Robert Finley
Town Park
Telluride, CO
September 17th, 2017
"Telluride Blues & Brews Festival"
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Total time- 56:46
Source- DPA mics
Recorder- Tascam DR-60D
Processing- Audacity (these are 16/44 files)
Recorded by a friend
You can find out more about Robert Finley and support him and the Music Maker Relief Foundation at these web sites-
http://www.robertfinleymusic.com/
https://www.facebook.com/RobertFinleyMusic/
https://musicmaker.org/artists/robert-finley/
From Wikipedia-
"Robert Finley is an American blues and soul singer-songwriter and guitarist. After decades of performing semi-professionally followed by time away from music, Finley made a comeback in 2016. He released his debut studio album, Age Don't Mean a Thing, later in the year which was met positively by critics.
Finley was born and raised in Bernice, Louisiana. At 11 years-old, he began practicing the guitar he had purchased from a thrift store. Gospel music played a crucial role in his early development: "I always went to gospel quartet groups and I always took the front row seat, and I just watched their fingers", recollected Finley in an interview. In 1970, he joined the army, originally to serve as a helicopter technician in Germany. Upon his arrival, however, Finley accommodated the army band's need for a guitarist and bandleader by traveling with the group throughout Europe until he was discharged.
After returning to Louisiana, Finley worked as a part-time street performer, leader of the gospel group Brother Finley and the Gospel Sisters, and as a carpenter. In 2015, Music Maker, a non-profit organization that supports aging blues musicians, discovered Finley busking before a gig in Arkansas, who was deemed legally blind and forced to retire from carpentry. With their help, Finely made a musical comeback, featuring him in packaged tours with acts like Robert Lee Coleman and Alabama Slim.
Finely released his debut studio album, Age Don't Mean a Thing, on September 30, 2016 on Big Legal Mess Records. Although for the most part Finley was a bluesman, his record producer Bruce Watson keyed on more of his soulful compositions. With production credits from Watson and Jimbo Mathus, Finley traveled to Memphis to record the album with members of the Bo-Keys. He penned all but two of tracks, highlighted by an autobiographical title song, on Age Don't Mean a Thing, evoking influences from Booker T and the MGs, James Brown, and B. B. King. Music journalists were highly receptive to Finley's comeback and album, particularly his revitalizing take on Southern soul."
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