The Robin Thrush Jr. Band

The Robin Thrush Jr. Band

Genres: blues, guitar, blues rock

About The Robin Thrush Jr. Band

Below was translated from Dutch to English using the 'Google Translator' application. The original text can be read here: THE ROBIN THRUSH Jr. BAND – MUSIC CITY JAM – LIVE IN THE STUDIO Robin Thrush Jr. was born April 27, 1989 in Roseville, California. He soon followed the footsteps of daddy Robin Sr, who taught him the good tricks of the guitar game. In 2000, the family moved to Nashville, Tennessee, and the The Robin Thrush Jr band was established - first as four, on the CDs "Live at SIR and" Born To Play ", and since 2006 as 'power trio' with Robin Sr bass bass, David Richardson on drums and Robin Jr who takes the guitar and vocals. On the album 'Live In The Studio' "Music City Jam, Live in the Studio", the third CD of the band is a live studio shot, without overdubs, and released in November 2009. It sounds like a driven guitarist who does not bump into his chairs or chairs: Alvin Lee, Chuck Berry, Johnny Winter, Freddie King, Jimmy Page, Mike Bloomfield, John Cipollina, John Fogerty and Cream, they all pass the revue in his elongated solo's (sometimes a bit too)? Vocal has to grow Robin Jr, but it is clear that the voice is in second place: priority no. 1 is the guitar, and that's fine. "Baby Please Do not Go" - this solid version of the song that everyone knows of The Doors, instantly adds the tone of the CD: guitar - heavy, heavy guitar ... clearly influenced by "tougher" music from the late 60's and the 70's. "Parchman Farm" - another "classic" in the early hard rock genre - I think Blue Cheer, but probably more to me (age) and the fact that 'Vincebus Eruptum' lasts 1/3 of my records "collection" ... Bo Diddley's "Who Do You Love" sounds like a jam-like jam, like those in the 1970s who listened to podiums ("jam band" anyone?), A "tradition" with the advent of the years '80 hit the corner of the corner, but now and again the head turns up. In this band, without doubt, under the influence of bassist Robin Sr, who was active in the sixties and seventies in San Francisco as a guitarist. "Music City Blues" - begins as a "resting point", a slow blues with clean guitar work, which is more and more distorted as the end approaches. In "Steppin 'Out", Robin returns to what he clearly feels like: up - tempo guitar - driven blues rock. "Spoonful" makes no doubt, Robin Jr took at least one spoon of mustard at Cream. "Woke up This Morning" - Alvin Lee (ex-Ten Years After Going Home fame guitarist) wrote this song, so the expert expects fast, driven guitar parties ... and gets value for money. For the lovers of '70's ​​hard rock, this is a - though low-pitching - collection of alternative versions of classics in the genre. If you're not a lover of hard guitars, let's pass this cup better. jAyBee MySpace: The Robin Thrush Jr. Band CDBaby: The Robin Thrush Jr. Band Blues On Stage: CD Review: The Robin Thrush Jr. Band 'Born To Play'

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