Download DATA
01. Baby What You Want Me To Do (4:40)
02. Wild Woman (2:44)
03. Born Under A Bad Sign (2:59)
04. I Can't Quit You, Baby (6:27)
05. We All Wanna Boogie (5:19)
06. West Side Stroll (5:16)
07. I Got The Blues (3:43)
08. Shadow On The Floor (4:05)
09. I Feel Good (2:48)
10. Five Long Years (5:45)
11. Sharper Than a Tack (4:22)
12. Don't Change Your Mind (5:42)
Al Jones lead guitar, vocal
David Hollstein rhythm guitar
Peter Schmid:bass 
Oskar P?hnl drums
Thilo Kreitmeier reeds, horn arr.
Johann Fliegauf harmonica
Markus Hummel organ
Like good whiskey, blues musicians get ever better with age. It was back  in the sixties when guitarist/singer Al Jones and drummer Oskar "Ossi"  P?hnl (then in their teens) had their first blues band together. "We  never changed our style, we only just improved in it," says Jones.  "Blues tunes are technically simple but hard to play. You have to put  your personality into them. You have to know exactly what you are doing.  Some tunes we've been playing for twenty years. Some tunes need to be  played for twenty years until you play them right." Born to an  American-German family, Al Jones took up the guitar at age 12. Impressed  by the American Folk Blues Festival that was touring Europe in the  sixties, he started playing the blues in 1966. 
About 10 years later, the Al Jones Blues Band was re-founded on a more  professional level. Offering authentic Urban Blues, Chicago style, the  band soon proved to be one of Europe's most authentic blues ensembles.  They played the North Sea Jazz Festival in The Hague, Netherlands, and  opened for B.B. King at the Zagreb festival. They toured with Willie  Mabon, Sonny Rhodes, Champion Jack Dupree, Louisiana Red and - for no  less than eight weeks - Tommy Tucker. As an opening act for Johnny  Winter, they nearly stole the show when urged by the audience to do two  encores. The band's 1995 release "Watch This!" (BLU-1024 2) was  critically acclaimed as a mature, largely laidback slow burner that  seemed to burst out of a black neighborhood in Chicago. Their new album,  "Sharper Than A Tack," offers a more aggressive variant of the band's  style. Pushed by a hot rhythm guitar and occasional saxophone, organ and  blues harp, Al Jones' distinctive guitar and relaxed vocals are more  intense than ever. "We never play with reduced power," says Jones. "We  always want it intense and burning. Nothing shallow." It's just the  blues with a funky edge.

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