Live At the Grey Eagle

发行时间:2008-01-01
发行公司:CD Baby
简介:  "These young women may be the new face and sound of blues in this century." - TIMES ARGUS, Vermont      In a scene dominated by bluesmen, Grit Pixies deliver more sound per square inch than your average blues duo – in cute dresses to boot. With one guitar, two voices, multiple harmonicas, and plenty of personality, this Asheville, North Carolina-based dynamic duo, featuring Jill Fromewick on harmonica and Eliza Lynn on guitar and vocals, “take up where old-school blues legends leave off”. Inspired by harmonica and guitar duos of both the present (Cephas and Wiggins, Annie Raines and Paul Rishell) and of days past (Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee, Fred McDowell and Johnny Woods), Grit Pixies inject modern attitude and style into their own tunes as well as the work of their blues heroes. At their live show, the pair’s mighty chops mingle with signature on-stage comic relief, leading one critic to proclaim: “These young woman may be the new face and sound of blues in this century (Times Argus, Vermont).”
  "These young women may be the new face and sound of blues in this century." - TIMES ARGUS, Vermont      In a scene dominated by bluesmen, Grit Pixies deliver more sound per square inch than your average blues duo – in cute dresses to boot. With one guitar, two voices, multiple harmonicas, and plenty of personality, this Asheville, North Carolina-based dynamic duo, featuring Jill Fromewick on harmonica and Eliza Lynn on guitar and vocals, “take up where old-school blues legends leave off”. Inspired by harmonica and guitar duos of both the present (Cephas and Wiggins, Annie Raines and Paul Rishell) and of days past (Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee, Fred McDowell and Johnny Woods), Grit Pixies inject modern attitude and style into their own tunes as well as the work of their blues heroes. At their live show, the pair’s mighty chops mingle with signature on-stage comic relief, leading one critic to proclaim: “These young woman may be the new face and sound of blues in this century (Times Argus, Vermont).”