Los Angeles-based guitarist Doug MacLeod continues down the country-blues path with Whose Truth, Whose Lies? Macleod’s appealing originals, like “‘Splain It to Me,” “Norfolk County Line,” “My Black Pony” and “Can’t Give Me Nothin’,” combine simple storytelling and motherly wit along with clean acoustic playing and urgent, rootsy vocals. And his politically charged title track is incredibly prescient, given the fall-out of the 2000 presidential election. While Macleod has been regarded as an accomplished electric blues-guitar player and songwriter since his 1984 debut with Hightone, No Road Back Home, he has distinguished himself more successfully with this recent shift to the acoustic side of the blues.
Originally PublishedRelated Posts
Sonny Terry/Brownie McGhee: Backwater Blues
Start Your Free Trial to Continue Reading

Jonathan Butler: The Simple Life
Jonathan Butler’s optimistic music belies a dirt-poor childhood growing up in a South Africa segregated by apartheid. Live in South Africa, a new CD and DVD package, presents a sense of the resulting inner turmoil, mixed with dogged resolve, that paved the way to his status as an icon in his country and successful musician outside of it. Looking back, the 46-year-old Butler says today, the driving forces that led to his overcoming apartheid-the formal policy of racial separation and economic discrimination finally dismantled in 1993-were family, faith and abundant talent.
“When we were kids, our parents never talked about the ANC [African National Congress] or Nelson Mandela,” he says. Butler was raised as the youngest child in a large family. They lived in a house patched together by corrugated tin and cardboard, in the “coloreds only” township of Athlone near Cape Town. “They never talked about struggles so we never knew what was happening.”
Start Your Free Trial to Continue Reading
Harry Connick, Jr.: Direct Hits
Two decades after his commercial breakthrough, Harry Connick Jr. taps legendary producer Clive Davis for an album of crooner roots and beloved tunes

Scott LaFaro
Previously unavailable recordings and a new bio illuminate the legend of bassist Scott LaFaro