Bluesrock Alliance profile picture

Bluesrock Alliance

Keepin' the Flame Alive

About Me

We love blues and rock n' roll. We look for it everywhere. We play the old stuff, and the new stuff if it keeps a bluesy rip to it.We are a Bluesrock Alliance. Two of our members (Rob and Jim) are originally from England. The rest of us are as american as the mississipi delta. The short history of how Blues became Rock n Rock is this; Some body got an electric guitar and started playing blues with it. Chuck Berry liked it and played it faster and wham it was on! The squares got wind and tried to put it in the bag, but the cat got out in England. They gave it back a couple years later. Thank god they didnt keep it themselves or we might be playing in a Pat Boome tribute band. Blues then Rock n' Roll, America then England thats how it all played out.This Band celebrates the heritage of that electrifying sound and strives to keep the excitement of that music alive by playing it when and where we can. If you love this music then you are definitely a friend of ours and we hope you come out and join the celebration.Become an Ally. Let us know your out there!!!!

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 7/29/2005
Band Website: bluesrockalliance.com
Band Members: Brad Grey is on drums. Rob Ransom is on Guitar and keyboards. Dave Ordway plays guitar and sings back up vocals. Jim Young is our bassist and fronts the band on some songs and sings backup as well. Tim Riley is our lead vocalist.
Influences: Though much early rock & roll was based in the blues, Blues-Rock didn't fully develop into a subgenre until the late-'60s. Blues-rock emphasized two specific things — the traditional, three-chord blues song and instrumental improvisation. Borrowing the idea of an instrumental combo and loud amplification from rock & roll, the original blues-rockers — bands like Cream that grew out of the Alexis Korner and John Mayall tradition of British blues, as well as American bands like the Paul Butterfield Blues Band and Canned Heat — also attempted to play long, involved improvisations which were commonplace on jazz records, as well as live blues shows. The hybrid became quite popular and the bands that immediately followed them were louder and more riff-oriented. Out of this approach came heavy metal and Southern rock, which both used basic blues riffs and featured extended solos. In the early '70s, the lines between blues-rock and hard rock were barely visible, as boogie-based bands like ZZ Top employed album-rock production techniques that tended to obscure their blues roots. However, blues-rock soon backed away from hard rock, and there was a set number of acts that continued to play (and rewrite) blues standards as well as write their own songs in the same idiom. In the '80s and '90s, blues-rock was more roots-oriented than in the '60s and '70s, even when artists like the Fabulous Thunderbirds and Stevie Ray Vaughan flirted with rock stardom. By the '80s, blues-rock had become an accepted tradition, much like the blues.
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Type of Label: None

My Blog

Whats Bluesrock Alliance doing?

Bluesrock Alliance is just over six months old.  What a pleasure for all of us to be playing and performing Rock n Roll and blues music. The gigs are coming now and the hard work is paying o...
Posted by Bluesrock Alliance on Tue, 28 Aug 2007 11:06:00 PST

BluesRock Alliance News

Hi all you fans out there! BluesRock Alliance is playing this coming Friday 6/8 at Cruisin' Grand in Escondido. You can also catch us in September at Oceanside Harbor Days right on Oceanside Harbor. P...
Posted by Bluesrock Alliance on Wed, 06 Jun 2007 06:21:00 PST