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Photos
by Geoff Rollert, Joseph A. Rosen, David Horwitz & Dave Jones
THE
BEST LEGENDARY CRUISE YET!!!


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CLICK FOR PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE! <––


All
invoices are billed per person, not per cabin, with final payment
due no later than October 7th, 2005. Pay in full discount amounts
will be based on cabin occupancy. Those who pay in full by July
18th will receive a $125/single, $75/double and $50/triple discount.

View
ms Westerdam DECKPLANS (pdf)
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Terms
+ Conditions
(pdf)
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Taj Mahal
One of the most prominent figures in late 20th century blues,
singer/multi-instrumentalist Taj Mahal played an enormous role
in revitalizing and preserving traditional acoustic blues. Not
content to stay within that realm, Mahal soon broadened his approach,
taking a musicologist's interest in a multitude of folk and roots
music from around the world -- reggae and other Caribbean folk,
jazz, gospel, R&B, zydeco, various West African styles, Latin,
even Hawaiian. The African-derived heritage of most of those forms
allowed Mahal to explore his own ethnicity from a global perspective
and to present the blues as part of a wider musical context. He
never strayed too far from his laid-back country blues foundation
and always comes fresh and innovative for the cruise.
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Bobby "Blue" Bland
Undeniably one of the great blues vocalists of all time, he has
straddled the charts over many decades and recorded in a variety
of styles. Always a blues ballad stylist without peer, he had
little difficulty in creating the soul/blues hybrid represented
by his albums from the 70's onwards. Bobby earned his enduring
blues superstar status the hard way: without a guitar, harmonica,
or any other instrument to fall back upon. Bland was inducted
into the Blues Foundation's Hall of Fame in 1981 and the Rock
& Roll Hall of Fame in 1992.
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Millie Jackson
Millie
brings an explosive and highly controversial show to the
Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise. A music industry icon, Millie
crossed over into R&B mainstream with her forward female approach
and has in recent years had the smashing successful play, "Young
Man, Older Woman", a play she wrote and starred in. Just
a few of her hits include..."If Loving You Is Wrong-I Don't
Want To Be Right", "Ask Me What You Want", "If
You Think I'm Sexy", "Hurt So Good" & "My
Man Is A Sweet Man". Millie is the epitome of performance
perfection, a consummate entertainer on stage, in spite of being
labeled, bawdy, brash, bad and risqué. The cruise promises
to be off-the-hook whenever Millie takes the stage. Not for church
folks.

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Buckwheat Zydeco
"Buckwheat
leads one of the best party bands
in America; he can pump out zydeco two-beats or shift into rolling
12-bar blues, steaming all the way." - The New York Times
If you've seen a Buckwheat show, you know what to expect: rocking,
stomping, good time Creole party music. If you haven't seen Buckwheat
Zydeco live, you're missing one of the music world's most exciting
and fun performers.
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Rod Piazza & The Mighty Flyers
Their
distinctive West Coast boogie-woogie style has earned Rod Piazza
and The Mighty Flyers the reputation as one of the best blues bands
in the world today. He started playing harmonica as a teenager after
his brother, who was 10 years older than Rod, introduced him to
R&B. When his brother wasn't around, Rod used to play his R&B
records. And it was Rod's brother who took him to see Jimmy Reed
who gave Rod one of his used harmonicas back stage after his performance.
Until that time, Rod had been concentrating his musical efforts
on his guitar playing. As he experimented with the harmonica, he
found that he really liked the harp sound...
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The Chicago Legends featuring James Cotton, Pinetop Perkins, Hubert
Sumlin, Bob Margolin, Willie "Big-Eyes" Smith & More
Bob
played guitar in the band of Chicago Blues legend Muddy Waters,
touring worldwide and recording, and learning to play Muddy’s
powerful music directly from him. In 1980, Bob started his own band.
As a leader, Bob has recorded two albums for Powerhouse Records,
three for Alligator, one for Blind Pig, and his latest is The
Bob Margolin All-Star Blues Jam. This album was nominated for
a 2004 W.C. Handy Award for "Traditional Blues Album of the
Year." It features Pinetop Perkins, Hubert Sumlin, Carey Bell,
Willie "Bigeyes" Smith, and Mookie Brill and has been
nominated for a Handy Award for "Blues Band of The Year."
Bob is nominated for a W.C. Handy Award in '05 for guitar.
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Tab Benoit
Everything
Tab does, he does on the spot. He rarely rehearses, making each
performance a new experience for both the band and the audience.
He likes things simple, and approaches life with a laid-back reverence.
Whether it's his uncanny ability to fix things, his winning performances
racing dirt track stock cars, or his emotional, yet restrained,
approach to playing music, Benoit believes in spontaneity and the
importance of the moment. Benoit just does what comes naturally.
Tab has been compared to some of the greatest bluesmen and guitarists
of all time.
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Jimmy Thackery
Jimmy
will always unleash an intense volley of rockin' blues guitar. His
double edged guitar dynamics allow him to fire off tracer missiles,
bend a note so it will fit under a limbo bar, run off dive bomber
riffs, and find space within the trembling of one stinging note.
"I put all my senses on hold and find the zone and follow what's
inside." He's one of the few blues guitarists who learned first
hand from the masters of the blues (not off a record or DVD). After
15 years as the co-founder of the Nighthawks, he ended his time
with them in 1987 and has been on the road for another 15 years
doing nearly 300 shows a year proving each night that he is still
the guitar powerhouse in the blues.
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John Hammond
From
coffeehouses to concert halls, festivals and beyond, John Hammond
has spent forty years entertaining blues, folk and rock audiences
around the world, performing intense solo-acoustic blues. A Grammy
Award winner and four time nominee, Hammond is also a multiple W.C.
Handy award winner who has shared the stage and/or recorded with
many of the masters, including Muddy Waters, Willie Dixon, John
Lee Hooker and Howlin' Wolf.
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Joe Bonamassa
"Bonamassa
is a bold talent." - Billboard
Joe's latest CD, entitled Had To Cry Today, continues where
Blues Deluxe left off. Mixing original and classic blues,
Joe incorporates influences of Chicago, Delta and British blues
into something wholly unique and electric. From the 40s and 50s
music of BB King, Muddy Waters and Buddy Guy to the English invasion
of the Yardbirds, Clapton and Cream, Had To Cry Today deftly
elaborates on the many faces of modern music's most influential
genre.
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Kenny Neal and Billy Branch
Kenny
Neal and Billy Branch have influenced the blues world since they
were teenagers, some twenty to twenty-five years ago. When the two
of them decided to make an acoustic duet album in France, it was
a rare treat. Now available in the U.S. on the Alligator Label,
"Double Take" allows a rare opportunity to hear Baton
Rouge’s Kenny Neal, who normally works with an electric guitar,
on acoustic with the equally acclaimed Chicago singer-harmonica
player Billy Branch.
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Anthony Gomes
Anthony
is an artist who has fused the sum of his influences into something
that is truly fresh and exciting. Drawing from Soul, Gospel, Rock,
and R&B, then blending it all together with blues, Gomes has
created a sound that is uniquely his own and is leaving his imprint
on American Roots music. A tireless performer, his live shows leave
his audiences in foot-stomped, hand-clapped, danced-out fits of
exhaustion. Gomes struts and growls like a preacher on Sunday, and
plays guitar in a manner that makes one wonder if he met the devil
at the crossroads.
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Ronnie
Baker Brooks
Ronnie
released his debut solo album, GOLDDIGGER, on his own Watchdog Records
label in the summer of 1998. It was produced by Minneapolis
veteran Jellybean Johnson. A gloriously diverse, modern blues-rock
album, GOLDDIGGER's centerpiece is a searing slow blues called "Stuck
on Stupid." Ronnie's duet with his dad on "Make These
Blues Survive" is a speedy shuffle that talks about the challenges
of taking the blues into the future. Other songs on GOLDDIGGER deliver
buoyant blues-rock with whirling, Hendrix-like overtones; a straight-ahead
blues shuffle, a blistering slide guitar workout; a dreamy acoustic
pop number and a couple heavy crunch rock tunes.
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Deanna Bogart
The
Maryland-based blues and boogie pianist / saxophonist combines the
energy of 1930's style boogie piano blues with contemporary blues
sounds emanating from places like New Orleans, Chicago and Memphis.
Cashbox called Bogart a “butt-kickin’ barrelhouse player
that could give a good chase to old Jerry Lee.” Blues Revue
gushed that “A big part of what makes Deanna Bogart such a
delight is her vivacious, charismatic live show." The Washington
Post raved about “her two-fisted turns on piano that radiate
plenty of energy and momentum!“ Music Monthly delights in
Bogart's ability “to blend savvy street smarts with an earthy
sensuality that is spontaneous from the very minute her music jumps
from the speakers.” The Baltimore Sun celebrates how Bogart
“plays the keyboard and sings like nothing you've ever heard–but
should! Her vocal style is as full of vitality as her piano playing–both
are sexy and deep, with unstoppable strength and unflagging energy!”
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Phillip Walker
Phillip
Walker takes the Blues to another strata. Despite
recording somewhat sparingly since debuting as a leader in 1959
on Elko Records with the storming rocker "Hello My Darling,"
Louisiana-born guitarist Phillip Walker enjoys a sterling reputation
as a contemporary blues guitarist with a distinctive sound honed
along the Gulf Coast during the 1950s. A teenaged Walker picked
up his early licks around Port Arthur, TX, from the likes of Gatemouth
Brown, Long John Hunter, Lightnin' Hopkins, and Lonnie "Guitar
Junior" Brooks.

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Corey Harris & The 5 x 5
To
me, the blues is the blueprint," says maverick guitarist and
singer/songwriter Corey Harris. "That's what we as black Americans
gave to the world: the concept of blues. But at the same time, I'm
of a different generation. I'm trying to represent what my tradition
is, and then represent my individual self in the contemporary moment."
Harris's life and music embrace the black experience in all its
dimensions. His 5 x 5 trio features Victor Brown on bass and Johnny
Gilmore on drums.
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Ana Popovic
Popovic's virtuoso guitar playing gives a nod to Muddy Waters, Jimi
Hendrix, and the entire jam band scene. Hailing from the Netherlands,
her musical range is extremely vast, and it is obvious she feels
most at home playing the blues. Her modern take on traditional blues
topics reinvents some of the subject matter in new ways, yet still
manages to pay tribute to the blues women that have gone before
her.
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Diunna & Blue Mercy
2005 IBC Winners
Diunna
Greenleaf is a native Texan who has a background steeped in gospel
music, influenced by the likes of Koko Taylor, Aretha Franklin, Rosetta
Thorpe, Sam Cooke, Charles Brown and her own parents Ben & Mary
Ella Greenleaf (Gospel). She has developed "Diunna's style
of Blues" in the same tradition as so many other great Texas
blues men and women.
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Ron Thompson & His Resistors
2005 SonicBids Band Contest Winners!
A
veteran West Coast guitar player, Ron has a deep history of playing
with some of the greats, as well as running his own band for over
20 years. Ron is a legendary blues guitarist and master keyboardist
whose career began in the rough and tumble world of East Bay nightclubs
and bars in the early '70s. After touring coast-to-coast for seven
years with John Lee Hooker as band leader, Hooker was quoted as
saying, "Ron Thompson, he's my main man!" |
PLUS
SURPRISE GUESTS: Tommy Castro, Lonnie Brooks, Jimmy Carpenter, Deborah
Coleman, Charles Wilson, Kenny "Blues Boss" Wayne, Zac Harmon,
Mitch Woods, Daniel "Slick"Ballinger & Jellybean Johnson!



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