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American Delta blues band From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Erin Harpe & the Delta Swingers are an American Delta blues band from Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, United States.[1] Formed in 2010, the group features founding members Erin Harpe (lead vocals and guitar) and Jim Countryman (electric bass).[2]
Erin Harpe & the Delta Swingers | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, United States |
Genres | Delta blues, soul, funk, reggae |
Years active | 2010 | –present
Labels | VizzTone Label Group |
Members |
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Website | erinharpe |
They released their debut album, Love Whip Blues, in 2014.[3] Their sophomore effort, Big Road, followed in 2017.[4] A festive album, The Christmas Swing, was released in December 2018.[5]
With the location in which they formed in mind, Harpe describes the band's sound as Charles River Delta blues, a fictional genre that gave its name to a track on Love Whip Blues.
Erin Harpe grew up in Greenbelt, Maryland. She graduated Eleanor Roosevelt High School, before studying anthropology at Earlham College.[3]
Harpe's father, Neil, is a blues musician who played in a band called Franklin Harpe and Usilton.[3]
Although his daughter grew up with music around her, she did not pick up an instrument until fourth grade, when she opted to play the flute. She played that for about ten years, before a young love interest, who knew all of the lyrics to "Alice's Restaurant," turned her head to the guitar. “I ran home and said, ‘Dad, you’ve got to teach me how to play it.’ After that, I was hooked. I could pick it up really easily, so I said, ‘Screw the flute’ and learned finger-picking blues guitar.”[2]
Harpe started to play at folk festivals and coffeehouses in her 20s. She later moved to Boston and met bass player Jim Countryman, whom she married in 1999. Harpe has stated "he’s my partner (as an artist) and my manager. I’m the artistic director, visual and musical.”[3] Together, they formed the electro-funk dance band Lovewhip in 1998, releasing four studio albums and one live set,[2] winning a Boston Music Award in 2004[3] for "World Music Act of the Year".
Harpe released her debut solo album Blues Roots in 2002. It was a set of covers by artists such as Memphis Minnie (Harpe's main influence),[6] Bessie Smith and Tommy Johnson.
Six years later she released Delta Blues Duets, which included duets recorded with her father.
A second solo album, Meet Me in the Middle, was released on October 30, 2020.[7] A single and the first track on the album, "All Night Long", was released the previous month.[8] Recorded by Harpe and Jim Countryman at home during COVID-19 pandemic, it won Album of the Year at the 2021 New England Music Awards.[9]
In May 2010, Harpe formed the Delta Swingers quartet. Alongside Countryman, harmonica player Richard "Rosy" Rosenblatt and drummer Bob Nisi were brought in as the last of the original members. Four months later, the band won their first Boston Blues Challenge and represented Boston in the 2011 International Blues Challenge (IBC), at which they made it to the semi-finals. The band returned to the IBC again in 2013 (as a quintet) and 2016 (again making the semi-finals). Several soloists performed with the group, including "Sonny" Jim Clifford on slide guitar and harmonica (during the period where they were a quintet along with Richard Rosenblatt).
An initial attempt to disband Lovewhip to focus on the Swingers was rebuked by fans. “We tried to end Lovewhip but fans revolted,” Harpe said in 2014.[2]
In April 2014, Harpe and Countryman, who also doubles as the band's general manager and booking agent, toured the United Kingdom as the Acoustic Blues Duo, with the former on acoustic guitar and the latter on ukulele bass.
After signing to Newton-based VizzTone Label Group (founded by Rosenblatt) in late 2014,[10] the Swingers released their debut album, Love Whip Blues, on November 4, 2014. The title (and second track on the album) is derived from the band's alter ego, Lovewhip.[3] Produced in collaboration with Dave Gross, of Fat Rabbit Studios, the album features ten tracks — four originals and six interpretations of songs by Willie Brown, Lucille Bogan, Luke Jordan, William Moore and John Prine.
Richard Rosenblatt left the group in 2015, after which Matthew Prozialeck took over on harmonica. Bob Nisi left the group and was replaced by Kendall Divoll in 2016.[11] Countryman fell ill in July 2017 and was hospitalized with diverticulitis, at which point the band took a break.
The band's second studio album, titled Big Road, was released in October 2017, its title taken from a lyric in the second song, Harpe's self-penned "Lonely Leavin' Town". Four of the tracks are original; the other six are covers. Harpe was producer with Countryman, Prozialeck, and Kendall Divoll co producing. Most of the album was recorded and mixed at Verdant Studio in Athens, Vermont, the exceptions being "Frankie" and "Guilty", which were recorded at Funk Bunker Studio in Arlington, Massachusetts. Big Road peaked at number 9 on the Roots Music Report blues albums chart and was ranked number 52 on their best of 2018 list.[12]
The band released their first Christmas album the following year, titled A Christmas Swing.[5][13] Matt Prozialeck departed the group at the beginning of 2019.
Harpe won the Boston Blues Challenge, for the fifth time (first time as a solo artist), in 2018, and attended the five-day International Blues Challenge in Memphis, Tennessee, in January 2019. The band have reached the semi-finals of the competition four times: in 2011, 2013, 2017 and 2019.
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