INTO THE WILD BLUE: GRAMMY SUBMISSION

Into The Wild Blue album cover.jpg

-FOR YOUR GRAMMY CONSIDERATION-
INTO THE WILD BLUE : BEST BLUES ALBUM
"Into the Wild Blue" : BEST INSTRUMENTAL

"This is the album of a lifetime, the distillation of everything that has made Roy Rogers such an important artist over the years. The slide work is superb and the band rocks with white hot intensity. A masterpiece."-John Swenson, Rolling Stone

The eight-time GRAMMY nominee is back with his first solo album in five years and at the top of his game with "Into the Wild Blue". Recently featured in Guitar Magazine, his own episode in the PBS "Music Gone Public" series and on the CONAN show, Roy Rogers' critically acclaimed release offers fresh blues tracks with hints of his jazz, funk, motown and rock n roll influences. The different slide textures on his latest instrumentals are out of this world. 

"Into the Wild Blue" : BEST INSTRUMENTAL
LISTEN
INTO THE WILD BLUE : BEST BLUES ALBUM
LISTEN

Roy Rogers Headlines First Bitterroot Performing Arts Series Concert


October 21, 2015 5:03 pm  •  PERRY BACKUS Ravalli Republic

HAMILTON – Every year it’s the same for Bitterroot Performing Arts Series. That first concert of the year kind of sneaks up on everyone and then suddenly its over. Monica Grable usually hears the grumbling afterward from those who missed out.“It’s a little slow on the upstart every year no matter who is performing in that first concert,” said Grable, the Bitterroot Performing Arts Council’s executive director. “That first concert happens and then there’s people saying ‘Oh no, it started. I didn’t know.’”This year’s first concert on Saturday, Oct. 24, is one people aren’t going to want to miss, she said. The Grammy-nominated blues slide master guitarist, Roy Rogers and his band, the Delta Rhythm Kings, will certainly be one of those shows that people talk about on Monday. MORE...

 

 

Into The Wild Blue Airplay Highlights

Living Blues Radio Chart July & Aug 2015 Top 25 on Playlists
Roy Rogers/Into the Wild Blue/Chops Not Chaps Records

AIRPLAY HIGHLIGHT

  • “Blues Deluxe”  -Syndicated at over 79 stations! Listen live at www.rootsmusicreport.com
  • "Confessing The Blues" with Cleve Baker -syndicated at over 100 stations around the world! Listen live at Confessing The Blues
  • "Blues At The Crossroads" -Syndicated at over 30 stations! Listen at
  • "BluesPower" - Germany
  • CKUT 90.3 FM "L'Hôtel Du Blues" - Montreal, Canada
  • CHGB Radio - "Sunday Morning Soul" - Ontario, Canada
  • JuzBlooz - Warrnambool, Australia

WEVL Soul Stew - Memphis, TN
DPS "Blues All Over The Place" - Dayton, OH
KVMR - Nevada City, CA
WQLN "Bop'n The Blues" - Pennsylvania
WEMU - Michigan
WDVX - Nashville, TN
KAFM - Grand Junction, CO
KRCB - Rohnert Park, CA
KPFA - Berkeley, CA  
KPIG - Watsonville, CA
WVBR - Ithaca, NY
KVMR - Nevada City, CA
WKCC Radio - "Friends of the Blues" Kankakee, IL
WTJU 91.1FM - Charlottesville, VA
WZXR – Williamsport PA
WCXR – Lewisburg PA
WQSU – Selinsgrove PA
KKFI - Kansas City, MO
WDPS - Kettering, OH
WEFT - Illinois
CapRadio.org - "Mick Martin, the Blues Party"  www.capradio.org Sacramento, CA
"Eight to the Barr with Tarr"- Streaming LIVE at KSAV.org & KTDE.com 
KRVM -"Blues, it's what's for breakfast" - Eugene, OR
PlanetPootwaddle.com - streaming online LIVE 24/7
WBZR 105.9 FM The "LA" Blues Cruise - Altmore, AL


Roy Rogers featured in Music Gone Public PBS Series - AIRING NOW!

Check your local PBS listings this summer for airings of the series 'Music Gone Public', featuring Roy Rogers with special guests Charlie Musselwhite & Ramblin' Jack Elliott!

CALIFORNIA: Los Angeles: KOCE PBS SoCaL Plus CALIFORNIA: Sacramento: KVIE, KVIE2               CALIFORNIA: San Francisco, Oakland, San JoseKRCB / KQED / KCSM            …

CALIFORNIA: Los Angeles: KOCE PBS SoCaL Plus 

CALIFORNIA: Sacramento: KVIE, KVIE2               

CALIFORNIA: San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose

KRCB / KQED / KCSM                                 

CALIFORNIA:   KIXE Redding/Chico (covers from the Oregon border to just north of Sacramento) 

COLORADO:   Denver PBS KBDI2

FLORIDA:   Orlando/Daytona Beach/Melbourne PBS WEFS

ILLINOIS:   Champaign/Springfield/Decatur PBS WSEC 

INDIANA: Ft. Wayne on PBS WFWA

INDIANA: Terre Haute PBS WUSI 

KENTUCKY: Peducah PBS WSIU

MICHIGAN: Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, Battle Creek on PBS WGVU, on PBS WGVU2

MINNESOTA: Minneapolis on PBSTPTlife (Covers almost all of Minnesota.)

MISSOURI:   Hannibal on PBS WMEC

MISSOURI: Cape Girardeau on PBS WSIU

NEW YORK: New York City on PBS WLIW

NEW YORK: Syracuse on PBS WCNY  

OHIO: Toledo PBS WGTE

OREGON:  SOPTV

TEXAS:   El Paso PBS

TENNESSEE: Knoxville

WETP  

TEXAS:   Odessa/Midland KPBT

VERMONT:   Burlington WVTB2

VIRGINIA: Blue Ridge PBS, WBRA2 , WBRA2        

Into The Wild Blue REVIEWS: TV & Print

"This is the album of a lifetime, the distillation of everything that has made Roy Rogers such an important blues artist over the years. The slide work is superb and the band rocks with white hot intensity. A masterpiece."  -John Swenson, Author, Rolling Stone, Gambit, Elmore and more.. 

“Rogers again offers up a foot-stompin’ assortment of blues-tinged jams with his latest album, Into the Wild Blue.”- Charlie of City Sound, North Bay Bohemian
“Rogers’ effortless slide guitar is in full effect on the record, and the Delta Rhythm kings keep a steady southern influence over the beat, like a hoedown happening in the bayou heat.”-Charlie of City Sound, North Bay Bohemian
City Sound, North Bay Bohemian ALBUM REVIEW, July 7th, 2015

“New album shows off guitarist's slide skills, affinity for the blues”- Carlton Fletcher, Albany Herald Interview with The Albany Herald, June 25th, 2015

"Don't you let them win bounces like a bayou-tinged Grateful Dead jam that creates a wonderfully warm atmosphere"-Garrett Bethmann of Tahoe OnStage
Tahoe OnStage ALBUM REVIEW, June 2015

“This is another great album from guitarist Rogers, a two-time Blues Music Award nominee. This album should put Rogers back on top where he belongs.”
-Richard Ludmerer, Making a Scene.org

MakingAScene.org ALBUM REVIEW, June 2015

“Tracks are fresh, fierce and leave no doubt that Rogers is not content to rest on his previous laurels. Roy's always been intrigued by the sounds of funk, jazz, good old rock-n-roll and even a bit of Motown sounds, all those elements can be deciphered on Into The Wild Blue. Well worth the wait, and it is great to hear Roy Rogers is still at the top of his game. If you are anywhere near the Bay Area check his gig schedule so you can check him out in person. You will not be disappointed! This well-produced album is a collection of different genres that are thoughtfully sequenced into a cohesive whole, so it would be a disservice to just cherry-pick a few tracks off of iTunes. Into The Wild Blue is a must-have for fans of guitar music”- Terry Mullins
FEATURE on Roy Rogers from Terry Mullins of Blues Blast Magazine, 06/15 Issue

On his recent release, Into the Wild Blue, Roy checks into the Queens Motel with a raunchy rhythm in 'She's A Real Jaguar'" –Danny of The Alternate Root
“Into the Wild Blue spreads Roy Rogers across a sky full of Blues as he jazzes up to teach 'Love is History'" –Danny of The Alternate Root
“Roy offers sage wisdom from a blues master as he shakes, rattles and rolls a message to the people of the world in 'Don’t You Let Them Win'”. –Danny of The Alternate Root
The Alternate Root ALBUM REVIEW

See Roy's episode in the PBS Series "Music Gone Public", featuring Roy Rogers & DRK with special guests Ramblin' Jack Elliott & Charlie Musselwhite! Airing now at PBS stations across the US. Check the schedule here-MUSIC GONE PUBLIC-ROY ROGERS

via Marin Independent Journal- Press Play: Roy Rogers

By Paul Liberatore, Marin Independent Journal

Slide guitarist Roy Rogers reaches deep down into the emotions of his instrument on “Into the Wild Blue,” his first solo recording in five years, an 11-track collection of vocal songs and instrumentals dedicated to his younger brother, Robert, who died last year.

On “Song for Robert (A Brother’s Lament),” the heartfelt instrumental that ends the album, Rogers sketches a solemnly beautiful melody over a lovely ensemble sound graced by Carlos Reyes’ celestial harp. MORE...

Bluesman Roy Rogers rides slide guitar 'Into the Wild Blue'-By Carlton Fletcher, Albany Herald

The question was fraught with the possibility of a negative response, one that would turn what had been an upbeat, informative interview around 180 degrees.
Some people are just sensitive about their names.
But when Roy Rogers, the slide guitar great who has played with such luminaries as Taj Mahal, Ray Manzarek, Allen Toussaint, Miles Davis and John Lee Hooker, laughed at the query and offered an amazing anecdote about the famous cowboy star with whom he shares his name, the question-and-answer session kicked into an even higher gear.
“Yes, that is my real name, and, yes, I was named for the cowboy star,” Rogers said in a phone conversation with The Albany Herald. “Man, the stories I could tell you. I mean, just recently when we first put the new album (‘Into the Wild Blue’) up on iTunes, guess whose picture they put with it.”
For rock music fans, Rogers’ often frantic slide work on “Into the Wild Blue” brings to mind Allman Brothers Band great Duane Allman, but Rogers’ influences go farther back to the slide masters who made the Blues an American music staple … Robert Johnson, Elmore James, Muddy Waters.
“Those Delta guys, those were the musicians who influenced my playing,” said Rogers, a Redding, Calif., native who was turned on to the blues of Robert Johnson at age 13. “I’ve done some shows with Gregg (Allman) over the years, but I never really knew Duane. We were more contemporaries, and while I think the Allman Brothers are a great band, I never even had a chance to meet and talk with Duane before he died.”
more....

 

4 PEAKS MUSIC FESTIVAL A HIT

Photos by Tess Freeman / The Bulletin

Photos by Tess Freeman / The Bulletin

 

A variety of bands entertain sold-out crowd

By Brian McElhiney / The Bulletin

Jun 23, 2015 at 02:13PM
The defining moment of the eighth annual 4 Peaks Music Festival came early in the evening Saturday when Poor Man’s Whiskey unplugged for an encore.

 

Unless you were standing right by the stage, you wouldn’t have noticed it. The people in the dancing pit right in front of the stage were treated to the most intimate moment of the festival’s main programming that day.

The sound barely carried out from the stage, lost in the early-evening breeze, but the five members of Poor Man’s Whiskey — who haven’t missed a 4 Peaks yet — played on as the normally rowdy audience gathered around the stage. As banjo player Josh Brough strummed his last chord and the band hit one final five-part harmony, the nearby crowd erupted.

In all, 10 bands played the second and final full day of the festival, which began Thursday evening and concluded Sunday afternoon. Organizer Stacy Totland said the festival sold out, all 1,000 tickets of it. Although the number of tickets sold didn’t increase from previous years, she said this year’s event still felt bigger than any of the others.

“There’s a lot more RVs, and families with young kids,” she said. “There’s so many little kids moving around; it’s great. And we have the little extra kids’ performers, yoga, a few new vendors.”

The festival’s child-friendly atmosphere drew a number of families to the event. Kids played and danced with Hula Hoops, bubbles and other toys on the back lawn between the sound board and the fence throughout the day.

Melissa Gregorich, 40, of Portland, came to the festival for the first time with a group of friends who each brought their kids, ranging in age from 1½ to 7.

“They’re having a great time,” Gregorich said, laughing. “They have all these activities here for them — juggling, bubbles.”

“We’re looking at mountains all day, so that’s not bad either,” said her friend, Andy Sweany, 38, also of Portland.

Totland said there was a rush to get into the camping areas as soon as the gates opened Thursday at 5 p.m.

By Saturday, many had already been at the ranch for two days, including Brian Heuer, 31, and Aspen Lowe, 33, both of Bend. Both are longtime veterans of 4 Peaks — Heuer said it was his fourth or fifth time at the festival, while Lowe was there for the third time.

“It’s amazing — after the night stuff, the band members are playing with people they know and wandering the campsites,” Lowe said. “That is the true fun, playing under the stars.”

The music got off to an early start Saturday. Throughout the day, performers switched off between the Main Stage, located at the back of the fenced-in festival area, and the Side Stage, under a tent near the festival’s entrance.

The side-stage acts kept things in a jam-band mood, with two sets each from JED, The High Council and Asher Fulero. After headliner (ALO) Animal Liberation Orchestra’s set, acoustic group Polecat played late into the evening.

The sounds coming off the Main Stage were a bit more diverse. There were jams, of course (ALO, Acorn Project, up at 12:30 p.m.); country-rock (openers Heels to Hardwood, who hit the stage at 10:45 a.m.); string-band bluegrass (Brothers Comatose, 2:15 p.m.); and a mix of everything (Poor Man’s Whiskey, 6:15 p.m.).

ALO got the crowd rocking (and toking) with some long, winding jams and keyboardist Zach Gill’s trippy, stream-of-consciousness rants.

This came to a head with a long story about trapping rats that prompted one audience member to compare Gill to Jim Morrison of The Doors (for the record, absolutely not). Highlights included “Waiting For Jaden” and closing song “Storms and Hurricanes,” a sweet love song with a bouncy ukulele chord progression.

Special mention should be made of Roy Rogers and The Delta Rhythm Kings, who heated up an already hot afternoon with a set of rollicking, down-South blues. Rogers, who played a mean slide guitar, led a simple trio through snarky originals such as “Jaguar” and old standards from across the blues spectrum, from Robert Johnson to Willie Dixon, giving everything a New Orleans twist.

— Reporter: 541-617-7814, bmcelhiney@bendbulletin.com