3131 Walnut St
Denver, Colorado 80205

Myth-making and myth-busting is what the blues has always been about. For example: There are
intersections where roads cross in the rural South, but there is no “crossroads.” The roots of the blues
originate in Africa, but the music did not exist until the African and Anglo traditions met and commingled
in post-Civil War America. The death of the blues gets predicted with numbing repetition, but then is
regularly “reborn” for an audience hungry for spiritual nourishment.

The great state of Kansas is best known for producing “Dorothy” and a bombastic rock band in the 1970s.
Until now. Enter Moreland & Arbuckle fresh from the heartland with their hair-raising mix of stomping
Mississippi Hill Country, Delta and rural blues. Reaching the finals at the 2005 International Blues
Competition in Memphis allowed them to bust out of their regional confines after performing together for
only three years, and since then the dynamic duo have taken their emotionally searing music around the
world.

Guitarist Aaron “Chainsaw” Moreland was born on December 16, 1974 in Emporia, Kansas. His father
played and his son’s earliest memories are of hearing 8-track tapes of Kiss and Led Zeppelin records. As
he grew, Moreland felt compelled to become a musician as his only option and began playing guitar at 15,
serving his apprenticeship in rock bands until hearing Son House seven years later. His total immersion in
the rawest prewar blues even extends to his choice of instruments that include a fretless, four-string “cigar
box” guitar that contains a bass string, a National Steel and a funky old parlor guitar.

Singer and harp blower Dustin Arbuckle was born in Wichita, Kansas on December 25, 1981 and
experienced a parallel upbringing with his musician father and singing from a very early age. He also
followed his muse to play at 15 after hearing Elmore James and B.B. King, though the blues harp lessons
would become his vocation. Prior to their current incarnation, Arbuckle and Moreland also had an electric
quartet called the King Snakes that was reduced to an acoustic duo after shedding bassists once too often.

Two previous CDs, the acoustic Caney Valley Blues (2005) and electric Floyd’s Market (2006) preceded
their NorthernBlues debut 1861, named for the year Kansas joined the Union. Track 1 is a rafter-shaking
version of Hound Dog Taylor’s “Gonna Send You Back to Georgia” featuring Moreland’s thundering
slide and Arbuckle’s muscular vocal exhortations. The band roars and whispers through nine originals in
addition to R.L. Burnside’s “See My Jumper Hangin’ Out on the Line” and Ryan Taylor’s “Pittsburgh in
the Morning, Philadelphia at Night.” With drummer Brad Horner rounding them out to an electric trio and
guests Jeffrey Eaton (homemade, one-string “gas tank bass”) and Chris Wiser’s (Hammond B-3 organ)
presence on a few tracks, the variety is delectable. “Fishin’ Hole” is all sunshine as it lopes along with an
infectious rhythm and a lyric inspired by Moreland taking his sons fishing. “Tell Me Why,” by contrast,
pays homage to Mississippi Fred McDowell with a dark and foreboding groove that later reaches a
chilling crescendo in the menacing “Diamond Ring” that likewise laments lost love. Moreland’s acoustic
picking on “Teasin’ Doney” would do Reverend Robert Wilkins proud, while Arbuckle creatively
channels Jimmy Reed vocally and instrumentally on the electric boogie shuffle “Please, Please Mammy.”
Rare are the young contemporary blues cats that can convincingly evoke primal country blues without
being mere dilettantes. Perhaps Aaron Moreland explains it best when he describes what he and Dustin
Arbuckle express as, “Life experiences, emotive musical overtones and rhythms, honest and heartfelt
music…raw, stripped down, primal and sincere.”

Official Website: http://www.thewalnutroom.com

Added by thewalnutroom on July 7, 2009

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