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  1. Projections is the second album by the American blues rock band the Blues Project.Produced by Tom Wilson and released by Verve/Folkways in November 1966, the album was their first studio release and examined a more rock-based sound. Jim Marshall was credited as the photographer of the album cover.. Soon after the release of this album, Al Kooper left the band in the spring of 1967 to form ...

  2. #5 – Flute Thing. The jazzy instrumental “Flute Thing” was composed by Al Kooper before Andy Kulberg’s flute playing rendered this tune a Blues Project classic. Fans of the Beastie Boys may recognize it from the hip-hop group’s “Flute Loop” as it was a song recorded for its album, III Communication.As the song progressed, each member of the Blues Project laid out solos that ...

  3. The Blues Project presents a series of events showcasing London’s thriving emerging music scene and covers London’s best emerging talent’s gigs and festivals. DJ Mix: Soul Sugar @ SENSES Block Party – Alternative R&B, Classic Soul, Funk & Soulful Edits.

  4. Christian Blues Project. 100 likes · 1 talking about this. The Christian Blues Project was formed in 2021, and features music based on classics by Sister Rosetta Tharpe and other pioneers of that...

  5. 2 de nov. de 2016 · The classic lineup of the Blues Project came together in 1965 in New York's Greenwich Village. The band featured Roy Blumenfeld (drums), Danny Kalb (guitar and vocals), Steve Katz (guitar and ...

  6. On paper, the Blues Project was a great idea, but in spite of an abundance of talent (Al Kooper, Steve Katz, Danny Kalb, and Tommy Flanders were all members)...

  7. The Blues Project in 1966 (l. to r.): Andy Kulberg, Al Kooper, Danny Kalb, Steve Katz, Roy Blumenfeld. They called themselves The Blues Project but, in the spirit of the times—the mid-’60s—the blues was only their starting point. Like Cream, the Paul Butterfield Blues Band and many other outfits of that era, the New York-based quintet ...