Sue Foley
Canadian born musician Sue Foley is a musical force to be reckoned with. The thirty-something year olds' music suggests that she has an old soul. The Los Angeles Times says, "Echoes of Earl Hooker, Bessie Smith, T-Bone Walker, Muddy Waters and other forebears of the blues filter through the cannon of singer, songwriter and guitarist Sue Foley." Critics, fans and musicians alike agree that she may well be the most respected female blues guitarist on the scene today.
Foley's musical juju has allowed her to share the stage with such legendary blues icons as B.B. King, Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown and the late John Lee Hooker. Sue Foley's new CD, appropriately titled Where The Action Is, further asserts Foley as a voice warranting widespread attention in the blues world.
Her 2000 release, Love Comin' Down, won a Juno Award (the Canadian equivalent to a Grammy Award) for " Best Blues Album" and five Maple Blues Awards (the Canadian equivalent to a W. C. Handy Award). Love Comin' Down prompted The Philadelphia Inquirer to say, “Foley has already transcended her influences to develop an absolutely riveting voice of her own.”
Where The Action Is, Foley's seventh album, picks up right where her
last album left off. It is filled with roots music of all sorts, but
it shows most definitely that Foley is down with the blues. "The
thing that strikes me about this record," she says, "is that I think
it is very direct. It's very much an in your face kind of record."
Opening with the dirty guitar rave up "Where The Action Is," remaking the Rolling Stones' "Stupid Girl" in her own style. Whether it’s laying down a funky acoustic groove on "Let It Go" or travelling down to the Delta on "Down The Big Road Blues", Foley covers an amazing amount of musical ground. Yet, Where The Action Is bears the imprint of an artist at the top of her powers, able to convey a variety of feelings with her stunning guitar technique and potent vocals.
As she did on Love Comin' Down, Foley works with noted fellow Canadian roots/blues artist and producer Colin Linden (The Band, Bruce Cockburn, Lucinda Williams, Keb' Mo') as producer on Where The Action Is. This time the Grammy nominated, Juno & Maple Blues Award winning songwriter/musician/producer decided to record with Foley in Nashville, where she says, "Colin knew the right musicians to call on depending on the song. The fact is we were more comfortable with each other this time around. We know each other better and we were able to take things one step further."
Some of the musicians Linden called upon include keyboardist Richard
Bell (The Band, Janis Joplin, Bruce Cockburn) bassist Dave Roe (Johnny
Cash), Ken Coomer (ex-Wilco) on drums and Brad Jones (Marshall
Crenshaw, Steve Earle, Steve Forbert) on bass. With the assistance
of such well-rounded players, Foley has created a record that honest,
authentic and bound to move you.
Foley came to most people's attention after she moved from her hometown of Ottawa to Austin, Texas in the early 1990's. It was there that blues guru Clifford Antone took her under his wing. She went on to release four albums for the Antone's label, each one more self-assured and musically advanced than the one that had preceded it. In 1997, she moved back to Ottawa, when she became pregnant, to be with her family. Motherhood and the change of scenery have obviously served her well as she is currently making the best music of her career.
Her songwriting has matured to the point that she has been favorably
compared to Lucinda Williams (who joined Sue for a duet on her last
album). Sue wrote or co-wrote 9 of the 12 songs on Where The Action
Is. Her songs possess moments where her music possesses the same
urgency, raucousness and beauty as Williams' does, especially on
tunes like country rock inflected "Get Yourself Together" and the
swamp dirge "Two Bluebirds." Of the latter, Foley relates, "That
one is dedicated to a close friend of mine. It was recorded in one
take and basically came together in the studio. It started out with a
telephone conversation and ended up as a song."
Foley's dedication to the blues is revealed in the traditional, acoustic "Down The Big Road Blues" which she attributes to Matty Delaney, a pioneer Mississippi blues woman. Her love of the Rolling Stones comes through on her ragged but right take of "Stupid Girl." "I've always liked songs that change in meaning with the gender of the person singing them," she explains. "I like the play on words and the play on meaning. I did something similar on Love Comin' Down with Willie Dixon's "The Same Thing." "Stupid Girl just rocks and it's fun".
Those two qualities best sum up what she's doing on this record as well. "I really like the rawness of it," Foley declares. "That's really where I'm at musically these days." To be sure, Where The Action Is, is a record that's playful, rocks like a mutha and shows an artist at full command of her powers.
For more information, please contact:
Eric Alper p: 416-292-8111 Ext. 240
at KOCH Entertainment Inc. eric@kochcan.com
KOCH International Inc.
1220 Ellesmere Rd., Unit 8
Scarborough, Ontario
Canada M1P 2X5
Tel (416) 292-8111 ext. 240
Fax (416) 292-8833
Email: eric@kochcan.com
www.kochcan.com
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