
BLUES AT THE BOW IS PROUD TO BRING TO YOU FOR OUR FIRST SHOW OF THE 2008-2009 SEASON

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lues music just speaks to me,” says bassist Dean Mueller,
who had his mind blown teachin
They play vintage
instruments and channel a blues style from the 1950s, but there is a
distinct new cyberspace bent to Delta Groove's
blues award winning quartet, The
Insomniacs.
These musicians who have
quickly jumped into the top tier of clubs and whose disc hit No. 5
on the blues charts and has been highly ranked since its release,
tour endless highways in a beat up van, babying a gut-string
upright, the 1951 Fender “Nocaster” guitar, the 1964 Framus
Star Bass and their Magnatone and Ampeg tube amps.
But, they fill the long
drives between gigs surfing the web on wireless laptops, looking at
the MySpace and Facebook friends lists of the clubs down the road,
and personally emailing blues fans to get them to listen to the band
and come to the show.
As a result, they get
hundreds of plays per day on MySpace, a site usually focused on
alternative, pop and hip-hop music. And they've enrolled a whole new
generation of first-time young blues fans, as well as older ones who
recognize the roots of their music.
The Blues community
recognized their talent early on. They won a Muddy Award from
Oregon's prestigious Cascade Blues Association for
Best New Act of 2006 and Best Contemporary Act of 2007. They are
nominated for a 2008 Best New Artist Debut Award from The
Blues Foundation and the song "Crime Scene" has been named
one of the top 20 contemporary blues songs for 2007 by
BluesCritic.com.
Guitarist Vyasa Dodson,
whose exotic name is a Sanskrit gift from his Northern California
mother, had a revelation when he switched from emulating Stevie Ray
Vaughan and Eric Clapton to studying blues masters such as Junior
Watson, Tiny Grimes, Johnny “Guitar'' Watson, Charlie Christian, and
Little Charlie Baty.
“The Blues isn't dead,” says
singer and guitarist Vyasa Dodson, 26, “It's just going in different
directions. B.B. King and Buddy Guy got started when they were
young. The same thing is happening today.”
“Blues music just
speaks to me,” says bassist Dean Mueller, who had his mind
blown teaching at Centrum's Port Townsend Country
Blues Festival, where he jammed with John Cephas, Louisiana
Red and Honeyboy Edwards. “It was just so cool. I knew I had found
my home.”
Together with Alex Shakeri
on keys and Dave Melyan on drums they bust out with an original mix
of blues, swing, jump, and roots rock & roll that has crowds
dancing the night away. You can't get that energy from a computer,
the Internet, MySpace or a DVD.
Put on your dancing shoes
before you take a test drive of “Left Coast Blues” and
check it out yourself.
The last thing you'll want
to do is sleep.
“The Insomniacs could
become legendary”www.myspace.com/insomniacsblueset