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Craig Hughes (Singles) "Hope It Makes You Happy" & "Blues Like A Hammer"

 

Info & Reviews

Blues Bunny
(UK) March 2009
Hope It Makes You Happy b/w All the World’s Women

Craig Hughes is from Glasgow which is not exactly the home of the blues but fortunately he doesn't know that. Armed with a guitar and the devil on his shoulder, he growls through "Hope It Makes You Happy". Laconic and twisted - but in a good way - he berates his lady for wanting a song named after her. That's what we need - none of this angst ridden rubbish but a sinking in of the boot just when it is needed. Damn, you can even sing along to it. Class!
       
On the flipside - if there were a flipside for it to be on - is the melancholy "All The World's Women". A more conventional blues number, Mr Hughes guitar playing seems more assured here than on "Hope It Makes You Happy" and he successfully manages to make this song sound like it had fallen right out of time itself. Works for me!
       
A record destined to be on vinyl? Hell, yes.
Bluesbunny

About Craig Hughes

EARLY DAYS

In the late 80s and 90s, alt.blues/roots musician and songwriter Craig Hughes paid his dues playing in alternative rock bands, at the same time developing his acoustic blues chops as a street musician. Lots of miserable, cold, wet busking from Glasgow through Central Scotland to the Edinburgh Festival and back.


LIVE ALT.BLUES/ROOTS

The success of a couple of solo acoustic gigs in 2005 led to a support slot with Tony McPhee of The Groundhogs and the opportunity to record a demo EP in Dublin. The demo was well received and led to gigs in the USA (in 2006 and 2007), as well as at venues and Americana promotions across Glasgow. Festival appearances include Bloom 'N' Blues, Altus, Arkansas U.S.A. (2006 & 2007), Oxjam's Ashton Lane Folk Festival, Glasgow 2007 and two appearances at Blues On The River (part of The Glasgow Jazz Festival) 2009.

THAT DEVIL MUSIC

In 2008 Craig began hosting That Devil Music, a monthly alt.blues/roots night in Glasgow. After a successful run at MacSorley's, the regular night became a mostly acoustic affair at The State Bar, with occasional full-band nights elsewhere (most recently The 13th Note). The night has seen Craig sharing the bill with artists from across Scotland, Europe and the USA.

RECORDINGS

New on Channel Nowhere, Craig's first album (recorded at Glasgow's Audio Experiments studio) is Pissed Off, Bitter And Willing To Share. Recent releases: the five-song EP Broke, Lonely and Guilty and the limited edition single Hope It Makes You Happy. 

Since 2006, Craig has provided original music for several short films. He has recently completed the soundtrack for the feature film, Stix and Stanes, now in post production, for writer/director Joe McArdle.


What Others Are Saying...

Great performer.

Paul Clarkson, Sunny Govan F.M.

For anyone who likes their blues, and I mean real blues not your Gary Moore siphoned, commercial, rock blues... this is down'n'dirty slide geetar, gravelly voice 'I'm gonna kill myself or someone else close to me" blues. I really recommend you check this guy out... Many moons ago he was the guitarist in a band I played with, and I hold him in the highest regard as a musician.... And if you live in Glasgow pop on over to a show, you won't regret it!

Grae Tennick, Morpheus Rising

Kick ass Glasgow based alt.blues singer/songwriter. Top notch songs about infidelity, death, lost love and all that. Miserable and depressing in the best way.

Ken Robertson, What's That Noise?


Leicester Bangs - December 2009

A little Q&A with Craig Hughes. On his new record, Pissed Off, Bitter and Willing To Share, he sings, plays guitar, bass and stomps a bit. Tommy Duffin plays drums and some bass, too.

Leicester Bangs: Tell us a little about yourself.

Craig: I play alt. blues and roots music, think of myself primarily as a guitarist but have seen the dreaded 'singer songwriter' tag applied, not entirely inaccurately...

LB: How did you start out making music?

Craig: Started playing guitar at around 12 years old. There was a good scene where I grew up - everything from blues to metal to punk and prog at the same gig, often in the same band. Sometimes in the same song. It was a good atmosphere to learn in.

LB: Who did you grow up listening to and how do they influence what you’re doing now?

Craig: I first showed a real interest in music when I was a wee boy, and I was really into rock 'n' roll and rockabilly. Loved early Elvis (had a copy of The Sun Collection which my dad gave me the day Elvis died) and at the time Bill Haley was my favourite - my folks took me to a Bill Haley show at a Rock'n'Roll revival show at The Glasgow Apollo when I was 9 years old. That did it. As the years rolled on I went through a lot of fazes, many of which stayed with me, and ended up in an alternative-rock head-space throughout the 90s - Rollins Band, RHCP, Soundgarden and so on. Now I'm playing primarily solo blues, but it's with that attitude, I think. The biggest influences on what I do now are probably Richard Thompson, Loudon Wainwright III, Skip James, Keith Richards and Chuck Berry. And Lemmy.

LB: Tell us about your latest release.

Craig: The latest release is my first album, 'Pissed Off, Bitter and Willing to Share', which kind of picks up where the EP 'Broke, Lonely and Guilty' left off. Where the EP was made up of fairly melancholy slide-heavy blues, and was pretty dark stuff all in, the album is a more aggressive and perversely upbeat affair - although lyrically it still draws from the darker side of life.

LB: Do you get out and play your music live, and if so, what can an audience expect at one of your shows?

Craig: My shows are solo acoustic affairs, but aggressive and full-on - I break a sweat. I play mostly my own material but occasionally throw in covers by anyone from Robert Johnson and Howlin Wolf - which you might expect - through Kris Kristofferson and Jerry Reed to Motorhead - which you might not. I put on some promotions in Glasgow under the banner That Devil Music, which is me performing with one or two other acts - I prefer to promote myself in the city as there are so many rip-off merchants at work in the live scene, particularly at the grass-roots level where everybody's trying to catch a break.

LB: What aspects of playing and recording music do you most enjoy?

Craig: There's a school of thought that has the kind of stuff I do down as some kind of catharsis, which probably isn't far off the mark although I think that's more in the writing stage. Recording can be quite frustrating at times, but there's that great moment when it comes together and you think: cool - that's a proper fucking record, that is!

LB: Where can people find (and buy) your music?

Craig: The album is out now - the CD is currently available from the Channel Nowhere site and my website, where there's all sorts of other fascinating gubbins to catch your eye, and will be available from CD Baby (CD/download) from the end of November 2009. CD Baby is handling digital distribution which takes time to roll out - the EP is already available to download from CD Baby, iTunes, Amazon, Lala etc., so look out for the album to start appearing on those stores over the next few weeks.

You can also check me out on MySpace, YouTube and Last.FM, amongst others. www.leicesterbangs.com 


Craig Hughes - You Don't Care At All - Live

http://www.craighughes.net/

http://www.myspace.com/craighughesmusic