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Steven Squire and Slowrain - What Blues May Come (2017)

Posted By: Domestos
Steven Squire and Slowrain - What Blues May Come (2017)

Steven Squire and Slowrain - What Blues May Come (2017)
WEB FLAC (tracks) ~ 255.12 Mb | 38:34 | Cover
Blues-Rock, Slide Guitar Blues, British Blues | Country: Hawaii, USA | Label: Steven Squire and Slowrain

If Steve Earle was a member of The Replacements in 1968 London… Electric and acoustic blues, alternative tunings and slide bring the no special effects music to life. From Delta Blues to British blues rock and back, punctuated with honest lyrics on top.

Steven Squire swears he was staring out a window from the back of his mom’s car in Los Angeles, six years old, nothing happening at all, when from the rock ‘n roll radio station came some fine, fine music in the form of the Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations”. He couldn’t believe what he heard! It blew the dust off of everything and he had to move. His life as he knew it was saved by rock ‘n roll. And it was alright! Later he heard the Velvet Underground’s “Rock ‘n Roll” telling the same tale and was thrilled there was someone else out there too. “I love Lou Reed’s narrative of the song with such matter of fact conviction. It really did happen that way for me too and I had felt isolated with these revelations before hearing his tune.” Steven then dove into his sister’s record collection and claimed one single to be his own. He wore the grooves out of John Lennon’s “Instant Karma” all because of the sound. “About this time I was also watching Johnny Cash’s show on TV without blinking. I remember the voices of my family milling behind me mumbling, ‘What’s with the boy?'” Soon after, the first album he owned was the Rolling Stone’s “It’s Only Rock ‘n Roll”. The revival was on.

Steven began writing his own songs as a teenager largely because he was a self-taught guitarist with little experience. He played his own mutated versions of some old blues his musical mentors played, but was either too impatient or unable to learn other songs. “I would never be hired into a cover band because I can’t play other artists songs well enough. I admire those who can pick off licks and chords with ease, but that’s not me. I always had to create something on my own to play so I could stay close to the feeling rock ‘n roll music gave me. I guess I still play a form of mutated blues.”

The first gig came about when Steven and his high school friend, Nick, were strumming basic three chord Neil Young, Dylan and Dead songs when Nick’s sister came home from her waitress job and quipped, “You guys sound better than the hack at our bar”. Nick joked back with “Get us a gig then”. So, she did. On the busy Labor Day weekend. Who was going to sing? “Even though Nick was an accomplished bass player and was getting pretty good on the guitar, he flatly refused to do any singing. So this is when I began singing with the guitar in public.”
Steven’s guitar style was shaped early from hearing the full scale rock ‘n roll band sound in his head while learning to play guitar on his acoustic. Wanting to fill in all the spaces with the rhythm section of the songs, he subconsciously developed a percussive approach. “The back beat had to be there to rock. Even if that meant I was probably always over-playing.” The electric guitar thankfully came. Then the amps. And the kids. He continued to write songs along with his day job and fatherhood. He taught his kids to play the various instruments he had on hand and made up songs with them for the fun of it. “What kid doesn’t light up around musical instruments, let alone making music! They were quite adept at adding their own ideas and I know I sponged off their enthusiasm.”

His passion grew and Steven built himself a recording studio at home. With limited windows of time he built music tracks that originated from his acoustic with electric guitars, mandolin, bass, harmonica and drum machine. “Yeah, the real drums were sorely needed. Programmed drums worked well for building the tracks and keeping me honest with being relatively on time, but there is no substitute for the real thing in my mind.” When he couldn’t find an available compatible drummer, he transferred the cost of hiring someone to buying a drum set, learned to play on his own and recorded them. He rarely uses any studio effects, only the occasional wah wah pedal will make an appearance on the guitar. Steven likes to record his guitars through all-tube amps with miked cabinets and acoustics for a warm and real in-the-room feel. “Similar for me having to have real drums on all my tracks, I like to have my amps turned up when I practice or record. It’s that whole rock experience I was hit with the first time I felt it. I’m not bothered by incidental amp hums and pick noises because, I’m inspired by a live room and performing the physical act of making music, which translates to fun! I can’t apologize putting the guitar up front, this is guitar-driven music.”

Steven Squire continues to create music because the ideas are there and he has to keep alive that first immediate blow to boredom he felt so long ago. “I’m able to relive that rush of clarity every time I play or hear what I like. Only, I know now that I’m not the first and I’m not the last.”

Track List:
01. Fly Into Me 03:13
02. Steel Acres 04:22
03. Wish I Knew You When 04:32
04. K-Town Stomp 03:20
05. Let Love Rain 05:23
06. Listen For You 04:10
07. Here Is My Love 03:07
08. For One 02:50
09. Satellite 03:12
10. Don't Want Love 03:08
11. Amazing Grace (Slight Return) 01:17

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FILE: 01 - Fly Into Me.flac
Size: 22056570 Hash: C2273745977B8046C020AC54C1CB04D5 Accuracy: -m0
Conclusion: CDDA 99%
Signature: 181DC4C18D509B84FAADA6E97D039BE13A01C9E7
FILE: 02 - Steel Acres.flac
Size: 26709610 Hash: 006FD930A555F1E513A91DD238E93C8B Accuracy: -m0
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: BCD976EBA3853D8D295E41BEBEC9014E0BFEF1BA
FILE: 03 - Wish I Knew You When.flac
Size: 33449473 Hash: D582FD8062FE2B343EEECDA6489ACA1C Accuracy: -m0
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 174CB8D7C0B9A120B7A50513EFC9E8E7FC58666C
FILE: 04 - K-Town Stomp.flac
Size: 26116661 Hash: 207B1875810F7B60812576654A72A6E2 Accuracy: -m0
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 1372E4255E7180B67AC164DA8509BC3E6923FCE0
FILE: 05 - Let Love Rain.flac
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Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 8D9374B9875CEE89F678E398265FBC425F5CCC0E
FILE: 06 - Listen For You.flac
Size: 30270971 Hash: AD560433657A2DD562CC1777752B0B6D Accuracy: -m0
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: F280A5C1717D528C9E7B5C448493C8E0CC014E7B
FILE: 07 - Here Is My Love.flac
Size: 22215738 Hash: 1F0F13FB0EABC1A906F97DCB540C6C5D Accuracy: -m0
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: A0C388C31DBF568065B0D1BA5DE90389173652F2
FILE: 08 - For One.flac
Size: 16621780 Hash: 77EFA869E5E6CD69562BE316B65BF800 Accuracy: -m0
Conclusion: CDDA 43%
Signature: 3A04931B798E0435FDF48667D09A119A266B22EC
FILE: 09 - Satellite.flac
Size: 25065602 Hash: E8D65D7F49927A10D2687C1BEE856EE1 Accuracy: -m0
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 92E29BCDEAC07BBB1272C93CB400E12A82A66AB1
FILE: 10 - Don't Want Love.flac
Size: 22402429 Hash: 7B3E240156CB25680638451753EEDF6B Accuracy: -m0
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: EB614F54591E140AE39743E6489CDE776A951EA1
FILE: 11 - Amazing Grace (Slight Return).flac
Size: 7252435 Hash: 39850810ACECFC0E1202877C6E010047 Accuracy: -m0
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: D875C592ADD2D141306ECB9A33DA1D917C7A8127

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