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Classics (2008)
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Track Listing |
| 1 |
Boogie Woogie Blues |
5:08 |
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| 2 |
Somebody's Gotta Go |
6:06 |
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| 3 |
Louella |
3:47 |
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| 4 |
You Don't Miss Your Water |
4:00 |
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| 5 |
Everytime I Roll The Dice |
3:50 |
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| 6 |
Dangerous Mood |
5:32 |
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| 7 |
Something on Your Mind |
6:09 |
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| 8 |
Hush Hush |
3:04 |
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| 9 |
Don't Let Me Down |
4:10 |
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| 10 |
God Bless the Child |
5:11 |
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Reviews
"An uptown beat pulses through Classics, a wonderfully produced self release from Pennsylvania's Ann Kerstetter Band that covers deep soul (William Bell's Stax classic "You don't Miss Your Water"), the Beatles ("Don't Let Me Down"), and roadhouse R&B ( Delbert McClinton's "Every time I Roll The Die") but favors jumping blues and boogie ( "Louella," "Boogie Woogie Blues") and elegant ballads ("Dangerous Mood," "God Bless the Child"). Kerstetter is a fabulous singer with personality, wide emotional range, and a welcome lack of affectation. And the arrangements provided by the band (Sean Farley on guitar, Greg Burgess on piano, Andy Seal on bass, and Steve Mitchell on drums) are praiseworthy."
-Tom Hyslop
Blues Revue Magazine June/July 2009 |
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"Ann Kerstetters vocals are powerful, and filled with emotion. The musicians surrounding her are tight and work very well together. Here is a group of artists whos talents seem to have no boundaries, The Ann Kerstetter Band delivers a refreshing mix of jazz, blues, and rock that is guaranteed to satisfy. "Classics" is one of the best surprises of the year. With covers of some of the biggest names in the industry. "Classics" is truly an instant classic."
-Al Lundy
Highway Blues / KZUM 89.3 Lincoln, NE |
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"I recently found a great new blues act hiding in Northumberland, PA. Ann Kerstetter and her band bring new life to some well-known and forgotten blues hits on her latest CD, CLASSICS. Whether it’s a boogie number or a slow one, Ann and her band deliver.”
-Greg "Doc" Lefebre
"Doc's Juke Joint" Jazz901.org
Rochester, NY
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"Take a passionate vocalist, at one with her music, add four extremely talented musicians who blend as a single unit, and "Classics" really is a classic - the vocalist, the song selection, and the musicians combine together for one great listening experience."
-Goodtime Charlie Lockard
The Blues Foundation "Keeping the Blues Alive award winner" |
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"Ann has teamed up with some of the area's finest musicians for this most recent release, Greg Burgess on piano, Any Seal on bass, Steve Mitchell on drums, and Sean Farley on guitar. This disc is all that it implies... Classics, written and originally performed by the best performers in the business. The covers performed here are exceptionally well done. The musicianship on this disc is flawless, the arrangements are impeccable and the vocals are strong, powerful and emotionally charged. Frankly, it gets no better than this. Based on this alone I would recommend buying this disc. Add to that the fact that they are local players and that proceeds from album sales will help to send the band to Memphis for the International Blues Challenge, I would recommend buying several and getting the Christmas shopping done early. The disc was recorded and mixed locally at Green Valley Recording. Do your part, do it often and do it 'til it hurts. There is nothing more important than supporting live local music...and when it's this good, there's no excuse."
-Bill Wilson
Billtown Blues, Fall 2008 |
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"Initially, I was a bit hesitant to review an album with no original tunes on it, since I rarely enjoy covers more than the originals. But being that I was told this was a "blues" cover album, I went ahead due to my shallow knowledge of many blues classics anyway. Upon listening to Classics, I was pleasantly surprised on many levels. First of all, The Ann Kerstetter Band is much more versatile than to simply be labeled a "blues" band, as they cover a wide range of genres and sub-genres that extend from classic jazz to modern country with a strong core of blues in between. They also span a large chunk of time, as each of the past eight decades (except the 1980s) is represented in the compositions on Classics origins. Another pleasant surprise is how fantastically polished are the performances on Classics. Kerstetter brought in an impressive group of true musicians to complement her fine voice with its requisite burr. Piano virtuoso Greg Burgess is out front on many of the songs traversing style and tempo while bassist Andy Seal uses the classic stand-up instrument to perfection. Add to this, true professionals Steve Mitchell on drums and Sean Farley on guitars and you've got a solid production from Green Valley Studio.
Add to this the back story, and a fantastic one at that, where we witness the re-ignition of a fire that will not die. Ann Kerstetter started performing four decades ago at age 16 and continued to do so into the 1980s. She then spent a two full decades on hiatus from any public performance until just a few years ago. Sometimes the Phoenix does rise. The songs themselves are all well done with some exceptional standouts - William Bell's "You Don't Miss the Water", Big Jay McNeeley's "Something
On Your Mind", and the Beatles' "Don't Let Me Down", which is particularly interesting with its arrangement of 12-string acoustic and bass by Andy
Seal and special guest Blaine Renn, who supplies the acoustic lead. A note of irony on this latter song is the fact that Burgess does not play on a
cover of a song that so prominently featured Billy Preston on the electric piano but nevertheless, it certainly sounds good with this acoustic arrangement. To point out the rare weak points of the album itself, I would start with the sequence of the songs, which hides some of the finer tunes while kicking-off with the boiler-plate "Boogie Woogie Blues". There is also an under use of high-end presence in the drum mix, which gives them a bit too much of an "eighties" sound that could better compliment the more authentic-sounding instruments. Kerstetter herself feels that she "held back on" Billie Holiday's "God Bless This Child", but it is hard to find much wrong with the fine version that caps off the Classics album.
All in all, this album grows on you in its simplicity and exploration of American music from a different time and place. I'm glad that I gave Classics a serious listen (several, actually) and I look forward to the second album by The Ann Kerstetter Band, Duke St. Diary , which contains mostly original material and is due out later this year."
-Sigourney Soul
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