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Featured mp3s and playing tips
The most recent additions to the site are posted first; please scroll down to see all files. To download song excerpts in MP3 format, right click (or CTRL click on a Mac) and select "Download Link to Disc" or "Save Target As" (depending on your browser).
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“Blues
Attack”
This
solo acoustic version of “Blues Attack” was
recorded on Sept. 30, 1997, during a Baton
Rouge Blues Week interview with David Dye
for World Café. Engineer extraordinaire
Tony Daigle was at the helm at Johnny Palazzotto’s
studio.
“This song ended up being the title
track for the album recorded in 1980, released
in ’81, which sort of bridges my stint
with Clifton Chenier and my work with Bayou
Rhythm,” Sonny says. “It’s
also one of the few tunes I’ve ever
written that came to me all at once. I woke
up one morning with this song in my head
and literally wrote it on the way over to
the studio in Crowley.”
“This version is completely stripped
down with just vocal and my old National
resonator
guitar, which gives it more of the Delta
vibe,” Sonny explains. “The guitar
is tuned to open G [normally D-G-D-G-B-D
low to high] but the difference here is I
took the sixth string and tuned that sucker
all the way down to a low G, an octave below
the fifth string. The good news is you get
that big low pedal tone. The bad news is
it flops around. But it does give an edge
that I like for country blues. Of all the
incarnations of ‘Blues Attack,’ this
is the only one like this on tape.”
4.83 MB, 128Kpbs, MP3
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Common Law Love
Here are Sonnys thoughts on this rendition of "Common Law Love" recorded with Steve Conn on accordion and harmony vocals live at KBCO FM:
"I was in Boulder doing E-Town when Steve was the musical director. He was featured on the original Outward Bound album version, so we thought itd be a good idea to record a live duo version for KBCOs Studio C Sessions. This is in E tuning, and its a treat to hear the accordion in this key. Most Cajun and zydeco songs are in G and C. We dont hear an accordion in E very often down here in Louisiana. This is basically a 1-4-5 song. The slide is at the 12th fret, and youre able to fret behind it to get the main figure. Youre hearing all six strings so its a bigger sound."
4 MB, 128Kpbs, MP3
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Road A Plenty
Here are Sonnys thoughts on "Road a Plenty:
"Ive always liked writing variations on a theme. One idea can spark a cycle of songs. Road a Plenty came up when I was writing Spider-Gris, one of the instrumentals on Levee Town. Both songs use some of the same chordal voicings. When an idea is good enough, it can stretch through many incarnations. I really improvised the solo on this one its always better to capture the moment and not think too much."
"The key figure for the song involves fretting the first and second strings on the third fret and bouncing the slide (on the little finger) off the second through fifth strings at the fifth fret. Its sort of a reversed version of "Spider-Gris," starting high and going low instead of the other way around."
"This was recorded at my home for a benefit CD, and its in G Spanish tuning. I played my 66 Strat through an MXR Dyna Comp to The Plex (Richard Becks version of the Echoplex) to a Line 6 POD to an API mic pre and eq to tape."
2.9 MB, 128Kpbs, MP3
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Broken Hearted Road
Here are Sonnys thoughts on this rendition of "Broken Hearted Road" recorded for a World Café remote on Sept. 30, 1997:
"This solo acoustic version was recorded at Johnny Palazzottos studio in Baton Rouge with engineer extraordinaire Tony Daigle as part of an interview with David Dye for World Café. Its stripped down with just vocal and my old National resonator guitar, which gives it more of a Delta vibe."
"At the time, the song was developing and I had been playing it electrified with the band in a version more reminiscent of what Jazz Fests Quint Davis once called Cajun Cream. The version here is the antithesis of that."
"I always liked the technique of the bottleneck slide line following the vocal in unison. It gives it a more powerful, haunting quality its a throwback to the Delta players. Using Dm tuning, the thumb pedals the sixth string while the melody is picked out with the bottleneck on the first and second strings using the second and third fingers of the right hand."
4 MB, 128Kpbs, MP3
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Congo
Square version 1 excerpt,
version 2 excerpt
"Congo Square"
is one of Sonnys best-known songs, and his arrangement
has evolved a bit over the years. "Congo Square" can
be heard in a flatpicked, standard-tuning version on the "Down
in Louisiana" CD and in an open-tuned slide rendition on
the "South of I-10" CD.
The song was written in the key of D minor, and the slide (and
current stage) version of "Congo Square" uses a D
minor tuning (D-A-D-F-A-D, low to high). This tuning is also
used for the live version of "Broken Hearted Road."
Though its only slightly different from the more commonly
used open D major (you just drop the F# down to F to make the
tuning minor), D minor tuning opens up a whole new range of
musical possibilities.
"Because of the slacker tension, D minor tuning gives you
an elasticity to touch that you can really feel and hear in
the overall sound," Sonny says. "Bluesy with a powerful
low end, it has an atmospheric mojo and a spooky vibe I really
like. Think Elmore James in a dark mood."
Audio clips of both versions of "Congo Square" can
be found in the Discography section.
The clip for the "South of I-10" version, in fact,
features Mark Knopflers guitar solo.
version 1, 1 MB, 128Kpbs, MP3
version 2, 1.1 MB, 128Kpbs, MP3
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You Must Keep On
This tune dates back to '74 or '75 and was a staple of gigs at the Red Dog Saloon and Mother's Mantle in Lafayette, Sonny reports. Our version is taken from "The Tulsa Sampler" LP and comes to us courtesy of Tom Powell.
It seems Sonny and Dave headed up to Oklahoma to cut some tracks with some of Eric Clapton's bandmates (two band selections were featured alongside this cut), and this was the sole solo track (with overdubbing). "This was one of those 24-hour sessions that you learn not to do," Sonny says with a laugh. "It really burns you out. I remember the door opening and the sun blasting in, with Dave coming back from a decent nights sleep at the hotel. I must've looked awful, 'cause he grabbed the keys to my car and drove us all the way back to Louisiana." Still, Sonny says, hes always been happy with the way this all-acoustic track turned out. "I was inspired by my father. It reminds me of how he used to sing and rock me to sleep when I was a little kid."
3.7 MB, 128Kpbs, MP3
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Son of Native Stepson
By popular request, weve posted the rare acoustic version of the electric South of I-10 instrumental that opens this web site. Dave, Sonny and drummer Mike Organ laid down basic tracks in New York, and Steve Conn overdubbed accordion and Hammond B-3 parts with Sonny's co-producer R.S. Field in Nashville. We were on the road and decided to do this acoustic version of the song, which I like doing, because there's always a flip side to a song, it just gives it a whole different vibe, Sonny reports. He played his Martin D-28 on the cut, and says it offers a taste of the direction a future all-acoustic album might take.
3.4 MB, 128Kpbs, MP3
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Back to Bayou Teche (live)
This promo-only version was tracked November 24, 1992 at Amsterdam's Club Paradiso. This rarity features Goners Dave Ranson on bass and Kenneth Blevins on drums plus longtime Sonny Landreth accomplice Steve Conn on accordion and background vocals and was originally issued on the four-song Zoo/Praxis "South of I-10" promo disc "Exit 103A."
4.7 MB, 128Kpbs, MP3
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Key to the Highway
This live, late night jam is featured on the benefit CD Medicine Show, Vol. 1: Live at Grant Street Dancehall. To order, call the Acadiana Arts Council at 337-233-7060.
5.9 MB, 128Kbps, MP3
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