The full Songs From The Garden album, plus as bonus tracks - the Oom Chugga Remix Challenge album, all on one audio CD. Comes in a lovely eco-pack, with cover art by young Dex Ellis and package design by Katie Hawkinson. There's a fold-out insert (not pictured here yet) with liner notes, credits and photos, and that's about it! On Berkeley Cat Records, while supplies last.
Includes unlimited streaming of Songs From The Garden
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
ships out within 3 days
edition of 300
Purchasable with gift card
$15USD
Streaming + Download
Includes high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more. Paying supporters also get unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app.
When my father got drunk, he could go on endlessly and repetitively about how all he wanted was for his family to be happy and how he was going to turn our garage into his rumpus room. I gathered that the rumpus room was to be a place where he and his men friends could drink, talk shit and listen to music. In our house the radio was never off. News, sports (mainly baseball games) and music.
We had increasingly attractive record playing outfits in our small new home in George Washington Carver Manor Annex in southeast LA. The 78’s and 33’s were neatly stacked but not in any discernible order. Count Basie (my father's) might be close to Debussy or The Sons of the Pioneers (my stepmother's), but black music dominated.
Jimmy Witherspoon (“Ain’t Nobody’s Business”) was fine, but I seem to have learned that T-Bone Walker was not. My dad was more inclined to Basie than to Ellington, although he bought everything Ellington recorded. Drink bent my father toward the blues. The more drink, the nastier the blues.
I learned that the blues were important and, during the folk music explosion, I purchased and wore out my copy of Robert Johnson’s “King of the Delta Blues”.
But I would never dare to sing the blues. I was not up to the subtleties. Although I could hear them, I did not trust myself to reproduce them. Also, I was a balladeer, after the fashion of Eliza on this album. But since I’d done a Bossa nova, a country and western, a love song and a folk-like tune, it seemed fitting that I try the blues. My son enthusiastically supported the idea. As ever, my daughter, Zoe, was the enabler.
I mined David’s and Zoe’s connections to assemble the players on this tune, surrounding myself with fail-safe music no matter how well I rendered my song. I call them “The Magic Carpet Blues Ensemble"
The lyrics came easy. I have been astonished at how long my sputtering equipment lasted. But, in no way commensurate with my fantasies. So, I wrote from the standpoint of the perennially bragging black man at the end of his powers. Still pretending. But it’s about loss, as most of the blues is.
credits
from Songs From The Garden,
released November 20, 2021
Russ Ellis - Vocals
Rhonda Benin - Vocals
The Magic Carpet Blues Ensemble
Tammy Hall-Hawkins - Piano and arrangement
Cedricke Dennis - Guitar
Darryl Anders - Bass
Deszon Claiborne - Drums
Sax - Dave Ellis
Recorded at Bird and Egg Studios by Cam Perridge
Mixed by Cam Perridge
A concept album where meteorology is a metaphor for anxiety, the new one from timing is artful indie at its finest. Bandcamp New & Notable Feb 13, 2023
Margo Price's latest album tackles loss, failure, and freedom over lush pop, psychedelic country, and rock arrangements. Bandcamp New & Notable Jan 13, 2023
A charity album that celebrates the music of Georgia sees Jason Isbell collaborate with Julien Baker, Brandi Carlile, and more. Bandcamp New & Notable Oct 28, 2021
Simpson’s first full-on concept album, a Civil War-set story written in tribute to his grandparents, celebrates country tradition while simultaneously subverting it. Bandcamp Album of the Day Aug 30, 2021
Recorded live at Macon City Auditorium in May 2016, this live set ranks among Jason Isbell's finest, most comprehensive performances. Bandcamp New & Notable Apr 22, 2021