Terry Robb presenting the Official Music Video for his new single βHow a Free Man Feelsβ
Some musicians win awards. Then there are the very few who have awards named after them. Terry Robb β one of the most decorated and widely respected artists working in any genre βis one of those guys. The Vancouver-born, Portland-based bluesman took home the Muddy Award for Best Acoustic Guitar so many times that the Cascade Blues Association finally broke down and attached his name to the trophy permanently.
Recognition for his artistry doesnβt stop there. The Oregon Music Hall of Famer has been praised by Rolling Stone, Acoustic Guitar, Down Beat, Guitar Player, Vintage Guitar, and Living Blues, which called him one of the nationβs finest acoustic guitarists. Heβs toured the country with Buddy Guy, Steve Miller, and John Fahey, appeared on Late Night With Conan OβBrien, strummed and picked for the crowd at the Rose Garden before a Portland Trail Blazers game, and collaborated with the Oregon Symphony. During his multi-decade run in the spotlight β one in which heβs released fifteen acclaimed albums β heβs shown himself to be a master of nearly every blues style and technique imaginable. Heβs played slide, heβs played electric, heβs finger-picked, heβs kept it traditional, heβs gone experimental, heβs given it to the crowd rough and fiery, heβs been gentle and understated, and heβs pushed the blues into places where it doesnβt ordinarily go. But heβs never any better than he is when he picks up his Martin acoustic and lets it rip.
Thatβs what he does on βHow A Free Man Feels,β the newest singls from his most recent set. Confessinβ My Dues is a further demonstration of Terry Robbβs flexibility and mercurial talent β and this songs is a straight-forward example of superb axemanship. Thereβs nothing fancy about the clip, but it sure is effective. Here, we find Terry Robb in his native environment: the recording studio. βHow A Free Man Feelsβ is simple: Terry Robb is alone in studio, just him and his guitar. Black and white fades to bright color, as he sings about wanting to know how a free man feels. Thereβs no distraction β just Terry Robbβs voice and his intricate guitar work. With close-up shots of him at the microphone and his hands fretting the six strings, we get to see the master at work.






















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