The 15th annual Tampa Bay Blues Fest is around the corner Fri., March 20 through Sun. March 22 at Vinoy Park on the downtown St. Pete waterfront. Needless to say, its a good time. Sunny days, cool evenings, free-blowing beer and hour after hour of hot, quintessentially American music.
Heres a primer for the event, some quick blurbs about the acts to whet the appetite. Ticket prices range from $30 for a single-day ticket to $350 for a three-day backstage pass. This year also introduces organized after-party jams on Friday and Saturday nights, to be held at Nova 535 in St. Pete. Here are details.
Friday, March 20
12:30 p.m. Robin Rogers The blonde, blue-eyed songstress out of Charlotte, N.C. has quite a bit of that Koko Taylor roar in her.
2:30 p.m. Lurrie Bell The 49-year-old son of the late, legendary Chicago harp player Carey Bell wields a Stratocaster and has a lusty voice somewhat reminiscent of B.B. King.
4:30 p.m. Coco Montoya A one-time protégé of Albert Iceman Collins, L.A.-based singer/guitarist Montoya is a familiar figure on the blues festival circuit.
6:30 p.m. Curtis Salgado The 55-year-old veteran of the Northwest blues scene has played for a few years in Robert Crays band and in 1995 did a short stint as lead singer in Carlos Santanas band. He sings and plays harmonica.
8:30 p.m. The Fabulous Thunderbirds Singer/harp man Kim Wilson has been the constant over the bands 35-year history (which has included since-departed guitarists Jimmie Vaughan and Duke Robillard). Having scored a handful of hits in the mid 1980s (Tuff Enuff, Wrap it Up), the Austin-based quintet soldiers on as a more-than-dependable juke-joint R&B band.
Sat., March 21
11:30 a.m. Teresa James and the Rhythm Tramps Houston-bred, L.A.-based Teresa James brings a kind of Bonnie Raitt/Susan Tedeschi feel to her singing gritty but feminine. Sexy.
This article appears in Mar 4-10, 2009.
