Downchild Blues Band

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
When I Say Jump 00:00 Tools
(I Got Everything I Need) Almost 02:42 Tools
Madison Blues 02:55 Tools
Tell Your Mother 02:29 Tools
Wednesday Night Blues 05:16 Tools
Going Dancing 03:01 Tools
When The Morning Comes 00:00 Tools
Shotgun Blues 05:44 Tools
It's a Matter of Time 03:50 Tools
I Got Everything I Need (Almost) 02:42 Tools
Dew Drop Inn 03:53 Tools
Flip, Flop & Fly 03:04 Tools
I'm Mixed Up 05:15 Tools
Caught In The Middle 00:00 Tools
It's Been So Long 03:27 Tools
Annie's Got A Sister 03:31 Tools
Rock Me Baby 03:40 Tools
Now You're Hooked 04:54 Tools
I Know You're Lyin' 00:00 Tools
Downchild Shuffle 03:51 Tools
Stagger Lee 03:27 Tools
Rockin' Little Boogie 00:00 Tools
Lucky 13 00:00 Tools
Caldonia 03:11 Tools
How Long 00:00 Tools
Dig Myself A Hole 00:00 Tools
Bring It On Home 00:00 Tools
Don't Mind Dyin' 04:24 Tools
Road Fever 03:10 Tools
Rock It 00:00 Tools
I Am Mister Downchild 03:50 Tools
One More Chance 02:22 Tools
Bop 'Til I Drop 03:18 Tools
I've Been a Fool 03:41 Tools
Lazy Woman 03:13 Tools
Low Tide 00:00 Tools
Jump Right Up 00:00 Tools
Who'll Do the Leavin' 04:06 Tools
Money Trouble 00:00 Tools
Set A Date 00:00 Tools
Not This Time 03:08 Tools
I'm Finished 03:16 Tools
Off the Cuff 05:36 Tools
Tryin' to Keep Her 88's Straight 04:07 Tools
T.V. Mama 00:00 Tools
Soaring 00:00 Tools
A Garden In Her Front Yard 00:00 Tools
A Talk With My Heart 00:00 Tools
Dusty Road 00:00 Tools
The Argument 00:00 Tools
Old Ma Bell 03:12 Tools
Stages Of Love 00:00 Tools
Flip Flop & Fly 03:04 Tools
Already Said Goodbye 00:00 Tools
Heart Fixing Business 03:53 Tools
Don't Make My Baby Mad 00:00 Tools
Last Chance To Dance 04:04 Tools
Don't Leave It Too Long 00:00 Tools
There's A Blues Band There 00:00 Tools
Come On In 04:12 Tools
Howlin' For My Darlin' 05:03 Tools
Please Forgive 00:00 Tools
Uphill and Cold Weather 00:00 Tools
Where Have You Gone 03:38 Tools
Summertime Blues 00:00 Tools
A Feelin' So Good 03:45 Tools
When I Go To Work 00:00 Tools
Caledonia 03:10 Tools
Sad Sad Day 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Woman, Mississauga Man 00:00 Tools
Good Times Guaranteed 03:10 Tools
A Girl I Love To Love 00:00 Tools
Don't You Bother My Baby 00:00 Tools
Tonight I Want To Dance With You 00:00 Tools
Cruisin' 00:00 Tools
Mr. Confused 04:42 Tools
Bring It on Back 03:08 Tools
York County 00:00 Tools
Everything's Gonna Be Alright 00:00 Tools
Good Morning Blues 00:00 Tools
Flip, Flop and Fly 00:00 Tools
Something On Your Mind 00:00 Tools
I Came for Your Daughter 00:00 Tools
The Slide 00:00 Tools
I am Mr. Downchild 03:50 Tools
Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had 00:00 Tools
Gone Fishing 00:00 Tools
Do The Parrott 02:42 Tools
Next Time You See Me 00:00 Tools
Every Day I Have the Blues 00:00 Tools
Take Me Back Annie 00:00 Tools
Droppin' Like Flies 05:45 Tools
Oh! Oh! 00:00 Tools
I Can't Stand It 03:26 Tools
Flip Flop And Fly 00:00 Tools
My Aching Heart 03:25 Tools
Gonna Tell Your Mother 00:00 Tools
It Isn't Right 00:00 Tools
I'm Alone 00:00 Tools
Goin' Dancin' 00:00 Tools
Almost 02:42 Tools
Messin' With The Kid 00:00 Tools
That's All Right 00:00 Tools
Understanding And Affection 00:00 Tools
Flip, Flop, Fly 03:04 Tools
You Don't Have To Go 00:00 Tools
My Baby 03:41 Tools
You Don't Do 00:00 Tools
I'm Sinkin' 00:00 Tools
Let's Go Strollin' 00:00 Tools
Scars 00:00 Tools
What You Gonna Do 00:00 Tools
Cotton In My Ears 00:00 Tools
Just A Little Bit 00:00 Tools
Albany, Albany 02:42 Tools
Down In Virginia 00:00 Tools
For Pete's Sake 00:00 Tools
Change My Way Of Livin' 00:00 Tools
All Over 00:00 Tools
Kissy Face 00:00 Tools
My First Letter 00:00 Tools
Mailbox Money 00:00 Tools
Something I've done 00:00 Tools
Worried About the World 00:00 Tools
Shoot That Moon 00:00 Tools
Good Time Guaranteed 00:00 Tools
Changed My Ways 00:00 Tools
I Am Mr Downchild 03:50 Tools
Screamin' 00:00 Tools
Big Hill 05:42 Tools
A Girl To Love 00:00 Tools
She Won't Come Home 00:00 Tools
A Woman's Ways 00:00 Tools
My Baby She's Alright 03:41 Tools
Tramp 00:00 Tools
I Need A Hat 00:00 Tools
She Thinks I Do 00:00 Tools
Can't Get Mad At You 04:42 Tools
Tell Me Baby 00:00 Tools
Master Chef 00:00 Tools
Let's Get High 00:00 Tools
Hook, Line, & Sinker 00:00 Tools
Half Ain T Been Told 00:00 Tools
Everyday I Have The Blues 00:00 Tools
Into The Fire 00:00 Tools
Mr Confused 04:42 Tools
Try To Fall In Love With Me 00:00 Tools
Take A Piece Of My Heart 00:00 Tools
May Baby, She's Alright 00:00 Tools
Somebody Lied 00:00 Tools
Hey Hey Little Girl 02:15 Tools
This Must Be Love 00:00 Tools
Half Ain't Been Told 00:00 Tools
Rocket 88 00:00 Tools
Must Have Been The Dev 00:00 Tools
Shoot The Moon 00:00 Tools
Evelyn 00:00 Tools
Nine Below Zero 00:00 Tools
Rendezvous 00:00 Tools
Let S Go Strollin 00:00 Tools
Could Have Had All Your Lovin' 00:00 Tools
Drivin' Blues 00:00 Tools
What You Gonna Do? 00:00 Tools
Must Have Been The Devil 00:00 Tools
Hook, Line And Sinker 00:00 Tools
She Won T Come Home 00:00 Tools
What Was I Thinking 00:00 Tools
Down In The Delta 00:00 Tools
El Stew 00:00 Tools
You Don T Do 00:00 Tools
Flip, Flop, and Fly 00:00 Tools
Blood Run Hot 00:00 Tools
Natural Ball 00:00 Tools
Done Changed My Way Of Living 00:00 Tools
They Were Rockin' 00:00 Tools
Shot Full Of Love 00:00 Tools
Blue Moon Blues 00:00 Tools
Can You Hear The Music? 00:00 Tools
These Thoughts Keep Marching 00:00 Tools
You Don't Love Me 00:00 Tools
Some More Of That 00:00 Tools
Cotton In My Ears (instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Gonna Tell You Mother 00:00 Tools
I Need A Woman 00:00 Tools
I'm Always Here For You 00:00 Tools
Fall In Love With Me 00:00 Tools
Cruisin' (instrumental) 00:00 Tools
I Came For Your Daugther 00:00 Tools
Shot Gun Blues 00:00 Tools
I Got Everything I Need Almost 02:42 Tools
Bop Till I Drop 02:42 Tools
I've Got Everything I Need (Almost) 00:00 Tools
Kiss Face 00:00 Tools
Caledonia (Live) 00:00 Tools
Let's Go Strollin 00:00 Tools
Tryin' to Keep Her 88's Straig 00:00 Tools
Try To Fall In Love Wi 00:00 Tools
Can You Hear The Music 00:00 Tools
This Road 00:00 Tools
Tryin' to Keep Her 88s Straight 00:00 Tools
Time to Say Good Bye 00:00 Tools
Calidonia 00:00 Tools
Been So Long 03:27 Tools
Woman's Ways 00:00 Tools
Fasten Your Seatbelt 00:00 Tools
Time To Say Good-Bye 00:00 Tools
One In A Million 00:00 Tools
A Woman's Way 00:00 Tools
My Mississippi Queen 00:00 Tools
(I Got Everything I Need) Almost (Live) 00:00 Tools
Understanding & Affection 00:00 Tools
Cotton In My Ears (Album Version (Instrumental)) 00:00 Tools
Houserockin' Boogie 00:00 Tools
Don't Wait Up For Me 00:00 Tools
Tramp (Live) 00:00 Tools
One More Chance (Live) 00:00 Tools
Shotgun Blues (Live) 00:00 Tools
Bop Til' I Drop 00:00 Tools
My Baby, She's Alright 00:00 Tools
Flip Flop & Fly 00:00 Tools
Uphill And Color Weather 00:00 Tools
Wednesday Night 00:00 Tools
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(You can also see ‘Downchild’ on Last.fm here: http://www.last.fm/music/Downchild ) The Downchild Blues Band is a Canadian blues band, described by one reviewer as "the premier blues band in Canada". The band was formed in Toronto in 1969 and still performs today. The band's international fame is partially due to three of its songs, the originals I've Got Everything I Need (Almost) and Shot Gun Blues, and its adaptation of Flip Flop and Fly, all from its 1973 album, Straight Up, being featured on the first Blues Brothers album, Briefcase Full of Blues (1978). The band's musical style is described as being "a spirited, if fundamental, brand of jump-band and Chicago-style blues". Donnie Walsh thinks a hat might make a difference. “Something that will help the band fit in … or stand out,” says the veteran Canadian bluesman by way of explaining the title of the new Downchild album, I Need A Hat. It’s a joke, of course. Downchild doesn’t need a hat, or a ticket, a tag, a bag, a niche, or a flashing neon sign. Forty years on, Downchild remains a blues force, true to itself and without equal. For just about every waking moment of the four decades since he formed the Downchild Blues Band – Canada’s best known and best loved blues outfit – Walsh has been living the dream that changed his life back in the early 1960s, when someone dropped a Jimmy Reed album onto the turntable at his girlfriend’s 16th birthday party in suburban North Toronto. It’s a moment Walsh – he also answers to his “given” name, Mr. Downchild, taken from a song by Sonny Boy Williamson II – says he will never forget. “That was it. I was hooked. I never wanted to play anything else.” He drove his girlfriend crazy learning Reed’s lip-splitting harmonica technique, then James Cotton’s. He locked himself away from the world while he picked apart Muddy Waters’ and Albert King’s guitar licks, reconstructing them in his own inimitable style on a beat-up electric guitar. And when he did venture out, it was to one of Toronto’s legendary blues dives to catch his heroes Luther Allison, B.B. King, Buddy Guy and Junior Wells, all of them regular visitors in those days to Walsh’s hometown, Canada’s blues capital. Walsh was a good student. He is recognized around the world as both a blues harp virtuoso with few equals, and an unusually expressive guitarist. He wasn’t the only one, of course. They say Toronto’s built on the blues, but all across Canada the blues, particularly jump-style and Chicago blues that used to blast across the border from radio stations in northern U.S., is a basic, shared language. Singer Chuck Jackson, tenor sax player Pat Carey, drummer Mike Fitzpatrick, bassist Gary Kendall, and pianist/organist Michael Fonfara – Walsh’s compadres in Downchild for the past decade and a half, and, he says, the “best musicians I’ve ever played with” – were soaking up the blues in their teenage years as well, in different parts of the country. Their shared dedication has served them well. And with the release of their 16th album, I Need A Hat, October 6th, 2009, on the Canadian independent label Linus Entertainment, Donnie Walsh and his buddies are celebrating their collective longevity big time. Comprising a new batch of Walsh originals – edgier, darker, more caustically humorous than ever before – I Need A Hat boasts a cluster of stellar guests. Dan Aykroyd – a long-time friend and admirer of Downchild – on harmonica, second-generation Canadian blues-rocker Colin James and Nashville-based Canadian roots music veteran Colin Linden on guitars, and Stax Records legend Wayne Jackson of the Memphis Horns on trumpet, all make muscular and eloquent contributions to the album, which Walsh produced over five days earlier this year in Toronto’s famed Metalworks Studios. “It’s not really producing,” says Walsh, a self-deprecating homegrown star – when he’s not on the road, he’s fishing his favourite pickerel hole at his secret lake in northern Ontario – and a ribald raconteur with a lacerating dry wit. “We’ve been together long enough to know just how everything fits, every groove, every note, every piece of punctuation. It’s not as if we have to go looking for hooks – they just happen. That’s one of the great things about a band that’s been together for as long as we have. It just gets better and better.” “I get a buzz doing the final mix, tweaking the nuances, the little elements I know are in there, hiding somewhere. Those little bits are like pure gold to me. I love shining them up.” “And it was really exciting this time to have so many great guests adding their own parts.” During the past 40 years and against all odds, Walsh and his band mates have won countless music industry awards, including a Juno (Canada’s Grammy) for “Best Roots and Traditional Album” in 1991. They also received a Juno Award nomination in 2005 for “Blues Album of The Year” for their album “Come On In.” In 2007 Downchild was named “Entertainer of The Year” at the annual Maple Blues Awards (the Canadian equivalent of a W.C. Handy Award). With more than 80 great musicians on the payroll during its long life, Downchild is a robust road beast, having racked up thousands of performances at concert halls, fairgrounds, saloons and roadhouses in every corner of the continent. The inspiration for Aykroyd’s and the late John Belushi’s fabulous creation, The Blues Brothers – they recorded Downchild’s “Shotgun Blues” and Walsh’s “(I Got Everything I Need) Almost”, the latter shortlisted as one of Canada’s Essential Songs in a survey conducted by the Toronto Star in 2007 – Downchild is an institution in their homeland, and revered by blues fans around the world. America’s National Public Radio service pays regular tribute, featuring Downchild in concert specials and blues programs. For years a favourite on the North American festival circuit, the band made its first concert appearance in Europe in 2008, at the Lille Blues Festival in France, returning in 2009 for the Tobakken Blues Festival in Esjberg, Denmark. More trips to Europe, where Downchild’s reputation is almost mythical, are in the works. Apart from its earliest incarnations, with Donnie’s brother, the late “Hock” Walsh as singer, Downchild was always more than a bar band. A party band, sure – good times guaranteed, just as it says on one of Downchild’s album titles. But musicianship of the highest order, sharp arrangements, strict adherence to its legitimate sources, slick pacing and a steely fix on the moods of its audiences, have always set Downchild apart. This has been a class act for the better part of its 40-year life. Drummer Mike Fitzpatrick credits the quality and individual character of the songs Walsh and singer Chuck Jackson – he contributed “Down in the Delta” and “I’ve Gotta Leave” to I Need A Hat – have brought to the band. “The songwriting is exceptional,” he says. “There’s always some unexpected slant to the story in each song, or a line that cuts straight to the bone.” Bassist Gary Kendall hears something old and something new each time he listens to I Need A Hat. “The more I play it, the more I get it,” he says. “This is vintage Downchild – straight up blues, no frills, no R&B, nothing slick. But Donnie’s doing something new with his lyrics, commenting on what’s happening in the world, reaching out to people who’ve lost their jobs and are facing hard times. That’s different. His songs are usually much more personal.” About the reasons for Downchild’s success, Walsh is succinct and unequivocal. “First, it’s knowing your audience, and knowing when to give them what they want,” he says. “If they want to dance, you step up the groove. If they want to watch, you give them lots of solos.” “As for keeping a band together for as long as Downchild has been around, it’s an unspoken thing, finding a balance between what I need and what I know each musician can give. Every member of this band is well equipped to do what each of us wants and needs. Downchild has always been bigger than the sum of its parts, and I can’t really explain why. “ “But I do know that after 40 years doing this, I’m happier than I’ve ever been. The hard parts are easier. I’m writing songs all the time – and better songs – which surprises me. I get to experience new things all the time, and see new places.” “And I get to make my own records. I will never sell enough of them to put me out of work … but that’s probably a good thing.” Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.