Jason Ricci & New Blood

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Snowflakes and Horses 04:18 Tools
I'm A New Man 10:10 Tools
The Rocker 06:58 Tools
The Way I Hurt Myself 06:29 Tools
Sonja 06:18 Tools
Deliver Us 04:38 Tools
Loving Eyes 11:12 Tools
The Blow Zone Layer 03:49 Tools
Dodecahedron 05:15 Tools
Mellow Down Easy 05:15 Tools
Blues Penitentiary 05:15 Tools
Down at the Juke 05:15 Tools
The One Least in Love 04:21 Tools
Roll all Day 09:19 Tools
Mr. Satan 03:22 Tools
Shake Your Hips 09:19 Tools
Walter's World 04:21 Tools
The World's Just Wrong 05:20 Tools
Broken Toy 05:56 Tools
My heads a bad neighborhood 04:35 Tools
Rocket Number 9 10:34 Tools
The Eternal Is 09:05 Tools
Feel good funk 20:22 Tools
Marmoset > Baked Potato 05:37 Tools
Wake County Stomp 09:48 Tools
Hip shake 08:18 Tools
Done With The Devil 05:11 Tools
Afro Blue 08:56 Tools
From the soul 04:33 Tools
Sweet Loving 03:48 Tools
Holler For Craig Lawler 06:28 Tools
Wish you would 07:19 Tools
I Turned Into A Martian 03:07 Tools
Ptryptophan Pterodactyl 04:13 Tools
How It Come To Be 03:43 Tools
As Long As I Live 05:21 Tools
Blue & Lonesome 10:27 Tools
Life Of Denial 03:52 Tools
Drifting Blues 09:10 Tools
Keep The Wolf From My Door 05:41 Tools
Scratch my back 04:44 Tools
I-55 04:09 Tools
Enlightenment 04:44 Tools
Reverse technology 16:25 Tools
Everything i play 05:45 Tools
My Head Is a Bad Neighborhood 05:36 Tools
Playboy 04:43 Tools
Comin' Home, Baby 03:41 Tools
Marmoset-Baked potato 05:37 Tools
Careless love. 04:00 Tools
Missippi mood 07:40 Tools
My head ia a bad neighborhood 04:49 Tools
Careless Love 04:00 Tools
Mississippi Mood 11:48 Tools
Comin' Home Baby 03:41 Tools
I'm Just A Playboy 07:45 Tools
Baked Potato 08:07 Tools
The Eternal 05:28 Tools
Blue And Lonesome 05:28 Tools
My Head's a Bad Neighborhood 00:00 Tools
Everything I Play Gonna Be Funky 08:25 Tools
Drifting And Drifting 09:10 Tools
Marmoset: Baked Potato 00:00 Tools
Akos 08:25 Tools
Comin home baby 08:25 Tools
Harmonica Caprice No. 1 in C Minor 03:06 Tools
Snowflakes and Horses (Explicit Lyrics) 04:17 Tools
Can't Close Our Eyes 16:53 Tools
Turkish Coffee 15:02 Tools
Goenophiny 15:02 Tools
Driftin' and Driftin' 15:02 Tools
Same Thing 15:02 Tools
Thank You 15:02 Tools
Turkish Coffee > 15:02 Tools
Help Me 15:02 Tools
Doin' Time In The Blues Penitentiary 15:02 Tools
Cissy Strut 15:02 Tools
Jam 15:02 Tools
Jam > 15:02 Tools
Too Many Drivers 15:02 Tools
I Wish You Would 15:02 Tools
Mean Mistreater 15:02 Tools
Amazing Grace 15:02 Tools
Banter 15:02 Tools
Outro 15:02 Tools
Driftin' Blues 15:02 Tools
Mister Satan 15:02 Tools
Feel Good Funk > 15:02 Tools
Amazing Grace > Turkish Coffee 15:02 Tools
Driftin' Blues > I'm Just A Playboy 15:02 Tools
Goenopheny 15:02 Tools
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Born 2/3/74 and raised in Portland, Maine, Jason Ricci is the son of the controversial businessman/politician/activist Joe Ricci. Ricci started playing music in punk bands at the age of 14. After discovering a love of the harmonica and Blues music, he turned his attention in that direction. In 1995, Ricci moved from Portland to Memphis, TN, where shortly there after he placed first in the Sonny Boy Blues Society contest at 21 years of age. Later that same year Ricci recorded his first album, Jason Ricci (Self titled). In Memphis, Ricci began playing with David Malone Kimbrough, son of blues great Junior Kimbrough, and soon was a part of the bands of both Kimbroughs and was sitting in with R.L. Burnside. This also marked a dark period for Ricci, as drug addiction led to a one-year stint in jail. Ricci claims to have been sober ever since. In 1999, Ricci won the Mars National Harmonica Contest, and began playing with Keith Brown, later recording with him as well. In 2000, he received a two page write up in Blues Access magazine by Adam Gussow (harmonica player for Satan and Adam) saying: "I am convinced he along with New Jersey's Dennis Gruenling is one of the best harmonica players of his generation." After 15 months with Big Al and the Heavyweights, Ricci started his own band, Jason Ricci & New Blood, in 2002. This band features Shawn Starski, who, in June 2008, was named by Guitar Player Magazine as one of the "Top Ten Hottest New Guitarists." In 2005, Ricci was honored with the Muddy Waters Most Promising New Blues Artist award. In 2007 [7] Ricci and New Blood were signed to Eclecto Groove, a new subdivision of Delta Groove Records. His first album with the label, titled "Rocket Number Nine," was released October 23, 2007. Later in 2009 the band recorded "Done With The Devil" for the same Label. The band as a whole has been nominated for Blues Band of the year three times by Blues Wax magazine. Ricci won the Blues Critic Award for Harmonica player of the year (2008) and was nominated for Harmonica Player of the year by the B.M.A. awards as well in 2009 and 2010. [8] Today, Jason Ricci and New Blood can be found playing almost 300 days per year in cities all over the United States, Canada, and Europe. Ricci has also accompanied guitarist Walter Trout on his recent European tours. Controversy Ricci is one of the only openly gay male performers touring on the blues circuit today. This has both been a professional obstacle as well as an opportunity for Ricci to challenge both gay stereotypes and traditional Blues expectations: "The [gay] community doesn't like drum sets and guitars and actual live music. They're used to lip-synching, and dudes in dresses, and Madonna, and Cher, and techno beats. Those are the things that kept me from coming out earlier. I felt like I had nothing in common with the gay community, and I still don't feel like I have a lot in common with the community. I'm hoping that changes, but the majority of their icons are press-friendly little Mickey Mouse-doll figureheads that you're more likely to see on a show redecorating somebody's house than onstage at a blues festival...When I came out of the closet as a gay white male from an upper-middle-class suburban home, I came out as not just gay, but as a white guy, and as a guy who likes punk, and as a guy who didn't come from total poverty, and all those things that we associate with being 'blues' things. And when I did that, I wanted to sing about that. I wanted to write songs about what my life was like, and I wanted to use terminology that was modern." Though Ricci does not generally wear his sexuality on his sleeve on stage, his openness with being gay has occasionally been a difficult issue in the traditionally conservative Blues world, as he's been "disinvited" from a number of venues and events. "Done With The Devil" signaled a new direction in Ricci's musical inspiration, as his study of the occult strongly influenced the writing on the album. [12] Ricci has become a student of Thelema and the writings of Aleister Crowley, and Ricci has gone so far as to call him "a great holy man." [13]This has prompted more controversy for an already controversial artist, prompting an extended online mea culpa from Ricci himself, in which he fervently denied accusations of Satanic worship. [edit]Discography 1995 “Jason Ricci” (self titled debut) North Magnolia Music 1997 “Down At The Juke” North Magnolia Music 2001 “Feel Good Funk” Self Produced 2004 “Live At Checkers Tavern” Blue Sunday Records 2005 “Her Satanic Majesty Requests Harmonica Music” (Compilation) –Self Produced 2006 “Blood on the Road” Rah Fox Records 2007 “Rocket Number 9” EclectoGroove Records 2009 “Done with the Devil” EclectoGroove Records[15] Note: This discography does not include appearances by Jason Ricci or other members of New Blood on other artist’s albums, or various compilations. [edit]References ^ Nagy, Levy . “Jason Ricci” . Levynagy Weblog . June 7, 2009 ^ Nagy, Levy . “Jason Ricci” . Levynagy Weblog . June 7, 2009 ^ Bledsoe, Wayne . “Out Gay Bluesman is opening Ears and Minds” . Scripps News, November 28, 2007 ^ Ricci, Jason, "Biography" . http://www.intrepidartists.com/jasonricci.html ^ Bledsoe, Wayne . “Out Gay Bluesman is opening Ears and Minds” . Scripps News, November 28, 2007 ^ Bledsoe, Wayne . “Out Gay Bluesman is opening Ears and Minds” . Scripps News, November 28, 2007 ^ http://www.intrepidartists.com/jasonricci.html ^ http://www.blues.org/bluesmusicawards/nominees.php#ref=bluesmusicawards_pastyears ^ Beckers, Ludo, "Interview: Jason Ricci", Back to the Roots, retrieved 2007-10-24 ^ Long, Autumn . “Jason Ricci Gets His Rocks Off” . Blues Revue Magazine . Feb/March 2008 ^ Wenzel, John, “Music Q&A: Jason Ricci” . Get Real Denver . December 20, 2007 ^ Arnold, J.W.. “Jason Ricci Bringing His Blues Harmonica Magic to K.C.". Camp KC April 30, 2009 ^ Ricci, Jason . “Favorite Crowley Quotes” . http://blogs.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendId=45122033&blogId=513343675 ^ Ricci, Jason . "Occult or Satanic Symbols on our Site, Videos, and Lyrics" . Jason Ricci Writings .Http://jrnb.blogspot.com/2009/05/occult-or-satanic-symbols-on-our.html ^ Long, Autumn . “Jason Ricci Gets His Rocks Off” . Blues Revue Magazine . Feb/March 2008 Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.