The Death Whisperer Series

The Death Whisperer Series
The Death Whisperer Series available at https://www.amazon.com/author/dmichaelolive
Showing posts with label Beckman Vineyards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beckman Vineyards. Show all posts

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Robert Johnson & Beckman Vineyard's Cuvee Le Bec


You can’t talk about blues guitar without mentioning the legendary Robert Johnson. His influence on modern blues and rock and roll is undeniable and many of his tunes like Crossroad blues, Walking blues, and Sweet home Chicago have achieved canonical status, anthems of the blues genre.

It’s amazing that one hundred two years ago, a dirt-poor African-American boy was born who would grow up to learn to sing and play the blues influencing music for a century and beyond. He was the king of the Delta Blues singers influencing Eric Clapton, the Rolling Stones, the Allman brothers, and many others who’ve sung his praise and honored his legacy by recording his music.

He recorded 29 songs between 1936 and 1937 for the American Record Corporation, which released eleven 78rpm records on their Vocalion label during Johnson¹s lifetime, and one after his death, but he plied his craft on street corners and in the juke joints of the south. His life has been romanticized because so little is really known about him. His life is surrounded by myths from a deal with the devil that led to his incredible musical mastery to the tragedy of his death due to poisoning in 1938 by a jealous boyfriend that prolonged the agony of dying for three days.

But one thing is certain. His musical ability left a legacy of guitar mastery that is some of the most complex and difficult music to play. Even Eric Clapton acknowledged its difficulty in an interview I posted some weeks back. So enjoy one of the consummate bluesmen whose influence will continue for generations to come.

Travelin riverside blues: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ecwW2fX1Yew
I believe I’ll dust my broom: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4ZW08zOkYU
When you gotta good friend: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oKQhlqeYeu8
If I had possession over judgment day: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wtKPpExdwkM
I’m a steady rollin man: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OxXczXbTbdQ

We need a powerhouse wine to compliment Robert Johnson, so I suggest a Beckman Vineyards 2010 Cuvee Le Bec. It’s a blend of 44% Syrah, 34% Grenache, 13% Mourvedre, and 9% Cournoise, very similar to what one finds in France’s Northern Rhone region. It has aromas of dark berries and pepper with a fruity palate that’s rich in blackberry and raspberry. The Cuvee Le Bec is a very balanced wine with a long, lingering finish, just the thing for one of the Delta Blues greats of all time. Enjoy!

Cheers!


Sunday, October 7, 2012

Kirby Kelly and 2010 Beckman Vineyards Le Bec


Tonight, I want to introduce you to an incredible man, a fantastic musician, and a great “feel good” story. Kirby Kelly grew up in St. Louis Missouri and began playing guitar in his early teens. He started by listening to Jimi Hendrix records over and over, picking up licks and chord progressions, but it was the sounds of blues legend Son House that turned his focus toward the blues. The raw power and emotion that the music of the old blues masters evoked really stirred his soul unlike any other musical genre.

When he got out of high school, he began a journey that bounced him between Missouri and Texas until 1980 when he moved to Texas to help run an ostrich farm. Although he could entertain his family and friends with his guitar genius, severe stage fright kept him from performing publically until he was in his thirties. But an Ibanez guitar artist-relations rep heard him at a guitar show testing a new amp and hooked him up with Mike “Junior” Clark who eventually forced him out of his shell to face his stage fears. Now over fifty years old, Kelley has his own Delta blues show.

But it hasn’t been easy. At one point in 2009, burned out and tired of bad deals with promoters and club owners, economics forced him to sell or pawn his collection of twenty-eight lap steel, acoustic or electric guitars to pay bills. His wife, Peg, remembers, “Every month he would ask how much we needed and then he’d come in with the money.” Finally, as a last resort, he showed up at North Dallas Guitar Center store planning to sell his last guitar, a custom-made Paul Reed Smith. But his friend and guitar shop owner Robbie Gustin knew about living on the edge of life and salvation. His fight with drugs and depression brought him to his knees, and he believes he was saved to be placed in the right place at the right time to help Kelly. He refused to take the guitar, and instead informed Kelly that he’d entered him in Guitar Center’s national “King of the Blues” contest. When Kelly objected, Gustin told him to shut up because it was a God thing.
Kelly bested more than four thousand other guitarists, who competed at local Guitar Center stores across the country and in district and regional rounds to make the finals. At the finals, he was the oldest one in the final five to play in front of a capacity crowd at the House of Blues on Sunset Strip in Hollywood. Sitting in the front row as judges were many of Kelley’s guitar heroes, including Steve Lukather and Hubert Sumlin, who played with the legendary Howlin’ Wolf. For his first song on the electric guitar, he performed a blues tune off a list given to the contestants, but to show guitar mastery, contestants had to perform a second song on an acoustic guitar. Kelley played his version of the Robert Johnson blues classic Cross Road Blues. He is a master at the Delta Blues style, sometimes employing two slides at once, a feat that blew the judges away and Kelly Kirby was crowned the 2009 King of the Blues.
When the announcer called his name as the winner, Kirby made his way to the mike and read a note from his daughter written twenty years ago that said, “To POP, you are a good guitar player.” Needless to say, there wasn’t a dry eye in the house.
Through it all, his wife Peg says their faith in God kept them going through the many bad times that probably outnumbered the good. But she realized her husband was gifted. “I’ve always known that he was one of the best and had faith that someday somebody would see that. I prayed that others would see what I saw.” Now they have. Kelly Kirby considers himself thrice blessed with his faith, his marriage to an incredible woman, and his ability on the guitar. Hope you enjoy this amazing man and musician.
See that my grave is kept clean: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_S4qSBsdj4
King of the blues competition: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70D3qJS57Ck
Sun gonna shine on my back door someday: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cPYP_4DJmxw
Last fair deal going down: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1TLnXQw37_Q
Hair parted in the middle: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FkNj3BA68sY
Tell me where you stayed last night: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vVmvpihtpu4

For a special man like Kirby, I’ve got to pair him with a super special wine, the 2010 Beckman Vineyards Cuvee Le Bec Santa Ynez Valley ($18.00). It’s an American version of a classic Cote du Rhone with a luscious mixture of Syrah, Grenache, and Mourvedre. The aromas of this wine explode with dark berries and herbs. The taste is slightly sweet with red raspberries, juicy tart cherries, and cassis. Fine tannins lead to a long sweet finish. This wine paired with Kirby Kelly is a can’t miss for a crisp autumn evening. Enjoy!

Cheers!