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Blue Hula Stomp

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (29 ratings)
Blue Hula Stomp album cover
01
C Stomp Blues
3:41
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02
Body And Soul
3:39
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03
Hilo March
2:36
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04
Ukulele Spaghetti
1:46
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05
Do You Call That a Buddy?
3:27
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06
Chili Blues
2:17
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07
Paauau Waltz
4:00
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08
Short Man's Vindication
3:19
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09
Wasting My Love On You
4:16
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10
Hano Hano Hanalei
2:43
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11
Blue Hula Stomp Medley
3:12
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12
Hilo Hula
3:20
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13
Agogostein's Lament
2:42
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 40:58

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Brozman at his Best!

Dobrocat

This is a must have for fans of the National Guitar. Bob Brozman is the man! I could write for hours about his music and his talent. Here's a better idea. See his website - www.bobbrozman.com

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They're the beneficiaries of a rather unlikely tribute album and a primary inspiration and/or influence for numerous contemporary string bands, from the high-profile Carolina Chocolate Drops to Geoff Muldaur's one-off collaborators the Texas Sheiks. No doubt about it, the Mississippi Sheiks are happening these days. But then, they always have been - at least to the extent that's possible for musicians who thrived in the first half of the 1930s. When they formed around Jackson, Mississippi,… more »

They Say All Music Guide

There’s little doubt that Bob Brozman’s a virtuoso on all plucked string instruments, but his specialty is the National Resophonic guitar, and he can make that do anything, as he shows on this collection, which, like much of his work, has a decidedly Hawaiian lilt. The bulk of the material on Blue Hula Stomp dates from the 1920s and ’30s, rejigged in his own idiosyncratic style, whether it’s the unusual, bluesy “Do You Call That a Buddy?” or the lightning fast hula, “Hano Hano Hanalei.” He’s not just someone who can play with remarkable speed and precision, as he does on “Chili Blues,” but also with moving expression, as on the 1916 “hesitation” waltz, “Paauau Waltz,” a tune that demands a lot of the player, but which Brozman pulls off with moving panache. Perhaps the most unusual, however, is “Ukulele Spaghetti,” played on a National ukulele, the kind of piece to make every guitarist — and uke player — pick his or her jaw up off the floor in complete awe. And when he really takes off on the title track, it becomes explosive, as Brozman handles wooden and National Hawaiian guitars, rhythm and duet guitars, wooden ukulele, saxophones, and a vocal. A work of genuine joy and complete genius. – Chris Nickson

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