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12 - Working Mans Blues
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Album   $10
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A blues tune about trading the time of your life to get enough money to survive
blues boogie harmonica king philbo
Artist picture
Independent artist performing and recording original songs, operating Tangent Studio, and doing gigs throughout northeast Iowa
Philbo King (Phil Koenig) has been playing guitar since age 10, when he got an all-plastic Eminee Hootenanny guitar and a thick Beatles book from his sister Cecilia for Christmas, and a classical guitar book printed in 1912 from his grandmother. These were his sole musical training, as he is completely self-taught. At age 12, his parents moved to Davenport Iowa, where he connected with a few junior high friends to form a garage cover band called 'The Odds And Ends', doing music from the Monkees, Paul Revere and the Raiders and similar bands, playing on Teisco Del Rey and Woolworth instruments through Checkmate amplifiers. At age 13, Philbo connected with Dino Anton, who introduced him to the blues, to album rock, and connected him to blues guitar player John Pena. Early influences included Canned Heat, John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers, B.B. King, Al Cooper/Mike Bloomfield and John Lee Hooker. For the next couple of years, he sat in with various friends in all-night weekend blues jams and spent his free time playing along with records for hours each day. From 1971 to 1973 Philbo performed with several different progressive rock and cover bands in southern Wisconsin and in the Quad Cities area, including groups called 'Pivoted' , 'Dutch Schultz and Shotgun', and 'Sunshot'. Sunshot booked with McClane Agency and played extensively for 4 or 5 years in the region from central Illinois to eastern Iowa. The advent of punk rock caused one of the members to want to change the music, and Philbo quit the band shortly after. In 1978 Philbo played bass for a old-school country band, called 'The Good Ol' Boys' and covered music by Hank Williams Sr., Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys, Merle Haggard, Jimmy Reed, Charlie Pride and the Charlie Daniels Band. Philbo then went to work for a year or two with a Davenport local rock band called 'The Daily Planet', doing front-of-house sound mixing and assisting with recording work in their studio 'Redrox Recording'. This culminated with the band releasing an album and opening for Toto at the Palmer Auditorium in 1981. At this point he had gotten married, went to college and started a family, then ended up teaching electronics at a voc-tech college for the next 10 years after graduating. Although he did collaborate on a few music projects with other people during this time, most of his free time was spent experimenting with a 4-track Teac reel-to-reel recorder, learning how to record and mix music. In 1991, Philbo moved to the Cedar Rapids area and began working at an aerospace company, where he worked on jet aircraft avionics, doing work in designing autopilots, GPS, navigation, and various other projects. During this time he held weekend jam sessions at his house for his friends, and for the next 10 years played with them almost every weekend. Eventually they drifted toward using a PC to do recording, named themselves 'Tangent' and in 2000 released an album 'Sea Of Tranquility' which was a collection of all-original songs they had put together. In 2002 they released a second album of originals called 'Along Another Tangent'. In 2010 he decided to record a solo album of all-original blues, and worked on it off and on in spare time. It was finished in 2015 and released in March 2017. Late in 2015 Philbo contacted BeBad Brad McCloud and suggested working together. They were partnering as Case Of The Blues and have performed twice at the Juke Joint Festival in Clarksdale MS, twice at the Sunday Blues show in the Des Moines Botanical Center, and a variety of tavern gigs in Iowa. Philbo is currently working solo on recording a back catalog of over 100 songs he has written over the decades, while still performing live regularly. This recording work is expected to take a few years...
Song Info
Genre
Blues Blues General
Charts
Peak #14
Peak in subgenre #7
Author
Philbo King
Rights
(c) 2017 Philbo King Music ISRC: QM2DP1500012
Uploaded
October 20, 2022
Track Files
MP3
MP3 9.6 MB 320 kbps 4:12
Lossless
WAV 84.8 MB
Meta Data
Beat
4/4
Key
E maj
Vocals
Male
Character
Energy
relaxed, cool
high-energy
Danceable
coffee-place
dancefloor
Positivity
dark, sad, angry
happy
Appeal
unique
radio-friendly
Story behind the song
This is about spending so much of your life working that you start to lose sight of the things that really matter.
Lyrics
Been many many years working every day Putting in my time, bringing home my pay Everybody tells me it's got to be that way But I keep thinking There's got to be a way around these dues And I keep going back there, Doing the working man blues I watched my father working 40 years Paying his bills, keeping his family near One day they told him here's the news you feared As hard as you worked for us Now we've got no use for you You put In your time for us Doing the working mans blues Now I got a house and wife and three kids of my own And I had to keep 'em fed and love 'em as they'd grown Send them out in the world to build castles of their own Putting in the weeks and years Doing the working mans blues Years go by, here I sit Still paying working man dues I'm still working, paying my dues Feel like I'm walking in my father's shoes Those boys in the suits they just don't have a clue And I'm still working Paying the working man dues Every day's another day Singing the working mans blues Working man's blues Working man's blues
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