Home Read Now Hear This: Joanna Connor | 4801 South Indiana Avenue

Now Hear This: Joanna Connor | 4801 South Indiana Avenue

Big, bold, blistering and balls-out, the guitar heroine's latest is a bluesy barnburner.

THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE: “Chicago slide-guitar virtuoso and singer-songwriter Joanna Connor — one of the reigning queens of blues-rock guitar — released her 14th album 4801 South Indiana Avenue on Joe Bonamassa’s new label Keeping The Blues Alive. She’s definitely doing that.

The new album was produced by Bonamassa and Josh Smith at Ocean Way Recording Studios in Nashville —  and Joanna, Joe, and the rest of the musicians on the album dug deeply and conjured up an authentic, alive, and kicking set of non-derivative Chicago blues.

Says Joanna, “We chose the album title 4801 South Indiana Avenue because it was the actual street address of the hallowed funky blues sanctuary Theresa’s Lounge. We want the listener to open that door, walk in, and feel to their core some of the magic that a place like that brought night after night. It was an honor to bring this to you, the listener.”

Joanna has played guitar with the who’s who of blues including the likes of James Cotton, Buddy Guy, Jimmy Page and Junior Wells. Debuting at Chicago’s premiere blues club Kingston Mines in the 1980s, she has played there three nights a week ever since, between gigs at larger clubs and festivals, before the spread of the pandemic earlier this year. An aggressively edgy and highly innovative blues-rock guitarist with a tight groove that encompasses jazz and funk, Joanna is hailed by many as one of the most powerful and influential female guitarists on the planet.

The new album reflects an entirely new experience from the way Joanna has recorded music in the past. “This album is a homage to the blues school that I attended in Chicago,” she says. “We attempted to capture the spirit of tradition and inject it with raw energy and passion. We used no effects, lots of cool guitars and vintage amps, which is new for me. We tried to redo it to portray the deep history I have in the blues genre, bring out the thousands of sweaty hours in those blues clubs in Chicago and deliver it to the record.”

But why did Joe Bonamassa want to produce Joanna’s new album? “I remember asking Joe point-blank, ‘Out of all the guitar players in the world why me?’ He said, “Because you have an intensity about your playing that most people don’t have. As a matter of fact, I wish I had some of that in myself where you just let it go, and you don’t even think about it.”

The new album features the crème de le crème of musicians. Joanna cites working with them as an unforgettable experience. “Playing with Reese Wynans was an honor and a privilege and brought me to tears. Having Josh Smith and Joe playing guitar on every cut and arranging everything was a gift to me. Bassist Calvin Turner was incredibly groovy and solid and was responsible for the horn arrangements. Lemar Carter is one of the hottest drummers on the music scene and plays with Frank Ocean and so many others. He’s a master of time and taste and groove. We recorded every song in a max of three takes. We were all in the same room together, except for Joe who was in the control room playing and producing. Making this album felt like a sweet gig.”

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