Sean Costello

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Anytime You Want 00:00 Tools
Can't Let Go 00:00 Tools
Have You No Shame 00:00 Tools
Hard Luck Woman 00:00 Tools
I'm a Ram 00:00 Tools
Going Home 00:00 Tools
Same Old Game 00:00 Tools
Told Me a Lie 00:00 Tools
How In The Devil 00:00 Tools
All This Time 00:00 Tools
Double Trouble 00:00 Tools
Peace of Mind 00:00 Tools
Little Birds 00:00 Tools
Feel Like I Ain't Got A Home 00:00 Tools
No Half Steppin' 00:00 Tools
Simple Twist of Fate 00:00 Tools
She Changed My Mind 00:00 Tools
I Get a Feeling 00:00 Tools
Hold On This Time 00:00 Tools
Who's Been Cheatin' Who 00:00 Tools
Mellow Chick Swing 00:00 Tools
Father 00:00 Tools
It Takes Time 00:00 Tools
Don't Be Reckless With My Heart 00:00 Tools
Don't Pass Me By 00:00 Tools
Take Me Back 00:00 Tools
Big Road Blues 00:00 Tools
All I Can Do 00:00 Tools
You Don't Know What Love Is 00:00 Tools
The Plumber 00:00 Tools
Call the Cops 00:00 Tools
Take It Easy 00:00 Tools
You're Killing My Love 00:00 Tools
I Got Loaded 00:00 Tools
Sail On 00:00 Tools
It's My Own Fault 00:00 Tools
Check It Out 03:12 Tools
Talk To Your Daughter 00:00 Tools
Cuttin' In 00:00 Tools
I Want to Be Loved 00:00 Tools
Jumpin' Salty 00:00 Tools
Cold Cold Ground 00:00 Tools
Goombay Rock 00:00 Tools
I've Got to Ride 00:00 Tools
Ah'w Baby 00:00 Tools
Moanin' for Molasses 00:00 Tools
Those Lonely Lonely Nights 00:00 Tools
Rub-A-Dub 00:00 Tools
Close to You 00:00 Tools
Motor Head Baby 00:00 Tools
No Lie 00:00 Tools
I Want You So Bad 00:00 Tools
Lovin' Machine 00:00 Tools
Good Advice 00:00 Tools
Trust In Me 00:00 Tools
Low Life Blues 00:00 Tools
You're a Part of Me 00:00 Tools
One Kiss 00:00 Tools
All Your Love 00:00 Tools
Miles Away 00:00 Tools
Walking Blues 00:00 Tools
Big Beaver 00:00 Tools
You Can't Win With a Losing Hand 00:00 Tools
Your Love Is Amazing 00:00 Tools
Tell Me Baby 00:00 Tools
Mojo Boogie 00:00 Tools
San-ho-zay 00:00 Tools
Blues Para Mi Angelita 00:00 Tools
You Wear It Well 00:00 Tools
Can I Change My Mind 00:00 Tools
T-Bone Boogie 00:00 Tools
All Your Love (I Miss Loving) 00:00 Tools
I Went Wrong 00:00 Tools
Fool's Paradise 00:00 Tools
Blue Shadows 00:00 Tools
One More Chance With You 00:00 Tools
The Hucklebuck 00:00 Tools
No Half Steppin´ 00:00 Tools
Make a Move 00:00 Tools
I'm Leaving 00:00 Tools
Obviously 5 Believers 00:00 Tools
Reconsider Baby 00:00 Tools
Jelly Roll 00:00 Tools
Doing My Own Thing 00:00 Tools
Anna Lee 00:00 Tools
The Battle is Over But The War Goes On 00:00 Tools
Sit Down Baby 00:00 Tools
My Favorite Things 00:00 Tools
Everybody Wants Her 00:00 Tools
I´Ma Ram 00:00 Tools
Take A Walk With Me 00:00 Tools
She Was A Dreamer 00:00 Tools
Why Baby 00:00 Tools
I´ve Got To Ride 00:00 Tools
(Let Me) Take You Home 00:00 Tools
Lucille 00:00 Tools
Love Is Amazing 00:00 Tools
I Packed My Thing, I'm Leavin' 00:00 Tools
Those Lonely, Lonely Nights 00:00 Tools
I Ain't Got You 00:00 Tools
I Don't Want No Woman 00:00 Tools
Canned Heat Blues 00:00 Tools
Slip Away 00:00 Tools
C.C. Baby (See See Baby) 00:00 Tools
Your'e Killing My Love 00:00 Tools
(Let Me)Take You Home 00:00 Tools
Blues In D Natural 00:00 Tools
Lucky You 00:00 Tools
Feel Like I Aint Got a Home 00:00 Tools
You Can't Win With A Losing Ha 00:00 Tools
Those Lonely Lonley Nights 00:00 Tools
Battle Is Over 00:00 Tools
Don't Be Reckless With My Hear 00:00 Tools
T-Bone Shuffle 00:00 Tools
Title Unknown 00:00 Tools
It's My Own Fault, Baby 00:00 Tools
Jumpin` Salty 00:00 Tools
So Many Roads 00:00 Tools
All Your Love (I Miss Loving) [Live][#] 00:00 Tools
Cuttin´In 00:00 Tools
Hucklebuck 00:00 Tools
Who´s Been Cheatin´Who 00:00 Tools
Motor Head Baby [Live][#] 00:00 Tools
Jumpin´Salty 00:00 Tools
Plumber [#] 00:00 Tools
Going Home To Live With God 00:00 Tools
All Your Loving 00:00 Tools
I´m a Ram 00:00 Tools
San Jose 00:00 Tools
Ah´w Baby 00:00 Tools
See See Baby 00:00 Tools
Mojo Boogie [Live][#] 00:00 Tools
Lucile 00:00 Tools
01 - No Half Steppin' 00:00 Tools
19 Years Old 00:00 Tools
Kansas City Blues 00:00 Tools
02 - You're Killing My Love - 2001 - Moanin' For Molasses 00:00 Tools
2nd Set Intro 00:00 Tools
01 - Moanin' For Molasses - 2001 - Moanin' For Molasses 00:00 Tools
Il Mio Amore 00:00 Tools
You Can't Win A Losing Hand 00:00 Tools
Call the Cops (From the album "Call The Cops, 1996") 00:00 Tools
Moanin; for Molasses 00:00 Tools
Cissy Strut 00:00 Tools
She Shanged My Mind 00:00 Tools
Talk to Your Daugther 00:00 Tools
You Killing My Love 00:00 Tools
Simple Twist Of Fade 00:00 Tools
48,9 Everybody Wants Her 00:00 Tools
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April 16, 1979-April 15, 2008 Born in Philadelphia, Costello began playing guitar at age nine, about the time his family moved to Atlanta. He came of age early, appearing regularly in clubs before he could drive, much less gain legal admission, to them. At age 14, his winning performance in the finals of the Memphis Blues Society’s talent competition had career-changing effects. First, it netted him studio time to record his debut album, Call The Cops, a collection of 1940s and 1950s-style Chicago blues. The Memphis trip also marked the beginning of an important association with another finalist, as Costello put his solo aspirations on hold long enough to contribute indelibly memorable guitar tracks to Susan Tedeschi’s career breakthrough gold album, Just Won’t Burn and, with his band, to back her on the high-profile national tour in support of that record. Although Cops was well-received (Real Blues deemed it “explosive”), Costello went hard to the woodshed before his next recording, Cuttin’ In (2000). The results were immediately apparent in a more mature, fully realized vocal delivery, and in a broader range of material that touched on Texas influences (Johnny “Guitar” Watson), darkly exotic Caribbean sounds (“Goombay Rock”, a track discovered by accident), and second-generation postwar Chicago artists (the worldly, tour-de-force cover of “Double Trouble” marks Costello’s first attempt at recording a song by Otis Rush, who continues as a wellspring of inspiration). The release of Moanin’ For Molasses in 2002 included increasingly confident originals in the Chicago and New Orleans traditions, and reasserted Costello’s established strengths with powerful interpretations of material originally recorded by Jimmy Rogers, Buddy Guy, Jody Williams, J.B. Lenoir, with two songs from the Otis Rush canon. The inclusion of James Brown’s intense 1959 ballad “I Want You So Bad” and Johnnie Taylor’s slamming Stax side “You Can’t Win With A Losing Hand” pointed to a growing interest in soul music first evidenced in live performances of songs by Tyrone Davis and Clarence Carter, and marked an ongoing evolution as interpreter and artist that would come to fruition on Costello’s next project. 2005’s inspiredSean Costello ventured further into vintage funk and soul sounds, including gems from Johnnie Taylor, Robert Ward, Johnny “Guitar” Watson, and Al Green, and the superb, genre-approved originals “She Changed My Mind” and “No Half Steppin’”. His longtime interest in Bob Dylan shone through in a very personal reading of “Simple Twist of Fate” and in his own “Father”, which sounds like a lost outtake from the Desire sessions. Costello’s affecting delivery on the gorgeous ballads “All I Can Do” and “Don’t Pass Me By” proved him to be among our premier singers of torch songs and standards while revealing new aspects of his songcraft. Tommy Johnson’s “Big Road Blues” and the original “I’ve Got To Ride” looked back to the blues roots underpinning all Costello’s work. Costello cites four individuals as having directly affected his development as artist and performer. Early direction came from Texas-born guitarist Felix Reyes, whose Cats have provided fertile onstage proving grounds for generations of younger bluesmen in Dallas, Austin, Atlanta, Florida, and now Chicago. “He was a great teacher to me. I still think about the way he plays. He’s the guy that taught me to listen, not to play so many notes, and chill out, and don’t do everything you know all at once. He’s a really good player, a good friend to me.” Costello calls his apprenticeship with Ronnie Earl, conducted over several National Guitar Workshops, “a huge, huge influence” in developing a soulful, personal voice on his instrument. Later, Americana music icon Levon Helm made a tremendous impression on Costello, who gained valuable perspective on performing and life while working with him. Most recently, drummer Donnie McCormick, a veteran of the storied ‘70s rock and soul rhythm section The Dixie Flyers and longtime fixture on the Atlanta music scene, has acted as Costello’s mentor. “He’s a great singer-songwriter and performer. I’ve been soaking up his vocal style, which is unique, and learning about songwriting through him.” Along the way, Costello has had the opportunity to brush elbows with musical legends. He has shared bandstands with the likes of B.B. King, Buddy Guy, Hubert Sumlin, Elvis Costello, Dr. John, Kim Wilson, Johnnie Johnson, Pinetop Perkins, Luther Allison, Anson Funderburgh and Sam Myers, Lynwood Slim, Steve Jordan, Willie Weeks, and Jimmy Vivino . In addition to Susan Tedeschi, he has recorded with Helm, Jody Williams and Tinsley Ellis, and his band was hand-picked to record backing tracks for gospel greats The Five Blind Boys. Most recently, Costello received acclaim as the primary guitarist on Long Time Coming, the Blues Music Award-nominated comeback album by blues shouter Nappy Brown. Not content to remain at rest, Costello’s growth never sacrifices the feeling he values. As he says, “Whatever I do is going to be very rooted in blues or rhythm and blues. Everthing that I play is just jumping off from that point.” Just as soul and rock grew from the blues, fresh sounds enter Costello’s repertoire as a natural development of his listening habits. A musical discussion with Costello is as likely to touch on Otis Clay, O. V. Wright, Eddie Hinton, Otis Redding, Bobby Womack, and Johnnie Taylor (his all-time favorite singer) as Otis Rush, Robert Lockwood Jr., Freddy King, Bobby “Blue” Bland, Jimmie Vaughan, or Lurrie Bell (his favorite contemporary guitarist), with Bob Dylan’s work never far from the forefront. Heavy sessions listening to rock ‘n’ roll – which, for Costello, means Chuck Berry, Fats Domino, and Jerry Lee Lewis – played a part in developing the sound of his newest recordings. Forgoing the comfort of his long-time band (a full complement that featured organ and harmonica or piano), Costello has for the past two years been playing in a trio format with Aaron Trubic (electric bass) and, most recently, Paul Campanella Jr. (drums), a rhythm section of deadly precision and efficiency. The stripped-down configuration not only forces Costello to work harder - “I am playing a lot of guitar, man!” - it lends sharp focus and an aggressive edge to the music, a set of raw blues (“Anytime You Want”), impassioned gospel (“Going Home”), solid soul (“Can’t Let Go”), idiosyncratic pop (“You Told Me A Lie” filters The Beatles through the Chess studio), exposed-nerve ballads (McCormick’s “Have You No Shame” is one highlight) that crackles with energy and a deep groove. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.