CD Details
- Released: November 16, 2004
- Label: Mountain Top Prod
Tracks:
- 1.Money Back Guarantee
- 2.R.J. Getup! Milk That Cow
- 3.Watch Out
- 4.What I Got to Have
- 5.West Winds Are Blowing
- 6.Bit Off More Than I Can Chew
- 7.Goat Whiskers
- 8.Goin' in Your Direction
- 9.Jelly Selling Woman
- 10.I Feel So Good
- 11.Courtin' in a Cadillac
- 12.Miss Heidu Ho
- 13.It's My Life, Baby
- 14.How Much More?
- 15.South City Fog
Product Description:
Personnel: R.J. Mischo (vocals, harmonica); R.J. Mischo; Bob Welsh (piano); Walter Shuffelsworth (drums); Rusty Zinn, Steve Freund (vocals, guitar).
Audio Mixers: Myles Boisen; Frank "Paris Slim" Goldwasser.
Liner Note Author: Frank "Paris Slim" Goldwasser.
Recording information: Guerilla Recording, Oakland, CA (08/20/1998/10/27/1998).
This was Mischo's first album after his move from Minneapolis to San Francisco, and his fifth overall. It's a nice mix of seven originals and eight covers, with two instrumentals. Mischo is one heck of a harp player, a good singer, and an especially proficient songwriter. Obviously the other musicians on the CD agree or you wouldn't see their names on the bill. They include first-call guitarists Rusty Zinn and Steve Freund (who relocated to California in 1994 after playing almost 20 years with several Chicago masters). Although not a live recording, West Wind Blowin' has that sound. When you're listening to it, you feel like you've just walked out of a jumpin' club (sans crowd noise). The only exceptions to this are "R. J. Getup! Milk That Cow!," with just Mischo on harp and spoken word and Randy Bermudes on stand-up bass; and the closer, "South City Fog," a slow, moody instrumental showcasing Mischo's forlorn-sounding, chromatic harp playing. The best tracks are the straight up Chicago originals "What I Got to Have," the swingin' Sonny Boy Williamson tribute "Goat Whiskers," and Junior Wells' "It's My Life Baby." Not only a strong effort by Mischo, West Wind Blowin' is one of Zinn's best performances. Be sure to check out his Sammy Lawhorn vibrato on "Jelly Sellin' Woman." ~ Ann Wickstrom