November 2004
Frank is also part of the Down
Home Super Trio - their new release, the live recording from the 2003
Lucerne Blues Festival, is out now!
FRANK GOLDWASSERbuy this album at CrossCut Mailorder - a division of Bear Family Records
FRANK GOLDWASSER - gtr/voc
KIRK FLETCHER - gtr
ALEX SCHULTZ - gtr
JIM CALIRE - piano/organ/accordion/tenor/baritone
RED YOUNG - organ
LEE THORNBURG - trombone
DAVE WOODROW - tenor/baritone, GERALD JOHNSON - bass
RICK REED - bass
LORENZO MARTINEZ - congas/percussion
PAUL FASULO - drums
JOHN HANES - drums
CYNTHIA MANLEY & JESSICA WILLIAMS - background vocals
Special guests:
PHILLIP WALKER - gtr
SOUHAIL KASPAR - egyptian tabla
J.J. MALONE - piano.
(Original Deltagroove recordings)
Frank Goldwassers neues Album ist ein Meisterwerk voller versteckter kleiner genialer Ideen. Mit diesem Werk wird er sich in der ersten Liga amerikanischen Bluesgitarristen etablieren können. Goldwasser bleibt Kosmopolit. Sein weiter musikalischer Horizont übersteigt den vieler US-Kollegen, seine große Liebe ist der Blues - und sein Herz schlägt in Europa.
«««»»»
"Bluju", his first album for CrossCut and debut under his
given name, bears a lot of surprising thoughts and ideas, and qualities.
Not a one-shot production, not the same old blues/rock.
"Bluju" is
a very original and fascinating album. Frank is not disclaiming blues
tradition and history, but has added stylistic elements usually not
connected with the blues.
Tabla master Souhail Kaspar (Kronos
Quartet, Sting) guests on "I Can't Stand It"; African rhythms
are incorporated into several tunes.
Blues from Oakland can be heard in "Feels
Like Home," "Back
Door Key" and also "Three Sisters". "Well, Well,
Josephine" and Jimmy Reeds "I'm A Love You" are describing
the Mississippi-Chicago connection in Frank Goldwasser's blues. His "Homesick
Blues" is based on the beat of the Somalian pop star Maryam Mursal.
Alia Farka Toure's influence can be heard on "Don't Take Away My
Love", and "Petit A Petit (L'Oiseau Fait Son Nid") [French
for "Little By Little (The Bird Builds His Nest)"], comes with
New Orleans funk groove à la Neville Brothers. Furthermore, you'll
hear a lot of slide guitar and guitar phrases, reminiscent of Lafayette
Thomas or Albert Collins.
Los Angeles' own guitar ace Alex
Schultz (ex-Mighty Flyers – see
also CCD 11079 by B.B. & The
Blues Shacks)
contributes a few great solos, so does veteran bluesman Phillip
Walker.
Frank Goldwasser's new album is a highly inspired little master piece.
With this release his name will be established in the first league of
American blues guitar players.
Goldwasser will remain cosmopolitan. Musicalwise,
he is more open-minded than many of his Amercian contemporaries. His
big love is the blues, and his heart remains in Europe.
Gesanglich einwandfrei, satter Gitarrenton und tolle Songs (...) Vom Stil her schwer einzuordnen, oder vielleicht ganz einfach die gelungene Vermischung all dieser Stile durch einen intelligenten Europäer. Eine dicke Empfehlung!
Rollin'& Tumblin'
02/2004 #28
Robert Sacre
Frank's influences extend beyond strict Blues with riffs & rhythms inspired by Somali & Malian genres but it is his deep empathy for Blues which shines through. A quality addition to any Blueshound's record collection.
www.BluesFreepress.org.uk
Fall 2003
Judge Jones
Things are a little more cosmopolitan than most
blues ablums though (...). Frank has come up with an original sounding
CD – but one
that still remains a very fine contemporary Blues album.
Blues In The South
November 2003
Norman Darwen
Frank Goldwasser was born January 6, 1960 in Paris, France. Infected by
the blues virus after listening to Hound Dog Taylor's "Natural Boogie" LP
record, he mostly likely could not imagine to develop into a real blues
cosmopolitan.
Frank Goldwasser came to California in 1982. Troyce Key, with whom he had
worked in Europe, invited him to the U.S.A. The first couple of weeks, Frank
lived in the back stage area of "Eli's Mile High Club", one of
Northern California's few real blues clubs. Recollections of his early days
in Oakland can be heard in "Three Sisters".
Soon Frank took over the elading role in the club's house band. Later he went
on tour with Jimmy McCracklin and continued to work with renowned musicians from
the bay area, most notably Lowell Fulson and Charlie Musselwhite.
Only two years
after arriving in California, Frank recorded his first 45. Two LP records, recorded
under his stage-name Paris Slim, established his reputation as an innovative
musician with empathy. "I was privileged
to experience the Bay Area blues scene; I caught the tail end of it, when
it was still a breathing, living thing. If somebody should listen to my stuff
and hear an Oakland Blues thing in it, I'd be very pleased."