Gregg Allman was named international artist of the year, while New Brunswick bluesman Matt Andersen was named the year's top acoustic act, male vocalist and entertainer at Canada's 15th Maple Blues Awards ceremonies overnight.
Ottawa's MonkeyJunk earned awards for best electric act, best recording and best drummer. Saskatoon native Suzie Vinnick won the best songwriter and best female vocalist awards.
Nominees for the annual Maple Blues Awards are chosen by a panel of more than 50 experts; winners are then selected by blues fans across the country. The full list of winners is below.
Here's a look at our review of Gregg Allman's standout 2011 blues release 'Low Country Blues.' Click through the title for more ...
GREGG ALLMANLOW COUNTRY BLUES (2011): This record's hat-tips to blues, R&B, gospel and jazz only underscore how each provided uniquely American spices in the Allman Brothers Band's bubbling Southern-rock synthesis. Even so, it could have been recipe for a snoozy conversation piece if not for Allmanthe archetypical risktaker. Check out the appropriately fidgety edge he adds to Muddy Waters' I Can't Be Satisfied," as Allman dirties up a Chess-era groove. Other highlights include a devastatingly frank update of Sleepy John Estes' Floating Bridge," with a surging assist at the piano from Dr. John; Junior Wells' Little by Little," transformed into something resembling a lost soul side from the 1950s; Skip James' Devil Got My Woman," which again reveals the lively intellect of guitarist Doyle Bramhall II; and Amos Milburn's hardy R&B classic Tears, Tears, Tears," where Allmanbelying a series of serious health problemshowls with a shanty-shaking, soul-rending power. He's still got it. Every bit of it.
Ottawa's MonkeyJunk earned awards for best electric act, best recording and best drummer. Saskatoon native Suzie Vinnick won the best songwriter and best female vocalist awards.
Nominees for the annual Maple Blues Awards are chosen by a panel of more than 50 experts; winners are then selected by blues fans across the country. The full list of winners is below.
Here's a look at our review of Gregg Allman's standout 2011 blues release 'Low Country Blues.' Click through the title for more ...
GREGG ALLMANLOW COUNTRY BLUES (2011): This record's hat-tips to blues, R&B, gospel and jazz only underscore how each provided uniquely American spices in the Allman Brothers Band's bubbling Southern-rock synthesis. Even so, it could have been recipe for a snoozy conversation piece if not for Allmanthe archetypical risktaker. Check out the appropriately fidgety edge he adds to Muddy Waters' I Can't Be Satisfied," as Allman dirties up a Chess-era groove. Other highlights include a devastatingly frank update of Sleepy John Estes' Floating Bridge," with a surging assist at the piano from Dr. John; Junior Wells' Little by Little," transformed into something resembling a lost soul side from the 1950s; Skip James' Devil Got My Woman," which again reveals the lively intellect of guitarist Doyle Bramhall II; and Amos Milburn's hardy R&B classic Tears, Tears, Tears," where Allmanbelying a series of serious health problemshowls with a shanty-shaking, soul-rending power. He's still got it. Every bit of it.