Reviews for The Mississippi Sheiks Tribute Project

To read more of the review click the review title.

The Mississippi Sheiks Tribute Concert - Live in Vancouver CONCERT DVD

Crossroads Blues Society of Northern Illinois

Review Date: 
2011

Hittin' The Note

Review: 

The Tribute Concert to the music of The Mississippi Sheiks, now on DVD, captures some of today's most gifted players summoning up the sounds and spirit of the 1930's South. A recital by blues-folkster Jim Byrnes recounts the history of the honorees, getting the program off to an enchanting start.

Review Date: 
2011

MOJO

Review: 

"Things About Comin' My Way," which revived the repertoire of The Mississippi Sheiks, was MOJO's Blues Album of The Month in March 2010, the month of this concert recording. It is billed as a companion to the CD, which is entirely fair.

Review Date: 
2011

Rambles.net

Review: 

Recorded in Vancouver, British Columbia, over the weekend of March 12-13, 2010, The Mississippi Sheiks Tribute Concert is a companion to Black Hen's CD Things About Comin' My Way, which I reviewed here on 24 April 2010. Tributes tend to be an iffy business, often pointless and too close to the original to be of much interest.

Review Date: 
2011

Sing Out

Review: 

This DVD was shot at the concert Black Hen Records staged in Vancouver celebrating the release of Things About Comin My Way (Black Hen 0055), their tribute album to the Mississippi Sheiks, that fabled African American string band of the 1930's. Like the album, the concert is an all-star affair, but with a twist: nobody on the DVD performs the same songs they played on the album.

Review Date: 
2011

American Blues News

Review: 

To me, one of the great joys about blues music is that there's always a steady stream of historians, musicologists and musicians who (at their core) are still huge fans of the music and its history.

Review Date: 
2010

americanroots.com

Review: 

Most music fans who are true music fans (knowledgeable enough to visit this sight…;) have an interest in not only the music, but in the development and history of the music they like. To those of you I have something you’ll want to check out, especially if you are into acoustic blues.

Review Date: 
2010

AntiMusic.com

Review: 

Guitar player (and head of the Black Hen label) Steve Dawson is the mastermind behind this exquisite tribute to the Mississippi Sheiks, a family of performers who were very popular recording artists in the 1930s and '40s.

Review Date: 
2010

Blogcritics

Review: 

One of the highlights of my trip to the Blues Music Awards in May was the performance by a group of fine blues musicians who created the BMA-nominated album Things About Comin' My Way – A Tribute To The Music Of The Mississippi Sheiks.

Review Date: 
2010

Blues Blast Magazine

Review: 

Steve Dawson produced and recorded a critically acclaimed Mississippi Sheiks tribute on CD in fall of 2009. He wanted to create a live experience in Vancouver with the same artists and over two days this past March he did two shows, the second of which resulted in this DVD. What he got was truly spectacular.

Review Date: 
2010

Blues Bytes

Review: 

One of the highlights of 2009 was the wonderful tribute to the legendary Mississippi Sheiks, released by Black Hen Music. The CD showcased the amazing versatility of the pre-war duo by featuring a varied set of artists with backgrounds in the blues, folk, jazz, country, and rock. It was definitely a release that satisfied fans of many genres beyond the blues.

Review Date: 
2010

Blues In Britain

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks were an iconic “string band” whose popularity during the mid 20s to mid 30s resulted in a plethora of fine recordings for Paramount, Okeh and Bluebird – many of which remain popular with blues artists today – one of which, “Sitting On Top Of The World”, has been recorded by artists as diverse as Howlin’ Wolf, Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole and Cream.

Review Date: 
2010

Crossroads Blues Society of Northern Illinois

Review: 

Steve Dawson produced and recorded a critically acclaimed Mississippi Sheiks tribute on CD in fall of 2009. He wanted to create a live experience in Vancouver with the same artists and over two days this past March he did two shows, the second of which resulted in this DVD. What he got was truly spectacular.

Review Date: 
2010

FAME

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks was a black family group, the Chatmons, that, though nearly forgotten now, was one of the most influential musical groups America has produced. Muddy Waters was unstinting in his praise and said he'd walk 10 miles to see them play.

Review Date: 
2010

Guitar Edge

Review: 

THE MISSISSIPPI SHEIKS TRIBUTE CONCERT Live in Vancouver (Black Hen Music) **** Stars

Review Date: 
2010

Midwest Records

Review: 

Well, this is simply a no brainer. The great tribute album of last year also had a live concert to go with it, and this is the DVD memorializing the event.

Review Date: 
2010

Music Industry News Network

Review: 

VANCOUVER, BC – Black Hen Music announces a September 21 release date for the new DVD, The Mississippi Sheiks Tribute Concert – Live in Vancouver, featuring performances by Dave Alvin, John Hammond, Van Dyke Parks, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Geoff Muldaur, Jim Byrnes and many others. The DVD will be distributed in the U.S. by Burnside Distribution.

Review Date: 
2010

Nashville Blues Society

Review Date: 
2010

Penguin Eggs

Review: 

If you’re a guitar player, there’s definitely some tasty licks to be copped from this DVD. The Mississippi Sheiks were a late 1920s and 1930s guitar and fiddle group based around a family named the Chatmons. The two most well-known members were Bo Carter (Armenter Chatmon) and Sam Chatmon, who also recorded on their own.

Review Date: 
2010

Philadelphia Daily News

Review: 

BLUES CRUISE: Van Dyke Parks joked Sunday at World Cafe Live that "it's only taken 67 years" to get him on the road.

Review Date: 
2010

Philadelphia Daily News

Review: 

Van Dyke Parks joked Sunday at World Cafe Live that "it's only taken 67 years" to get him on the road. But this eccentric, Mississippi-steeped keyboard-player/singer/composer is making up for lost time with an appearance on the excellent new DVD "The Mississippi Sheiks Tribute Concert - Live in Vancouver" (Black Hen, A), which celebrates America's biggest recording act of the early 1930s.

Review Date: 
2010

Phoenix Blues Society

Review: 

One of the highlights of 2009 was the wonderful tribute to the legendary Mississippi Sheiks, released by Black Hen Music. The CD showcased the amazing versatility of the pre-war duo by featuring a varied set of artists with backgrounds in the blues, folk, jazz, country, and rock. It was definitely a release that satisfied fans of many genres beyond the blues.

Review Date: 
2010

Phoenix Blues Society

Review: 

One of the highlights of 2009 was the wonderful tribute to the legendary Mississippi Sheiks, released by Black Hen Music. The CD showcased the amazing versatility of the pre-war duo by featuring a varied set of artists with backgrounds in the blues, folk, jazz, country, and rock. It was definitely a release that satisfied fans of many genres beyond the blues.

Review Date: 
2010

Planet Weekly

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks Tribute Concert-Live in Vancouver (Black Hen Music) is a wonderful DVD with a September 21 release date. You get it all, 13 songs of Mississippi Sheik's music, interviews plus backstage footage including rehearsals. The MIssissippi Sheiks were a popular and influential guitar and fiddle group that played mainly country blues of the 1930'.

Review Date: 
2010

Post and Courier

Review: 

For hardcore blues music fans, dropping the name The Mississippi Sheiks should invoke fond memories of great country blues music.

Review Date: 
2010

The Bluegrass Special

Review: 

Muddy Waters once said he would walk ten miles to see the Chatmon brothers convene as the Mississippi Sheiks. He wasn’t kidding, either.

Review Date: 
2010

The Blues Report

Review: 

I don't get to see the vast number of live blues I used to, due to the fact that our local Blues Club sold it's soul for the love of money and more mainstream pop and rock music. That however is somewhat compensated for with the many fine CD's I receive for review which I can leisurely listen to over a nice meal, beer, glass of wine, or all the above.

Review Date: 
2010

the Georgia Straight

Review: 

Let’s get the hard sell out of the way: you need this live DVD, if only for Bob Brozman’s uncanny “Church Bell Blues”. Looking like Groucho Marx being possessed by the evil spirit of Delta bluesman Son House, the California singer-guitarist lurches through a performance that’s part voodoo, part vaudeville, and wholly virtuosic.

Review Date: 
2010

The Province

Review: 

This is the distillation of two shows at the Capilano Theatre from last March, a live version of last year’s Mississippi Sheiks tribute album featuring many of the same artists. Led by Steve Dawson, whose inspired project this is, there is a stellar band backing the likes of Oh Susanna, Colin James, Geoff Muldaur, John Hammond, Dave Alvin and so many more.

Review Date: 
2010

Toronto Blues Society

Review: 

This DVD is intended as a companion to the Tribute CD, Things About Comin’ My Way, from last October. Producer/bandleader Steve Dawson assembled many of the same performers for a live concert in Vancouver this past March, who perform a completely different set of songs than is on the CD.

Review Date: 
2010

Vancouver Sun

Review: 

Last year, B.C. musician and producer Steve Dawson assembled Things About Comin’ My Way, a tribute CD to long-forgotten ’30s
blues outfit The Mississippi Sheiks. This year, he took the act on the road, staging all-star concerts like this Vancouver revue with VIPs such as John Hammond, Dave Alvin, Colin James and Van Dyke Parks. A perfect blend of Americana and Canadiana.

Review Date: 
2010
Things About Comin' My Way

The Calgary Herald

Review: 

The idea for a concert version of the project was undertaken as a fitting gala to coincide with the closing of the Vancouver Winter Olympics, which featured over 15 guests and was, as Dawson says, an over-the-top undertaking.

Review Date: 
2012

About.com

Review: 

Back in the early days of the blues, the Mississippi Sheiks were about the hottest thing going, riding a string of hits like "Things About Comin' My Way," "Stop and Listen," and the enduring "Sitting On Top Of The World" to fame and commercial success.

Review Date: 
2010

Acoustic Guitar Magazine

Review: 

Sitting at the kitchen table with his wife, Steve Dawson had an idea: why not record a tribute to '30's string band the Mississippi Sheiks? He could start with people whose albums he'd produced, like Kelly Joe Phelps, or bands he'd met at festivals, like the Carolina Chocolate Drops, before reaching out to artists he didn't know at all.

Review Date: 
2010

B&R

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks consisted mainly of the Chatmon family from Bolton, Mississippi and their brand of string band music was celebrated throughout the Delta. Their most famous alumnus was Bo Chatmon (better known as Bo Carter) who had a successful solo career as well as playing with the Sheiks.

Review Date: 
2010

Blues & Rhythm

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks consisted mainly of the Chatmon family from Bolton, Mississippi and their brand of string band music was celebrated throughout the Delta. Their most famous alumnus was Bo Chatmon (better known as Bo Carter) who had a successful solo career as well as playing with the Sheiks.

Review Date: 
2010

Blurt

Review: 

Contrary to popular belief, the blues band was not a byproduct of the electric guitar's invention and the World War II migration of African-Americans out of the Deep South to big Northern cities where they could earn a living with music.

Review Date: 
2010

Boston Blues Society

Review: 

Mike Mellor features the album and talks about each song individually. Go here (link below) to read the feature...

http://thekillingfloor.typepad.com/the-killing-floor-notes-from-the-edit...

Review Date: 
2010

Charleston Gazette

Review: 

The ubiquitous “tribute project” has become something of pest in the world of CD releases. For the most part, they consist of mildly interesting (at best) versions of an artists’ canon of songs and usually have more to do with promoting the participating bands.

Review Date: 
2010

Charleston Gazette

Review: 

The ubiquitous "tribute project" has become something of pest in the world of CD releases. For the most part, they consist of mildly interesting (at best) versions of an artists' canon of songs and usually have more to do with promoting the participating bands.

Review Date: 
2010

Daily Gleaner

Review: 

For a band that has had such a unique and pivotal impact on the history of contemporary music, The Mississippi Sheiks are a little-known name.

Canadian musician, songwriter, and producer Steve Dawson aims to change that. On this album, he brings together a wide assortment of musicians to reinterpret and represent 17 tracks by this seminal string band.

Review Date: 
2010

eMusic

Review: 

They're the beneficiaries of a rather unlikely tribute album and a primary inspiration and/or influence for numerous contemporary string bands, from the high-profile Carolina Chocolate Drops to Geoff Muldaur's one-off collaborators the Texas Sheiks. No doubt about it, the Mississippi Sheiks are happening these days.

Review Date: 
2010

Juke Joint Soul

Review: 

There's a lot of history behind this disc, albeit a lot of mysterious and unconfirmed mythology about the ghosts of prewar blues. Muddy Waters used to travel for miles as a young man to catch the Sheiks play. Howlin' Wolf copped his version of "Sittin' On Top of the World" from them. Their musical legacy has always been somewhat untraceable but their influence has remained.

Review Date: 
2010

Long Island Blues Society

Review: 

The MS Sheiks were unique. Consisting of Sam, Lonnie and Armenter Chatmon and Walter Vinson, they were very important in the evolution of the blues. They took the music off the fields of King Cotton and into the burgeoning cities of the New South, helping turn Memphis into the music Mecca of today.

Review Date: 
2010

Maple Blues Magazine

Review: 

Black Hen’s Steve Dawson has undertaken an ambitious and hugely successful project that has as its sub-title “A Tribute To The Music Of The Mississippi Sheiks”. This entertaining string band had a varying lineup but usually included Sam Chatmon, Walter Vinson, fiddler Lonnie Chatmon & third brother Bo.

Review Date: 
2010

Maverick

Review: 

The sub-title of this seventeen-song tribute release is A Tribute to the Music of the Mississippi Sheiks. Named partly after the 1921 Rudo

Review Date: 
2010

Mississippi Sheiks Tribute Concert - Live Show Review - No Depression

Review: 

Gritty,unwashed and real. The blues saved American popular music from the saccharine whitewash of the nineteen fifties. For young people growing up in the suburbs, the blues and its tales of hasty retreats out the back door, wife stealing preachers and men who solved arguments at the end of a smoking gun offered another way of seeing and experiencing life for a sheltered generation.

Review Date: 
2010

MOJO

Review: 

Of the few African-American stringbands to record, the most successful were The Mississippi Sheiks - fiddler Lonnie Chatmon, guitarist/singer Walter Vinson and occasional colleagues. Their hits, Stop and Listen and Sitting ON Tope of the World, were among about 100 recordings.

Review Date: 
2010

NetRhythms

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks were between 1930 and 1935 the top-selling band, mainly as a result of Sittin' On Top Of The World, written by two of its members (Walter Vinson and Lonnie Chatmon), which has since turned out their most extensively-covered song (by everyone who's anyone and plenty others besides, from the worlds of blues, country and rock, from Bill Monroe to Howlin' Wolf, Doc Watson to the

Review Date: 
2010

Nippertown

Review: 

In the world of jug band music, the Memphis Jug Band is to the Beatles, as, make no mistake about it, the Mississippi Sheiks are to the Rolling Stones. One of the greatest (and most popular) pre-war country blues stringbands, the Sheiks – brothers Chatmon (Sam, Lonnie and Armenter) and neighbor-fiddler Walter Vinson – recorded nearly 100 singles between 1930-1935.

Review Date: 
2010

North Shore News

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks were only together for a short period of time in the early 1930s but the fiddle and guitar group were immensely influential on American popular culture with many musicians, such as Muddy Waters, citing their significance.

Review Date: 
2010

Popmatters.com

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks were a popular acoustic country string band who recorded 70 songs during the early part of the Great Depression. The group’s best known song, the surreal blues tune “Sitting On Top of the World”, has been covered by everyone from Howlin’ Wolf to Chet Atkins to Bob Dylan to Cream to Ray Charles to the Grateful Dead to Doc Watson and to Jack White.

Review Date: 
2010

R & R

Review: 

Forgotten superstars of the 1930s whose popularity saw them eventually play for President Roosevelt, The MIssissippi Sheiks' formidable legacy is given a loving makeover by seventeen sympathetic acts on a collection that deserves to cement the Sheiks' status as an incalculable influence on the development of American music between the wars.

Review Date: 
2010

Rambles.net

Review: 

As a recording act the Mississippi Sheiks, the last great African-American string band, lasted only five years, from 1930 to 1935, but they left one certifiable American classic in their wake. "Sitting on Top of the World," written by two band members, guitarist Walter Vinson and fiddler Lonnie Chatmon, has since been covered in just about every imaginable genre and arrangement.

Review Date: 
2010

rambles.net

Review: 

As a recording act the Mississippi Sheiks, the last great African-American string band, lasted only five years, from 1930 to 1935, but they left one certifiable American classic in their wake. "Sitting on Top of the World," written by two band members, guitarist Walter Vinson and fiddler Lonnie Chatmon, has since been covered in just about every imaginable genre and arrangement.

Review Date: 
2010

Record Dept.

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks recorded country and Delta blues throughout the 30’s and were one of the top selling groups of its time.

Review Date: 
2010

Sing Out

Review: 

Propelled by the enormous commercial success of their second 78-rpm release in 1930, the stoic "Sitting on Top of the World," acoustic string band brothers Lonnie, Sam and Armenter Chatmon, along with guitarist/singer Walter Vinson, recorded steadily for the next five years - waxing a large body of original blues, hokum songs, square dance hollers and topical commentaries that would eventually def

Review Date: 
2010

The Bluegrass Special

Review: 

Muddy Waters once said he would walk ten miles to see the Chatmon brothers convene as the Mississippi Sheiks. He wasn’t kidding, either.

Review Date: 
2010

The Daily Planet

Review: 

On Things About Comin' My Way, a host of talented musicians cover the songs of 1930s string band The Mississippi Sheiks, who Bob Dylan saluted on his World Gone Wrong album.

Review Date: 
2010

The Line Of Best Fit

Review: 

Never heard of The Mississippi Sheiks? Me neither. Turns out they influenced plenty of people you do know though, like Muddy Waters for instance, who would walk ten miles to hear them play.

Review Date: 
2010

Toledo Blade

Review: 

Seminal blues group the Mississippi Sheiks is feted in this tribute album with new recordings by John Hammond, Bruce Cockburn, Bill Frisell, Geoff Muldaur, Jim Byrnes, the North Mississippi Allstars and others. There's an earthy, down-home feel to it - gutbucket, not glitz.

Review Date: 
2010

Uptown Magazine

Review: 

This tribute album is unlike many others. Canuck musician/songwriter Steve Dawson (of Zubot and Dawson) decided to honour the music of a blues combo that only existed in the early 1930s in the Southern U.S. The 17 tracks here are well-conceived and wonderfully charming. Dawson figures on many of the tracks and his skill at guitar (especially slide guitar) is superb.

Review Date: 
2010

Washington Post Blues Society

Review: 

Things About Comin' My Way - A Tribute to teh Mississippi Sheiks features 17 songs originated by this short lived/ but legendary band, the mucleus of which was Lonnie Chatmon on fiddle and Walter Vinson on guitar, Bo Carter and Sam Chatmon on bass. The band took it's name from the 1921 silent film "The Sheik" starring Rudoph Valentino.

Review Date: 
2010

acousticmusic.com

Review: 

Among a historic raft packed full of "legends", the Mississippi Sheiks are the real thing, formed in 1930 by three brothers (Sam, Lonnie, and Armenter Chatmon) and Walter Vinson. They put out almost 100 singles and became one of the most popular string bands of the time (and were probably screwed black and blue by their label, too, if tradition is any indication).

Review Date: 
2009

An Honest Tune.com

Review: 

Guitarist/singer Walter Vinson and fiddler Lonnie Chatmon, collectively known as The Mississippi Sheiks, performed from 1930-35, and were even invited to a special command performance by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Their influence has traveled through time, and the duo receives another honor on the recording Things About Comin' My Way: A Tribute to the Music of The Mississippi Sheiks.

Review Date: 
2009

Blogcritics Music

Review: 

Even the name of this group is interesting. The name the Mississippi Sheiks was coined by members of the group as a playful double meaning. Mississippi is where they came from, but in the parlance of the day, a “sheik” was a man out “lookin’ for some tush,” as ZZ Top would say.

Review Date: 
2009

Blogcritics Music

Review: 

It’s gotta be cool to be the owner of a record label. Take Steve Dawson, the creative force behind Vancouver-based Black Hen Records. Dawson fell in love with the music of the Mississippi Sheiks, one of the most popular and prolific groups in the early days of recorded music.

Review Date: 
2009

Blues Blast Magazine

Review: 

“Sitting on Top of the World” is a song with which I had a casual acquaintanceship. That is until the year 2000, when Willie Nelson issued the CD “Milk Cow Blues” with a cover of “Sitting on Top of the World.” In the liner notes, he credits Bob Wills (of Texas Playboys fame) as the author.

Review Date: 
2009

Blues Bytes

Review: 

Between 1930 and 1935, The Mississippi Sheiks recorded nearly a hundred singles and made a definitive mark as one of the most popular string bands ever recorded.

Review Date: 
2009

Blues Matters

Review: 

If you do not know much about the Mississippi Sheiks, between 1930 and 1935 they recorded around seventy tracks. The CD, entitled "A Tribute to the Music of the Mississippi Sheiks" was recorded in essentially three big sessions, of which one comprised of a house band backing several of the artists. This process gives a more spontaneous and live feel to the material.

Review Date: 
2009

Blues Revue

Review: 

"This tribute album, the brainchild of musician/producer Steve Dawson, reinterprets the Sheiks' music across a broad range of styles. And it does so in ways that make the album much more than just another soundalike ... With a roster of artists who are clearly enjoying themselves, Things About Comin' My Way offers a gold mine of music and memories."

Review Date: 
2009

Blues Source

Review: 

This CD is a fantastic tribute to the great string band The Mississippi Sheiks. The Sheiks consisted of singer / guitarist Walter Vinson & fiddler Lonnie Chatmon. They sometimes included Lonnie’s brothers Sam & Armenter, (aka) Bo Carter. Sam was already a renowned blues & folk singer, and Bo was performing as well in those early days.

Review Date: 
2009

CD Hotlist

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks were a popular African-American string band in the 1930s, recording such famous songs as “Sitting on Top of the World.” Muddy Waters used to walk ten miles to see them play, and they were a major influence on a wide range of blues and blues-rock musicians.

Review Date: 
2009

CD/DVD Reviews

Review: 

The group name, The Mississippi Sheiks may not be a household name, but one of their most famous songs, “Sitting On Top Of The World” was made famous by Cream on the band’s 1968 Wheels Of Fire album.

Review Date: 
2009

CROSSROADS BLUES SOCIETY

Review: 

Something bad happened to me in the 70s, leaving me with negative feelings toward all things folk, bluegrass, goodtime, jug band, and, well, string band. As a result, all I know about The Chatmon brothers as The Mississippi Sheiks is a vague recollection of hearing “Sitting On Top Of The World” once or twice.

Review Date: 
2009

earshot-online.com

Review: 

he Mississippi Sheiks recorded during the 1930s and have more than one hundred singles to their credit. Made up of three sons of an slave (Sam, Lonnie and Armenter Chatman), the band recorded broke-down country and Delta blues.

Review Date: 
2009

exclaim.ca

Review: 

It's hard to imagine any other record this year boasting a more impressive cast of roots music stars than this tribute to legendary bluesmen the Mississippi Sheiks.

Review Date: 
2009

Folk Roots/ Folk Branches

Review: 

One of the nice things about being my age is that as a young folkie, I had opportunities to see, in some cases meet, and, in a few cases, even work with, some of the legendary first generation recording artists whose music so influenced everything that came after.

Review Date: 
2009

Folk Wax

Review: 

In the world of jug band music, the Memphis Jug Band is to the Beatles, as - make no mistake about it - the Mississippi Sheiks are to the Rolling Stones. One of the greatest (and most popular) pre-war country Blues stringbands, the Sheiks - brothers Chatmon (Sam, Lonnie and Armenter) and neighbor-fiddler Walter Vinson - recorded nearly one hundred singles between 1930-1935.

Review Date: 
2009

Good New Music

Review: 

This Canadian-American venture was put together out of pocket and on a shoestring by Vancouver-based guitar wizard Steve Dawson, thanks to connections with the artists and a few investors. It was recorded mostly at three sessions in both countries, with Dawson handling the chores on his side of the border as well as playing slide guitar on several songs and contributing his own track.

Review Date: 
2009

Great Norhthern Blues Society

Review: 

Do you like string band music? If so you should give a listen to Things About Comin' My Way: A Tribute to the Music of the Mississippi Sheiks recently released on the Black Hen Music label.

Review Date: 
2009

Kamloops Examiner

Review: 

They's a chill wind shriekin' through the graveyard. A gibbous moon hovers overhead and them fields lay dark and shadowed as the hopes of the men who coax them stubborn mules to haul the plows through them every day. In the shacks that surround them furrows they's singin' some. They got them some guitar, some fiddle, even someone blowin' tuneful through the lips of an old brown jug.

Review Date: 
2009

MIDWEST RECORD

Review: 

Hokum hasn’t had it this good in years. First was the well intentioned old hippie tribute to Yank Rachell. Then was Maria Muldaur’s trip back to the Even Dozen and early Kweskin days with an appropriate bunch of old hippies. Now comes a bunch of old and new hippies, backed by real rockers, tipping the cap to the Mississippi Sheiks in what is simply a jaw dropping, 4 ‘goddamn’!

Review Date: 
2009

Monday Mag

Review: 

Steve Dawson fans will be getting an earful at Saturday night’s concert at Hermann’s. Not only did the Juno-winning multi-instrumentalist release two solo records last year, he also recently finished Things About Comin’ My Way: A Tribute to the Music of the Mississippi Sheiks.

Review Date: 
2009

Nashville Blues Society

Review: 

In the early 1930's, the Chatmon brothers--Sam, Lonnie, and Armenter--along with Walter Vinson, formed the Mississippi Sheiks. They recorded some one hundred singles that would establish them as one of the most popular "string bands" of all time.

Review Date: 
2009

No Depression

Review: 

I’ve now been an avid music listener for more than half a century, since I was in grade school. But somehow, in all those years, I never managed to acquaint myself with the Mississippi Sheiks. Never even heard of ’em (though it turns out I’ve long had a track by them buried in my collection, on the terrific four-disc Roots ‘n’ Blues: The Retrospective).

Review Date: 
2009

North Shore News

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks were only together for a short period of time in the early 1930s but the fiddle and guitar group were immensely influential on American popular culture with many musicians, such as Muddy Waters, citing their significance.

Review Date: 
2009

Off the Charts

Review: 

You could go your whole life and not hear the Mississippi Sheiks. But, you couldn’t go a day without hearing their influence.

Review Date: 
2009

Off the Dial

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks were a depression era blues band long forgotten by the general public. Vancouver guitarist and record producer Steve Dawson thought it was time to bring the Sheiks back to life.

Review Date: 
2009

PHOENIX BLUES SOCIETY – BLUESBYTES

Review: 

Between 1930 and 1935, The Mississippi Sheiks recorded nearly a hundred singles and made a definitive mark as one of the most popular string bands ever recorded.

Review Date: 
2009

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Review: 

Here's the link to Rich Kienzle's podcast from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that includes a great review of the Sheiks Tribute CD:
http://media.post-gazette.com/podcasts/20091027bye.mp3

Review Date: 
2009

Planet Weekly

Review: 

...Things About Comin' My Way-A tribute to the music of The Mississippi Sheiks (Black Hen Music) is a fantastic project to honor the early '30s super group. The Sheiks blended blues, jazz, pop and country.

Review Date: 
2009

QRO Mag

Review: 

They don't make ‘em like they used to.

Review Date: 
2009

Record Dept.

Review: 

The Mississippi Sheiks recorded country and Delta blues throughout the 30’s and were one of the top selling groups of its time.

Review Date: 
2009

Red Deer Advocate

Review: 

Perhaps the roots tribute of the year, Steve Dawson and his spouse Alice have assembled a masterfully balanced collection of blues, folk, and unclassifiable renditions of music recorded by the Mississippi Sheiks during the early ’30s.

Review Date: 
2009

Sonic Boomers

Review: 

Tribute albums have pretty much run their course. After a decade-long deluge, things settled down this century until there was barely a trickle of those well-meaning but mostly yawn-inducing collections. Then something as strong as this 17-song album of songs by the Mississippi Sheiks comes along, and lo and behold all bets are off.

Review Date: 
2009

Star-Ledger

Review: 

A Delta-area family band led by fiddler Lonnie Chatmon, the Mississippi Sheiks were stars in the '30s, with Muddy Waters recalling that he "walked 10 miles to see them play." The Sheiks had a national hit with "Sittin' on Top of the World," which became a timeless standard for blues, country and rock artists alike.

Review Date: 
2009

The Alternative Root - The Roots Americana Music Magazine

Review: 

If you were to eplore the most influential artists of the American roots music movement beginning in the pre-war era of the 1930's your research would certainly include The Mississippi Sheiks. The Mississippi Sheiks music remains timeless; a testament to the songwriting and arrangements of founders Lonnie, Sam and Armenter Chatmon and Walter Vinson.

Review Date: 
2009

The Bluegrass Special

Review: 

Almost unknown today except to blues historians and enthusiasts, the wondrous Mississippi Sheiks were the most popular string band of the 1930s, beloved by white and black audiences well outside their Jackson, Mississippi, home base, so much so as to warrant concert jaunts up north to Chicago and New York and even a by-invitation show for President Franklin Delano Roosevelt at his Warm Springs, GA

Review Date: 
2009

The Blues Festival E Guide

Review: 

Between 1930 and 1935, Sam, Lonnie and Armenter Chatman, the three sons of slaves who along with Walter Vinson made up the core of the Mississippi Sheiks created some of the most memorable blues rants and square dance hollers ever conjured up.

Review Date: 
2009

The Gauntlet Entertainment

Review: 

Things About Comin' My Way, a tribute CD dedicated to 1930s band The Mississippi Sheiks, is a really fun listening experience. The idea of a compilation CD can seem risky at times because there's a great possibility for inconsistencies between contributing artists.

Review Date: 
2009

The Globe and Mail

Review: 

Butt nothing. Singer and guitarist Walter Vincson once said the reason for his taking up of string-band music and abandoning the farming life was that he was “tired of smellin' mule farts.”

Review Date: 
2009

The Line of Best Fit

Review: 

Never heard of The Mississippi Sheiks? Me neither. Turns out they influenced plenty of people you do know though, like Muddy Waters for instance, who would walk ten miles to hear them play.

Review Date: 
2009

The Uniter

Review: 

In Things About Comin’ My Way, producer Steve Dawson manages to evoke the spirit of 1930s plantation-blues band of brothers The Mississippi Sheiks. Born to slaves, Sam, Lonnie and Armenter Chatmon are covered by various artists and bands influenced by their moon-howling tunes on this beautiful tribute album.

Review Date: 
2009

The Vancouver Province

Review: 

Vancouver roots record producer and ace guitar player Steve Dawson first stumbled on the Mississippi Sheiks when Bob Dylan recorded a couple of their tunes on his World Gone Wrong album from 1993. From there he picked up the odd Sheiks 78 going through old record stores and garage sales. He loved them from the start.

Review Date: 
2009

Times Colonist

Review: 

Today, few recognize the name. But back in the 1920s and '30s, the Mississippi Sheiks were huge in North America.

Now Vancouver's Steve Dawson -- the Juno-winning guitarist, producer and songwriter -- has embarked on a one-man campaign to thrust the Sheiks back in the public eye.

Review Date: 
2009

Virginian Pilot

Review: 

This loving tribute to the music of the legendary 1930s group The Mississippi Sheiks brings their iconic rural blues to life. Producer and roots musician Steve Dawson put together the project to honor Walter Vinson, Lonnie Chatmon and occasional member Bo Carter, as well as the 78 multigenre songs they wrote and recorded in the early ’30s.

Review Date: 
2009

Vue Weekly

Review: 

Having released two albums under his name last year, Steve Dawson finds himself in the unlikely position of receiving a lot of notice for Telescope, an entirely instrumental album centred around his pedal-steel playing. With a Juno nod and a recent win at the Western Canadian Music Awards for the album, Dawson welcomes the interest, but admits to having not expected it.

Review Date: 
2009