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Philipp Fankhauser
Sa, 31.07.2010    20:00
THUN
Am Schluss
Philipp Fankhauser
So, 15.08.2010    12:45
ZOFINGEN
Heitere Open Air
Philipp Fankhauser
Fr, 27.08.2010    20:00
ST. GALLEN
Das Zelt
AKTUELL
Die Stadt Thun ehrt einen ihrer bekanntesten Söhne: Der Bluesmusiker Philipp Fankhauser erhält den mit 10'000 Franken dotierten Thuner Kulturpreis 2010.
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Philipp Fankhausers Song "Love Man Riding" erhält eine ehrenvolle Nennung im 16. Billboard World Song Contest
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Strong, subtle songs that resonate with quiet authority!
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Am 27. Dezember 2008 wurde Philipp Fankhauser im ausverkauften Konzertsaal des KKL Luzern mit einer Goldenen Schallplatte für Love Man Riding ausgezeichnet!
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Fankhauser's Love Man Riding listed among best cds of 2008 in Downbeat's January 2009 issue!!
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The song writing is of a very high standard. A melodic joy.
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That’s all the soul we want. So if you like blues and soul this one is for you.
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Dani Beck interviewt Philipp Fankhauser zu seinem neuen Album "Love Man Riding"
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Der schweizer Musiker hat Stil und eine beeindruckende Stimme.
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Love Man Riding ist ein perfekter Release mit 12 perfekten Songs. Eine CD, die man bei jeder Gelegenheit hören kann, ein Live Auftritt dieser Band ist ein absolutes Muss!
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Was Fankhauser da abliefert, ist musikalisches Teufelswerk allererster Klasse und geht sofort unter die Haut.
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Philipp Fankhauser's "Watching From The Safe Side" ist unglaublich!
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It is safe to say he is another addition to the growing list of excellent European bluesmen, and his multi-national band are of the top calibre – another of this year’s best releases to date.
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Johnny Copelands "I Got A Love" ist betörend filigran.
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“Love Man Riding“ ist abgrundtiefer Blues mit einer Stimme, die man so niemals von einem Weißen außerhalb Mississippis oder Tennessees erwarten würde. Herzzerreißend und beängstigend atmosphärisch.
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Jedes Orgelflattern mit Bedacht gesetzt
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Fankhauser singt so genussvoll, dass grosses Entertainment daraus wird.
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Keine Band dieser Stilrichtung hat mich derart überzeugt und berührt seit den frühen Tagen der Robert Cray Band!
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Als erster Schweizer Bluesmusiker ist Philipp Fankhauser am 12. Juni 2004 am weltgrössten Bluesfestival aufgetreten.
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Philipp Fankhauser unterschreibt einen weltweiten Plattenvertrag mit dem Label "Memphis International Records"! In Europa wird das neue Album "Talk To me" am 1. Juni veröffentlicht!
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BLUES WAX, JULY 2006 
Blues Wax
Fankhauser is not adding anything new to the tree trunk, but he shapes his art well!

Hours of Enjoyment, (07/19/06)
Upon initial listening, Philipp Fankhauser's enunciation compels the listener to try and place his Central European accent. Fankhauser's guitar playing, arrangements, and songwriting quickly come into focus. Eventually this concoction comes together into an above average Blues record of heartfelt compositions. With full arrangements including horns, Fankhauser kicks off Watching from the Safe Side with a big band Swing sound on "It's Over Now Baby." By the third track our Swiss friend is leaning into the deep ballad "Too Little Too Late." "I don't doubt that you're sorry, for one moment/Now you see the errors of your ways/And the tears, they're a nice touch, sliding down your face/But it's too little, too late."

Fankhauser leans on the late Johnny Clyde Copeland for the fourth track, a rousing rendition of "Blues Ain't Nothing." He also covers Copeland's "Love Song." Throughout the album Fankhauser's guitar playing is subtle and tasty. Producer Dennis Walker writes or co-writes on four of the albums songs while Fankhauser writes on seven of the eleven tracks. On the song "The Blues Don't Like a Crowd," the band's horn section steps up to propel the song against a solid twelve bar allowing Fankhauser to step up and bust out another tasty guitar solo.
In today's political climate some musicians feel compelled to walk the line of social or political commentary. Historically very few artists have been able to successfully raise awareness of social or political issues without sounding preachy. On the song "Thomas & Rodney," Fankhauser composes a song about a barroom conversation between a Swiss and an American citizen with the refrain "One from a free land and one from the land of the free." Considering Europe's love/hate fixation with America, you can only assume it must be Tuesday in Lucerne.

While this is my first brush with Fankhauser, he does have other albums available. He is not adding anything new to the tree trunk, but he shapes his art well, moving from one styling to another, and, for some, this album will bring hours of enjoyment. He is especially adept at ballads, and Tom Peterson's horn arrangements often work to raise up this recording, too.

Rick Galusha is a contributing editor at BluesWax West Des Moines, Iowa

 
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