B.B. King, "One Kind Favor," Geffen Records (Rating: 3 of 4)
B.B. King’s walking blues just don’t ramble from one painful memory into the next. His every step touches on suffering while seeking joy. King has recorded — with strong presence by producer T-Bone Burnett — his strongest disc in a decade. His last memorable recording, “Makin’ Love is Good For You” in 2000, was self-produced, up tempo and perhaps too upbeat. Here, every time King’s guitar Lucille soars, Burnett is there to have a bass drum or deep trombone drag us back into hardship and trouble. Dr. John, playing piano on most songs, dips into N’Orleans mud as drums trudge along, guiding King when he sings of leaving a woman he can’t please on “Get These Blues Off Me” or packing his clothes and moving on in “How Many More Years.” At 76, King looks back at life, humbled by the power of fate. The opener is a superb Burnett-driven reworking of Blind Lemon Jefferson’s “See That My Grave is Kept Clean” with King laying down funeral plans. In the dreamlike “Backwater Blues,” King stands on a hill looking at his home demolished by floods; his Gibson guitar rolls smoothly with the water fighting against the drums that want to suck him in. King reconciles the loss of a gal on “Sitting on Top of the World:” “There was days when I didn’t know your name. Why should I worry and pray in vain? But now she’s gone and I didn’t worry cause I’m sitting on top of the world. Alright.” The blues may be mournful but this gem always find balance. (King is set to play the Indiana University Auditorium on Nov. 1)
— Reviewed by Scott L. Miley, The Herald Bulletin
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EAR SHOT: B.B. King, 'One Kind Favor'
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A dream cabin in the woods
Phil Hatter regularly told his children that once they were all grown, he would build a log cabin in the country. They didn’t believe him. “I think log homes are really neat, but they have to be put in the right place,” he said.
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Jim Bailey: Jim Carter made football a respectable sport at AHS
When I first came to Anderson in 1951, Jim Carter had been named head football coach at Anderson High School. At that time, football at AHS was little more than an activity to get out of the way to make room for basketball season. The Indians were known to play two games in the same week to shorten the season.
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Community Briefs: May 27
A compilation of community news as published in the Sunday edition of The Herald Bulletin.
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Remember When: May 27
The slide was one of the more popular attractions at the Falls Park swimming area in Pendleton as evidenced by the number of people waiting their turn on the slide’s steps and its top platform.
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Champions League makes everyone a winner
The Champions League — in its 12th season — is sponsored by the Pendleton Junior Baseball Association and is open to anyone 5 to 18 with physical and developmental disabilities.
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History: Lapel Telephone Co. was talk of town
In November 1962, when the Lapel Telephone Co. was sold to United Utilities by the children of founder Earl Tull, a Madison County era ended.
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Back in the News: May 27
The Herald Bulletin looks back at stories from the Anderson Daily Bulletin and The Anderson Herald newspapers.
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Howard Hewitt: 'Pink' wines growing in popularity
Those silly looking pink wines in your favorite wine shop or liquor store are gaining respect through robust sales.
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Nancy Vaughan: Tomorrow starts today
The United Way of Madison County's 2011 annual report seeks to recognize the individuals and organizations that contribute their resources to support investments and activities to increase the education, income and health of all who call Madison County home.
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Births: May 27
Local birth listings are published each Sunday in The Herald Bulletin. Birth announcements with a photo are available for a fee. Call The Herald Bulletin at 640-4800 for more information.
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