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Paul Rishell & Annie Raines

No Guilt Without Sex

About Me

Moving to the Country

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Paul Rishell was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1950, which made his young teenage years coincide with the early 60's, so naturally he started out as a drummer in a surf-rock band. Fortunately for all of us, a friend soon turned him on to the country blues records of Son House, Robert Johnson, Charley Patton, Blind Lemon Jefferson and others, and Paul was hooked for life. Blues struck such a chord in him that he immersed himself in the old records until he learned to capture their feel on guitar and vocals, all the while gaining an encyclopedic knowledge of the great players and their recordings. By the early 70's Paul had moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts and established himself among contemporaries like Bonnie Raitt and Chris Smither as a solo performer, bandleader, and one of the top players on the fertile Boston music scene. It was an exciting time, as many of the great bluesmen made their first trips north of Chicago, and Paul had the chance to play with many of his heroes, including Son House, Johnny Shines, Sonny Terry, Brownie McGhee, and Howlin' Wolf.

At about this time Annie Raines was just across town, working her way through Kindergarten. The blues muse struck her during her high school years, which were the mid-80's. While her friends were listening to Pink Floyd, Annie was enthralled by the sounds of the Muddy Waters Band, and particularly drawn to the blues harmonica playing of Little Walter Jacobs, Big Walter Horton and Sonny Boy Williamson. As with Paul Rishell some twenty years earlier, the blues hit Annie so hard she just had to follow, and she dropped out of college halfway through her Freshman year to become one of the first serious female blues harmonica players in the country. Annie began to play gigs at local Boston area clubs, and later traveled to Chicago where she met and played with Pinetop Perkins, Louis Myers, and James Cotton.

Paul Rishell's debut recording, Blues on a Holiday was released in 1990 as the first CD from the fledgling Tone-Cool Records label, to resounding critical acclaim. The album was half acoustic, half electric, and established Paul as a masterful, versatile blues player and as well as a deeply soulful singer and songwriter. Meanwhile Annie continued to hone her considerable talents working the club circuit with various bands, including the Tarbox Ramblers and the very first Susan Tedeschi Band. Not coincidentally, Paul was giving guitar lessons to both Michael Tarbox and Susan Tedeschi at the time.

It was inevitable that these two kindred spirits would eventually get together, and when they did, during the recording of Paul's second Tone-Cool CD, Swear to Tell the Truth, in 1993, the sparks flew. Paul and Annie both base their ensemble playing style on close communication, listening keenly to the other players to support rather than overshadow them, and their duo work here is marked by the sensitive interplay that has become so central to their performances. Paul and Annie stayed together as a working team, collaborating on original songs and releasing I Want You to Know (1996) and Moving to the Country (2000), the W.C. Handy Award winner for Acoustic Blues Album of the Year.

Touring nationally and internationally at festivals, clubs, and concert halls, and playing and teaching at workshops, Paul & Annie have earned loyal fans around the globe. Their music has been featured on various TV soundtracks and radio shows including Americana, Folk, Triple A and Blues formats. They have performed on diverse radio and TV shows including A Prairie Home Companion, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, and PBS's Arthur. Paul and Annie have recorded with Susan Tedeschi, Pinetop Perkins and Rory Block, and continue to perform and record as members of John Sebastian's J-Band. Susan Tedeschi recorded an "unplugged" version of Paul's "Blues on a Holiday" with Paul and Annie for her second Tone-Cool/Artemis CD, Wait For Me.


About the band:
Although they have become known for their close attention to prewar acoustic blues styles, Paul and Annie first found their musical common ground in a Chicago/Texas-style blues band. Over the years, they have been privileged to share the stage and the studio with many fine backing musicians , including Troy Gonyea, Marty Richards, Chris Rival, Jesse Williams, Damian Purro, "Sax" Gordon Beadle, Scott Shetler, Billy MacGillivray, and Reed Butler.

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 8/29/2006
Band Website: paulandannie.com
Band Members: Paul Rishell, vocals, National Steel Guitar, Acoustic and electric guitars
Annie Raines, vocals, harmonica, chromatic harmonica, mandolin, piano, organ, zither, unknown maracas
Chris Rival, guitar
Troy Gonyea, guitar
Reed Butler, bass
Billy MacGillivray, drums
Influences: Mostly good music and some novelty records
Sounds Like: Little Walter, Charley Patton, Big Walter, Son House, Sonny Boy Williamson, Lead Belly, Blind Boy Fuller, Noah Lewis; minus a few IQ points but still alive.
Type of Label: None

My Blog

WHAT TO DO WITH WILLIAM SHATNER

An excerpt from a myspace blog written by "lyfestile1":   "Every once in a while, I'll be on myspace tryin' to find interesting folks who just mite like the music I make. Then it happens. .....
Posted by Paul Rishell & Annie Raines on Thu, 08 Feb 2007 03:04:00 PST

NEW P&A VIDEOS - CLICK ON "MY VIDEOS" AT LEFT!

These are the first videos I managed to upload from rough mixes of our live in Woodstock DVD.  The best is yet to come!
Posted by Paul Rishell & Annie Raines on Wed, 06 Dec 2006 08:20:00 PST

NOW BOOKING 2007 TOURS

Paul Rishell & Annie Raines have available dates in the following regions in 2007: Northeastern US - anytime Mid-Atlantic states - March, late May, July Southeastern US - March, late May...
Posted by Paul Rishell & Annie Raines on Fri, 03 Nov 2006 04:27:00 PST

I WANT YOU TO KNOW IS BACK IN PRINT!

When Tone-Cool Records was bought by Artemis two years ago, we knew that some things would fall through the cracks.  It turned out to be one giant crack.  Use your imagination. The first cas...
Posted by Paul Rishell & Annie Raines on Thu, 19 Oct 2006 06:33:00 PST

I'm so glad I struggled all these years so I could have something to post on Myspace. Yippee!

Now I know why I was destined to play music.  It was really just a means to an end...
Posted by Paul Rishell & Annie Raines on Tue, 29 Aug 2006 09:45:00 PST