Vocal
and Guitars - Mike Griffin
Bass Guitar - Larry Emmons
Drums - Raymond Massey
Piano - John Anthony
Horns - TN'T
Saxaphone - Dennis Taylor
Trumpet - Terry Townsend
Hammond B-3 Organ - Moe Denham
Produced by - Paul "Heavy" Lee and Tommy Couch, Jr.
Recorded and Mixed at Muscle Shaols Sound Studios, Sheffield Alabama
Assistant Engineer - Kent Bruce
Mastered by - Larry Nix Productions
Special Thanks To:
Beverly Griffin,
Ray & Mickey Griffin, Bill & Barbara Dalton, Nona Emmons, Nikia Emmons, Levon
Emmons, Eddie Brown, bessie Brown, Jerry Wynn, Donna Massey, Gina & Keith Watkins,
Karen Leipziger of KL Productions, Eddie Blakley & Terry newton of Village Sound,
Nashville, TN, Scott & Dan fo the Guitar Gallery, Viki Mammina of Studio V,
Eric Engladn, John Tubbs, The Chrome Link, Mike McGwin, Blond John, Mike Hawkins,
PRS Guitars, peavey Electronics, SWR Amplifiers, Richard Cocco, dr. John Jaworowicz,
Chuck Bloominburg, The Nashville Blues Society, The Magice City Blues Society,
Steve Ernst, Tommy Couch, Jr. and Paul "Heavy" Lee.
And A Very Special
Thanks to: "Nigel Paul, Renee Berridge and Buddy Emmons for ideas and inspiration,
Bevin Dalton for being there and doing that! And to all the Unknown Fans, Your
the Best!! See you on the road!"
"Check the dictionary
under the word "big" and you'll find several definitions talor-made for Mike
Griffin. Considerable size? Absolutely. The Nashville blues mand distributes
350 lbs. over his imposing 6'10" frame. Great Force? Yes indeed. He sings and
plays guitar with the strenght and power, detonating a sense of passion. A significant
degree off control? True again. The Oklahoma native well understands the value
of restraint and its precise application. Widely known? He's made a name for
himself around the South since the late - 1980's. Give this road warrior time
and the rest of the States will come under his domain as well.
Enter a striking
second Waldoxy-Malaco album by Griffin and his Unkown Blues Band that
has solid material, expert musicianship, variocolored shades of blues feeling,
excellent production values and, importantly, personality -- everything one
cold ask for from players whos artistic honesty is beyong reproach. The stirring
title track, Gimme What I Got Comin', derived from one of Malaco Records'
stable songwriters, its exemplary UBB-style blues. Griffin's low-down
voice works like a battering ram, its dramatic properties echoed by his stinging
Albert King-through-Mike Bloomfield guitar commentaries. The powerful slow tempo
Blues Will Never Die, penned by Griffin and his longtime collaborator
Larry Emmons, has perfectly infected guitar phrases that tremble the
heart of anyone who harbors thoughts of lost love. Queen of New Orleans,
an enjoyable excursion to R&B turf, and Chicago blues-slanted rendition of Big
Joe Turner'sT.V. Mama, among other performances, hightlight the bristling
vitality that goes with his slide work.
The musical comaraderie
between the guitarist and Hammond B-3 specialist Moe Denham on this program
of originals and turns from Malaco storehouse is something special, with each
player's solo dovetaling as versions of the same poignant happy-sad story. Larry
Emmerson on bass and drummer Raymond Massey, a relative newcomer
to the group, stay wonderfully alert and responsive to their friends at all
times. So do guest pianist John Anthony and the TN'T Horns, those
first-rate purveyors of soul spice aka Denise Taylor and Terry Townson.
The dicitionary
again. The words "rousing" and "entertainment." Place them together and you've
just described Big Mike Griffin's last recording."
Frank-John Hadley
author of The Grove Press Guide to the Blues on CD
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