger and its root causes.
Schedule
The 2004 Waterfront Blues Festival promises to be another
stellar festival.
Friday, July 2, noon to 10 p.m.
Main Stages:
The festival will kick off at noon Friday with a high-wattage
line-up headlined by Grammy Award-winning bluesman Keb’
Mo’, presented by CO-OP Network, at 8:45 p.m. on the Miller
Stage.
The Holmes Brothers, presented by Karolyn March, Attorney,
will serve up a set of their gospel-tinged blues at 7:45 p.m.
on the Credit Union Stage. The Chicago Tribune hails the Holmes
Brothers as "the undisputed masters of blues-based American
roots music."
Then hear the pioneers of rock-boogie-blues, Canned Heat,
presented by CO-OP Network, at 6:45 p.m. on the Miller
Stage.
In a tribute to blues divas, Linda Michelet will kick
off the day’s line-up at noon on the Credit Union stage.
Other main stage highlights include Seattle slide guitar
wizard Henry Cooper and a reunion of the Albina
Allstars, featuring Norman Sylvester, Lloyd Allen,
Raydell Clay and Mel Solomon.
A&E Front Porch Stage:
Memphis bluesman Robert Belfour will share the
percussive, hypnotic guitar style he developed with neighbors
Junior Kimrough and R.L Burnside in the north Mississippi
hill country. Former Memphis compadre Mark Lemhouse will
back Belfour on drums. Lemhouse, the formidable guitarist,
now based in Salem, was nominated for two W.C. Handy Awards
this year. Finger picking and tall tales from acoustic bluesman
and raconteur Roy Book Binder and Portland ’s young
acoustic duo, Hillstomp, will round out Friday’s A&E
Front Porch line-up.
Blues
Cruise:
The “Portland Spirit” will head down the Willamette River
on the first of five festival blues cruises. The Hoodoo Moon
Blues Cruise will feature Canned Heat, The Holmes Brothers
, Robert Belfour and Mark Lemhouse, Roy Bookbinder
and Hillstomp. TICKETS ARE GOING FAST. WE EXPECT THIS TO
SELL OUT BEFORE THE FESTIVAL BEGINS.
Howlin’
Wolf celebration
After hours, the Northwest Film Center will present its Reel
Blues film series on the A&E Front Porch Stage at 10 p.m.
with a screening of “Hubert Sumlin: Living the Blues.”
The film profiles the pioneering Chicago blues guitarist
Hubert Sumlin. The film kicks off a series of presentations
at the Waterfront celebrating Sumlin’s former boss, the legendary
Howlin’ Wolf.
On Saturday, at 10 p.m., Reel Blues continues
that theme with the fabulous recent documentary, “The Howlin'
Wolf Story—The Secret History of Rock & Roll.”
On Saturday afternoon, the Household Workshop
Stage will host a presentation by writer and musician Mark
Hoffman, co-author of the recent biography “Moanin’
at Midnight: The Life & Times of Howlin’ Wolf.”
The festival’s celebration of the Wolf culminates
Monday at 2:15 p.m. when Sumlin joins the Paul deLay
Band on the Credit Union Stage with Howlin’ with Hubert.
Following the performance, blues photographer and historian
Dick Waterman will interview Sumlin at 4 p.m. on the
Household Workshop Stage.
Saturday, July 3, noon to 10 p.m.
A&E Front Porch
Stage:
The Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival will spotlight blues
from the bayous of the Louisiana and Texas Gulf Coast.
For the third year, the A&E Front Porch
stage will host its popular Zydeco Swamp Romp, headlined
by Rosie Ledet, the sultry “Zydeco Sweetheart” from
Lafayette , La. Leroy Thomas and The Zydeco Road Runners
and Brian Jack and the Zydeco Gamblers, both based
in Houston, are known for their dynamic, accordion-swinging
front men. Portland ’s TooLoose Cajun Band will open,
followed by a zydeco dance-lesson demonstration on a dance
floor brought in for the event.
Main Stages:
Mardi Gras voodoo will take over the main stage when the legendary
Mardi Gras Indian group, the Wild Tchoupitoulas, join
New Orleans ’ legendary Cyril Neville and the Uptown Allstars
in a collaboration presented by First Tech Credit Union. Cyril
Neville and the Uptown Allstars will celebrate their 20 th
anniversary of Crescent City blues, funk and R&B. Trumpeter
Kermit Ruffins and the Barbecue Swingers will deliver
bluesy, swinging Crescent City classics as channeled by funky,
modern hipsters.
Sonny Landreth, presented by iQ Credit Union, is perhaps
best known for his brilliant slide-guitar work with John Hiatt
and the Goners. On his most recent recording, Landreth returned
to his roots in the Louisiana swamps and earned a 2004 Grammy
nomination for Contemporary Blues Recording of the year. Saxophonist
Reggie Houston, who has worked with such New Orleans
legends as Charmaine Neville, Fats Domino and Irma Thomas,
is pondering moving to Portland to become first Artist in
Residence at Portland ’s acclaimed music education program,
Ethos, Inc. At the Waterfront Blues Festival, Houston will
guest star with Portland piano ace D.K. Stewart and
his quartet. The set will stretch musically from New Orleans
to Chicago and from Memphis to Houston.
Playing into the Mardi Gras theme will be Portland's raucous,
20-piece March Fourth Marching Band.
For hard core blues, it doesn’t get much grittier than the
searing father-son reunion of James and Lucky Peterson.
Guitarist-vocalist James Peterson, now 65 and based in Florida
, has critically acclaimed recordings of his own on the Southern
soul-blues Malaco/Waldoxy label. Dallas-based Lucky Peterson
was a child blues prodigy when, at age 6, he scored a top
10 hit on the R&B charts, landing appearances on the “Ed
Sullivan” and “Tonight” shows. Today, he is the most formidable
triple threat in the blues world: a fabulous organist, brilliant
guitarist and captivating vocalist whose explosive live sets
are the stuff of legend.
Other main stage highlights include a set by Portland ’s
Lloyd Jones, whose seamless groove gets reinforcement
from Mark “ Kaz” Kazanoff and the Texas Horns. The
Texas Horns, who have toured and recorded with such artists
as Delbert McClinton, Dr. John and Buddy Guy, will serve for
the second year as the festival’s resident horn section, lending
their firepower to a number of main stage sets.
Expect another strong line-up on Saturday from Northwest
Women in Blues and hard-hitting blues rock from southern
Oregon ’s Broadway Phil and the Shouters.
Blues Cruise:
The “Portland Spirit” will set sail Saturday afternoon
on its Women in Blues Cruise. The cruise includes Austin
blues-belter Angela Strehli with Ron Thompson
and former Mother Earth lead vocalist Tracy Nelson.
On the upper deck, weather permitting, lower deck if not,
the acclaimed finger-picker Mary Flower will hold court.
This fabulous cruise includes Portland ’s Janice Scroggins
and Linda Hornbuckle.
Reel Blues:
After hours, Reel Blues will present “The Howlin' Wolf
Story—The Secret History of Rock & Roll,” last year’s
fabulous documentary on the late Howlin’ Wolf .
Blues Cruise-SOLD OUT:
The “Portland Spirit,” meanwhile, will head up the Willamette
River on its Midnight Mambo Cruise with another stellar
line-up of New Orleans blues and R&B: Sonny Landreth,
Cyril Neville, Kermit Ruffins and Reggie Houston. THIS
CRUISE IS SOLD OUT.
Sunday, July 4, noon to 10 p.m.
A&E Front Porch Stage:
The festival and the Memphis-based Blues Foundation will
present this year’s winners of the International Blues Challenge:
San Diego ’s Zac Harmon and the Mid-South Blues Revue
who won ‘best band’ honors, and Arkansas-based Lightin’
Lee & the Upright Rooster, who took the duo/solo category.
The Cascade Blues Association and festival will present this
year’s Journey to Memphis finals. Four regional acts--Rose
City Kings, Portland; Lori Bouck and the Interpreters,
Oregon City; Sammy Eubanks, Spokane; and Randy Oxford
Band, Tacoma--will compete to determine the CBA’s IBC
entry in 2005. Last year’s Journey to Memphis winner, Blind
Rhino, will follow with a set of its high-energy blues-rock.
The A&E Stage will host Bill Rhoades’ annual Harmonica
Blow-off, featuring Johnny Dyer; former Muddy Waters
Band harp ace, Paul Oscher; Lynnwood Slim; harmonica-ace
and blues journalist Scott Dirks; and Portland ’s Bill
Rhoades. The all-star backing band includes John Lee Hooker’s
longtime guitarist, Michael Osborne.
Main Stages:
San Diego ’s Paladins — “one of the most powerful
roots-rocking groups in the nation,” according to the Los
Angeles Times — promises to bring down the house in a rare
collaboration with the Texas Horns.
Detroit soul-blues veterans, The Motor City Rhythm &
Blues Pioneers, will feature the vocal talents of Joe
Weaver, Stanley Mitchell and Kenny Martin, all
of whom had hits in Motown in the 1950s and ‘60s. Detroit
drummer R.J. Spangler, who previously backed Johnnie
Basset and Alberta Adams at the Waterfront Blues Festival,
will lead the Pioneers’ hard-grooving backing band.
San Francisco roots rockers Jeffrey Halford and the Healers
team up with legendary Texas keyboardist Augie Meyers—known
for his work with the Sir Douglas Quintet, Doug Sahm and the
Texas Tornados, Bob Dylan and John Hammond—for a set of blues
and Tex-Mex flavored roots rock. Austin ’s Ruthie Foster,
a surprise hit on the A&E Front Porch last year, returns
to the main stage with percussionist Cyd Cassone for
a set of gospel-tinged blues. The line-up also features Robbie
Laws and Hoodoo Nation.
The Mannish Boys, a “super group” in the truest sense
of the term, features some of the cream of the West Coast
blues scene: former Fabulous Thunderbirds guitarist Kid
Ramos, San Francisco’s Frank “Paris Slim” Goldwasser
also on guitar, Randy Chortkoff on harmonica, and bassist/vocalist
Finis Tasby. In several different combinations, the
group will back special guests including veteran harmonica
ace Johnny Dyer and Southern California harmonica ace
Lynnwood Slim.
July 4 highlights include an old-time Gospel Summit
with Linda Hornbuckle, Janice Scroggins and Shirley
Nanette.
A celebration of the soul-blues legacy of Stax records
tentatively will feature veteran Portland soul singer Ural
Thomas, who worked as a backup singer for Wilson Picket;
Olivia Warfield; Kathy Walker; and Rubberneck’s Ricardo
Ojeda.
Joey Fender & the ‘55s, from Anchorage , Alaska
, will deliver blues and roots.
The Lucky Peterson Band with soul-blues vocalist Greg
Smith will close the stage. Smith, now based in Dallas,
Texas, played with Linda Hornbuckle when he lived in Portland.
Blues Cruise:
The Southern California super group, the Mannish Boys includes
Fabulous Thunderbird guitarist Kid Ramos and guitarist
Arthur Adams. The cruise also features Jesters Brass
Band and Dylan Thomas Vance.
Fireworks:
The evening ends with spectacular fireworks over the Willamette
River .
Monday, July 5, noon to 9 p.m.
Main Stages:
The 2004 Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival will continue at
noon on Monday, a legal holiday, with a line-up that features
a formidable crop of young guitar slingers balanced by a host
of seasoned blues men and women who honed their chops in years
of gigs in Texas roadhouses.
Headliner Jonny Lang, 22, presented by First Tech
Credit Union, will close the festival at 7:50 p.m. on the
Miller Stage. Lang, who already has a Grammy Award and two-platinum
albums under his belt, will play material from his hard-rocking,
new recording, “Long Time Coming. ”
Three other young guitar slingers will precede Lang, presented
by First Tech Credit Union. Each promises to give Lang a run
for his money. The Canadian-born, now Memphis-based guitarist,
Anthony Gomes, is a favorite on the East and Midwest
blues circuits. Readers of “Blues Wax Magazine,” the nation’s
largest-circulation blues publication, recently voted him
“Artist of the Year.” From northern California, the 26-year-old
guitarist Shane Dwight and his band have earned rave
reviews at such prestigious events as the Monterey Bay Blues
Festival and San Francisco Jazz Festival. Monte Montgomery
may be the most mind-blowing guitarist to emerge from Austin
, a city long known for its guitar virtuosos. Barely 30, Montgomery
was recently named Austin ’s “Acoustic Guitarist of the Year”
for the seventh year in a row. And “Guitar Player” magazine
just proclaimed him “One of the 50 Greatest Guitarists of
All Time.”
Opening Monday is another fiery young guitarist with roots
in the Texas blues tradition, Michael LePaul Williams.
Now based in Seattle, Williams grew up in Austin, Texas,
son of the legendary late blues-soul singer Junior Medrow
Williams, lead singer of Stevie Ray Vaughan's first group,
The Cobras.
Montgomery was still a toddler in the early ’70s when blues
belter Angela Strehli and her cohorts—Stevie Ray Vaughan,
Kim Wilson, Lou Ann Barton, Marcia Ball, Jimmi Vaughan—created
the rock-and-blues sound that helped spur the blues revival
of the next two decades. At the Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival,
Strehli will team up with former Mother Earth vocalist Tracy
Nelson for a female spin on roadhouse blues, backed by
a superb band led by San Francisco guitar ace Ron Thompson
reinforced by the Texas Horns.
Curtis Salgado will take a day off from a West Coast
tour opening for Steve Miller to put in an appearance that
promises to be a festival highlight. Salgado “is keeping the
classic flame of soul music alive,” raves the Los Angeles
Times in response to Salgado’s tour in support of his powerful
new Shanachie release, “Strong Suspicion.”
Stevie Ray Vaughn called former Howlin’ Wolf guitarist, Hubert
Sumlin, “the heaviest, most original guitar player I’ve
ever heard.” Jim Hendrix called him “my favorite guitarist.”
Sumlin will join Portland’s Paul deLay Band for Howlin’
with Hubert, a set celebrating the music of Wolf as well
as deLay and Sumlin. Following the Wolf’s death in 1976, Sumlin
and deLay toured the West Coast together in a band backing
pianist Sunnyland Slim. Both have remained friends and admirers
of each other’s work.
Other Monday highlights include a guitar shoot-out by the
Strat Daddies, featuring Jim Mesi, Tim “Too Slim”
Langford, Terry Robb and Robbie Laws, backed by
Jimmy Lloyd Rea on bass and Randy Lilya on drums.
A&E Front Porch Stage:
The A&E Front Porch stage will feature delta and acoustic
blues with sets by Los Angeles finger picker Doug MacLeod
and Muddy Waters Band alumnus Paul Oscher in his multi-instrumental
solo set, “Alone with the Blues.”
Houston bluesman Texas Johnny Brown toured and recorded
with Amos Milbourn, Bobby Bland, Junior Parker and Ruth Brown
and cut the guitar tracks on many classic recordings put out
by the Duke-Peacock label in the late 1950s and ’60s. Brown
makes his Waterfront Blues Festival debut and closes the Front
Porch Stage.
Blues
Cruise:
Texas Johnny Brown will share the bill on the afternoon
Lone Star Blues Cruise on the “Portland Spirit” with Ruthie
Foster, Monte Montgomery and Austin expatriate, the
Original Snakeboy. Recently relocated to Portland, Snakeboy
took first place at the 2000 National Slide Guitar Festival.
Last year’s Blues Cruises on the Willamette River were so
popular that this year the festival expanded the schedule
to five—three afternoon and two late-night cruises. Cruise
admission fees benefit Oregon Food Bank’s work to eliminate
hunger and its root causes. No-host hors d’ oeuvres and bar
are available on all cruises. Photo identification is required
to board. MIDNIGHT MAMBO CRUISE IS SOLD OUT.
Space is limited. Purchase tickets in advance through July
1 from TicketsWest, 503-224-8499, 1-800-992-8499 or www.ticketswest.com
. TicketsWest will charge a convenience fee. Oregon Food Bank
will sell any tickets remaining after July 1 at the festival
at Oregon Food Bank’s Information Booth by the Household Workshop
Stage. TicketsWest is also selling four-day festival passes
for $15 plus convenience fee.
Afternoon cruises run from 3 to
4:30 p.m.
Board at 2:30 p.m.
Afternoon cruises are open to all ages. Tickets are available
in advance from TicketsWest for $15 for adults and $10 for
children plus a convenience fee. That’s less than the cost
of a typical “Portland Spirit” cruise without the spectacular
music. After July 1, tickets go up to $20 for adults and $15
for children.
Women in Blues Cruise, Saturday, July
3: Angela Strelhi, Tracy Nelson, Mary Flower, Janice Scroggins
and Linda Hornbuckle.
Afternoon Blues Cruise, Sunday, July 4:
The Mannish Boys with Kid Ramos and Arthur Adams, Jesters
Brass Band and Dylan Thomas Vance.
Lone Star Blues Cruise, Monday, July 5:
Texas Johnny Brown, Ruthie Foster, Monte Montgomery, the Original
Snakeboy.
Late-night cruises sail from 10:45
p.m. to 1:15 a.m. Board at 10:15 p.m.
Late-night cruises are open to blues fans 21 and older.
Tickets are available in advance from TicketsWest for $25
plus a convenience fee. After July 1, tickets go up to $30.
Hoodoo Moon Blues Cruise, Friday, July 2:
Canned Heat, The Holmes Brothers, Robert Belfour and Mark
Lemhouse, Roy Book Binder and Hillstomp.
Midnight Mambo Curise, Saturday, July 3:
Cyril Neville, Sonny Landreth, Kermit Ruffins, Reggie Huston.
SOLD OUT.
Look for in-depth educational workshops on the Household
Workshop Stage and children’s activities at the Ethos
Blues Lab. Presentations and workshops scheduled include an
introduction to Piedmont guitar styles by Mary Flower;
a blues photography presentation by blues historian and photographer
Dick Waterman; a guitar workshop by Roy Book Binder;
an introduction to Chicago blues piano, harmonica and guitar
by Paul Oscher; blues and roots keyboard by Augie
Meyers; "Blues Piano for Kids: Learing a Professor
Long-Hair groove with David Moore"; a harmonica
workshop with Johnny Dyer and Scott Dirks, harmonica
player and co-author of the acclaimed biography "Blues
With a Feelin': The Little Walter Story"; artist
interviews with Hubert Sumlin and Ruthie Foster;
blues harmonica and piano classes for kids and more.
“The workshops give the festival a cultural depth that doesn’t
exist at most other festivals,” says Lisa Wiebe, director
of development at Oregon Food Bank.
Don’t miss the Empty Bowls booth. The Oregon Potters Association
coordinates Empty Bowls, a fund-raiser to benefit Oregon Food
Bank. The association collects pottery donations from its
members and sells them—most for just $10—at the blues festival.
Festival
sponsors
Oregon Food Bank thanks festival sponsors for making the
2004 Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival possible. The
2004 Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival is presented by First
Tech Credit Union with major sponsorship by CO-OP Network,
Household, Miller Genuine Draft, KINK fm102 and The
Oregonian A&E.
Supporting Sponsorship is provided by iQ Credit
Union, Pepsi, Snapple, Safeway Refreshe, Beringer Wine, Henry's,
Tully's Coffee, Frito Lay Snacks, Dreyer's Ice Cream, Yoshida
Sauce, Smuckers, Stonyfield Farm Yogurt, Zenner's Sausage
and Smoked Meats, Gillette, POVA, Riverplace Hotel, OregonLive.com,
KBOO, KOIN TV6, Northwest Film Center, Spring PCS, Day Wireless
Systems, Green Mountain Energy, Edge Design, Music Millennium,
Guitar Center, Beard Frames, Karolyn H. March, Attorney, Cascade
Blues Assocation, Oregon Potters Association and Cascade Zydeco
Association.
About
Oregon Food Bank
Oregon Food Bank is a nonprofit, charitable organization.
It is the hub of a statewide network of more than 800 hunger-relief
agencies serving Oregon and Clark County, Wash. Oregon Food
Bank recovers food from farmers, manufacturers, wholesalers,
retailers, individuals and government sources. It then distributes
that food to 20 regional food banks across Oregon . Eighteen
are independent, charitable organizations. OFB directly operates
the two regional food banks serving the Portland-metro area.
Those two centers distribute food weekly to more than 300
food pantries, soup kitchens, shelters and other programs
helping low-income individuals in Multnomah, Clackamas, Clark
and Washington counties. Oregon Food Bank also works to eliminate
the root causes of hunger through advocacy and public education.
###
For more information, visit www.waterfrontbluesfest.com
and www.oregonfoodbank.org
or call 503-973-FEST
Contacts:
Jean Kempe-Ware, public relations manager
Oregon Food Bank
503-419-4170 (office)
503-572-7588 (cell)
jkempe-ware@oregonfoodbank.org
Peter Dammann, talent coordinator
503-283-3225
damray@europa.com
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