XLogin

Password lost?  

Facebook Options


Sign up
download process

MP3 Paul Cox & Charlie Fabert - That´s What We Were Born For

Price: 8.99 USD
Download
Now
Add to cart
Instant Download from music, digital version

MP3 Album Cover Musicians use tradebit:

Learn how to make music
Pick up cool karaoke downloads
Search for sheet music!
  • Contains these products:
  • Single items of this product are available separately.
  • Big Change Is Gonna Come
    play button
  • One Night Stand
    play button
  • Its Getting Harder
    play button
  • You Were Never Mine
    play button
  • Mean Disposition
    play button
  • Burning Flame
    play button
  • Be Good to Yourself
    play button
  • I Cant Change
    play button
  • Dont Turn of the Light
    play button
  • Thats What We Were Born For
    play button
  • Size: 10 MB   Platform: MP3

File Data:

Contact Seller: music, CDbaby reseller USA, Member since 06/19/2005
URL: Twitter this Tweet this
Embed: Create JavaScript Mobile Tag Widgets for your homepage

Description:

(ID 150219233)
This is a fine albumn of superb Soul/Blues Vocals and tastefull guitar from Paul Cox and Charlie Fabert respectfully.
Mixing class covers with exciting original material to showcase both artists contributions in an excellant light.


10 MP3 Songs in this album (44:08) !
Related styles: Blues: Soul-Blues, Blues: English Style, Featuring Guitar

People who are interested in CHRIS FARLOWE DELBERT MCCLINTON JOE COCKER should consider this download.


Details:
Itâs a busy time for Paul Cox he has a new album with French guitarist Charlie Fabert âTHATâS WHAT WE WERE BORN FORâ; thatâs about to be released, and there is a whole run of live shows that includes one at the prestigious Pheasantry as part of the London Blues Festival organized by Shades of Soul. Paul is one of the very best vocalists on the UK Blues & Soul scene with a voice that has long been regarded as being in the same league as Chris Farlowe and Joe Cocker. Heâs a truly talented performer and has the key ingredients- determination for hard work and an unabashed enthusiasm- that look like bringing long overdue success. We caught up with Paul at various venues and at Roger Cottonâs Kent studio. Paul was always expansive and talked about the ups and the downs of his career so far, and his French connection his musical partnership with Charlie Fabert.

Before we talk about musical background lets catch up with where youâre at right now â we know, having met you at the studios, that youâre well on the way to completing an album with Charlie Fabert â can you tell readers first of all who is Charlie Fabert? And howâs the album coming along?

Charlie is a 22 year old French Blues guitarist I met in 2009 at Christmas during a gig at The EEL PIE club Christmas party. I saw him playing with the house band and was moved by his expressive playing, and a musical maturity way beyond his years. We talked after the gig and I realised he was a big fan of mine. So we discussed working together in 2010. He organised a DVD recording which I am a guest on and we toured later that year in both Britain and France to really encouraging responses. The obvious next step was to record which is what we are doing at the moment. His musical taste was very similar to my own so we had common ground to work from and I have found him a good sounding board for ideas; something that I have missed over the last few years.

Apart his work with me Charlie has built up a glowing reputation on the Blues scene in France with some spectacular reviews for his shows and playing. His French band is wonderful and a joy to work with, as is my line up in the U.K. We can consider ourselves blessed in that department. The CD is coming along nicely; it features four original compositions, two each from Richie Milton and Roger Cotton. There are also a couple of other great songs that we play live; âBe Good to Yourselfâ and âYou Were Never Mineâ which is beautiful song by Delbert Mclinton and Benmont Tench. Weâre hoping to have the CD out at the beginning of June.














What else have you got going on at the moment?

I have dates with Charlie lined up from late May through to the end of the year in Britain and in France to help promote the new CD and DVD. Iâve also got shows under my own name including the London Blues Festival on May 18th at The Pheasantry in the Kings Road. The dates with Charlie start on May 27th at The Rooster Bar in Lamberhurst and May 28th at The Jook House, Grand Victorian Hotel, Worthing followed by the Eel Pie on June 1st and The Boom Boom Club on June 5th with more to come later. Check out www.cox-fabert.com , or www.note-music.co.uk for all gig listings.

Thereâs a magical chemistry between you and Charlie when youâre on-stage â that sort of intuitive partnership is very rare âcan you comment?

Musical respect I guess, we had no idea how it would work until we tried it and it seems to work, long may it continue!

Iâm intrigued at how much your style crosses the blues and soul field â its individual but if was to make a comparison I think it might be to Delbert McClinton â comments

Most definitely, I have always worn my influences on my sleeve and have no qualms with making that obvious but I donât think that is a problem as long as you put yourself in there at the top of the list. I have been compared with many people over the years, I guess people need a reference point to put you in a place they understand but I always endeavour to put my own stamp on things as much as I can. Charlie does as well, its probably why we work so well together


















Weâve trawled around You Tube, etc. and seen lots of video and your song choice is pretty wide ranging- I wonder if you could talk about your influences and in particular if there is one seminal influence that really inspired you â a sort of role model?

Not one in particular but I feel I am carrying on a line that started with Long John Baldry and runs up to today with the likes of James Hunter, you know, can Blue boys sing the whites? I reckon my earliest influences came from Radio and singing styles I heard when I was a teenager in the 70â²s. Itâs probably subconscious but more readily Soul/ Blues style passionate voices, Otis Redding, Al Green, Paul Rogers, Joe Cocker, Robert Plant, etc.



Do you differentiate styles â this is blues â thatâs soul â or is it all just âsongsâ?

Itâs always the song, hence so many covers I guess. I am an interpreter first and foremost; a song has to have something I feel I can give something of me too. I would love to write a song that could be covered, I think we have one on this new CD, but I will always bow down to the greats in the song-writing department, I know my place!!

Letâs go back now â how did you start out in music?

My first pro gig was in 1978 with a rock band in Rugby called Oyster, great guitarist in that band called Robin Jones, he was a phenomenal talent and I believe he still plays. We met at Printing college in Birmingham and swapped cassette tapes of each other, he was playing along to John McLaughlin and I was singing âBlack Dogâ to the record!!, very early recording I can tell you!!

What would you say were career highlights so far?

There are several I guess; the first time you hear yourself on the Radio is always nice, working with great guitar players is another, Snowy White, Ray Minhinnett, Henry McCulloch, the late lamented John Slaughterâ¦and of course Charlie! Also making 5 CDâs of my own plus various memorable concerts and festivals, Montreux, Ronnie Scottâs, London Palladium (great blues venue!) Royal Festival Hall, opening for Ray Charles and Eric Clapton, singing with Paul Rogers, Bonnie Tyler, Sam Brown, Ruby Turner, Debbie Bonham; the list goes onâ¦

Youâve been around a while and I imagine thereâve been a few low points as well?

There are always low points, but as the old sage once said âwithout the lows you canât appreciate the highsâ, although the balance has tilted somewhat into the former just lately! As you and many of our musical kin know that this game is like constantly entering the lottery and occasionally getting 4 numbers, just a little better than normal but not long before the ticket needs to be replaced!!

Youâve got a great voice, great performance, and in my view you should be up there alongside Farlowe and the rest â it must have been a hard struggle to keep going â whatâs your philosophy in all of this?

I suppose never give up. There are times when the well of self belief runs a little dry but something or someone comes along to perk it up a little, i.e. Charlie. If I had as much belief in myself as others do then I should be a superstar. But hearing that all the while, the flattery, can in itself compound the frustration, but donât stop saying it ⦠PLEASE!!!! I guess its the love of doing it and the buzz etc., I mean what else could I do that I am good at, get paid for, have a ball, meet wonderful talented people who consider me an equal, and get a round of applause!!(Actually donât answer that!)

Let me say without flattery, youâve got a great voice and you are a great performer â do you think the best is yet to come?
















For sure, I am just getting going! With this CD and a great band it can only get better, watch this space!! I mean fifty is the new thirty and I feel that I am a damn site better singer now than I was then.

What are you aiming for?

I always wanted Respect and a regular income from music to sustain my life without being too grandiose. It has never really been about the money, though I have to say it is a bit more these days I⦠but being remembered and talked of in the right way; and I want people to LOVE ME!, but seriously getting people out to gigs, buying the CDâs and leaving a lasting musical legacy, not a lot you see!!

How do you see the music scene in general in these days?

Itâs evolved in a way which I feel has marginalised a lot of live music in the U.K. The average good music venue, pub or club etc. is thin on the ground and there is a whole generation who have never really experienced good live music at a fledgling level. Nowadays itâs all O2 Academy and big sponsored gigs, itâs toughâ¦

â¦the internet has opened up so many opportunities for people but there is no quality control so anyone can say they are a musician or songwriter but theyâre not always gonna find an audience, I know! It reminds me of the Punk days but I feel that this revolution is technology led rather than talent based. As for the Xfactor, well thatâs just another New Faces or Opportunity Knocks. We had those shows when we were young and this generation has their chance now, but itâs not a true barometer of whatâs out there, itâs just Saturday night TV making money for Mr Cowell.

When we watched you at the Jook House last week, you were on the edge of the stage and the band was swinging and you were into that classic gospel style call and response thing â it was a great moment. But I wonder how do you see all of that in the light of modern culture â I mean the Dance Music / Rave / X factor culture â are we in the death throes of a musical style thatâs just a preserve of the over 40âs or something else?

Well Charlie is only 22, Oli Brown is young, Chantel McGregor, etc., but I know what you mean, itâs the audience which needs to get younger too or this great music we love is gonna die out!

Musically, tell us how you go about arranging songs â are you a player as such, do you score charts â or use as form of short-hand â how do you do it?

None of that, I just sing. I use my recorder on my mobile, sing an idea then whoever I am writing with helps find the chords and we work it out from there, no set way. For instance on Ainât Nuthinâ Doingâ I just sang the lyrics as we were putting down the vocal, itâs just whatever works.

Your career has already run a while â have you got any songs that you always come back to?

A few- in truth, like many musoâs, itâs the new ones that you want to play- but there are a couple, âDamn Your Eyesâ and âDangerous Moodâ and âWalking on Sunsetâ have become staple fayre these days.

So having reflected on a career that definitely seems to be on the rise â Paul was up and raring to get on stage for yet another show.



Paul Cox & Charlie Fabert Tour Dates

May 23, Bulls Head , Barnes

May 27 Lamberhurst

May 28 Jook House, Worthing

June 1 Eel Pie Club

June 2 Sullivans, Weybridge

June 5 Boom Boom Club, Sutton

July 7 Beaverwood Lodge, Chislehurst

July 8 Sunbury Sports Club, Lower Hampton Road, Sunbury






in partnership with CDbaby
User tags: blues: soul-blues, blues: english style, featuring guitar, chris farlowe, delbert mcclinton, joe cocker, mp3 album

More Files From This User

Related Files

Mp3 145th Street Deluxe Blues Band - Blues: Rockin' Blues

Combining glary guitar riffs, awe-inspiring harmonica, hard hitting drums, and thundering bass chops, 145th Street's go up to blues music sets them in a sort......


Mp3 Alice Ashley - A Time Will Come

Contemporary Soul, bringing back the magic, the mood, the melodies and the story in the music. The Motorcity sound. 10 MP3 Songs in this album (41:24) ! Rel......


Mp3 Soul Feather 1 - Rock: Rock & Roll

Poetry put to guitar driven rock and roll. 13 MP3 Songs ROCK: Rock & Roll, BLUES: Blues-Rock Details: Soul Feather is a three piece rock band from Burlingt......


Mp3 Dennis Herrera Blues Band Featuring Julie Long - Blues Well Done!

Delicious mix of Chicago / Texas style blues served with a side of West Coast flavor, Blues Well Done. 11 MP3 Songs BLUES: Texas Style, BLUES: Chicago Style......