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Read What They're Sayin' About Us...It's Great Stuff!

Eyes Like Diamonds selected to appear on Starbucks CD
Mon, Feb. 19 2007
Starbucks PR
Racky Thomas at Johnny D's - Boston Phoenix
Tue, Feb. 21 2006
Blues with soul By: TED DROZDOWSKI The freshly written graffiti in the men’s room at Johnny D’s last Saturday, February 10, read, “It ain’t blues . . . it ain’t shit.” Out on the dance floor, the clutch of people swirling to the Racky Thomas Band most likely agreed. But Thomas, a mellow-voiced singer and harmonica player, is part of an endangered species: a diehard regional bluesman whose style is original enough for a national breakout. Trouble is, as Johnny D’s booking agent Dana Westover acknowledged, fewer people come to hear blues in the bars today than in the ’90s. And that makes the music a tough sell. A major reason is that blues has in general lost its snap. In its golden age — say the late 1920s through the 1960s — there was a great variety in the sounds of Delta musicians like Charley Patton, Son House, and Robert Johnson, and in the work of influential electric artists like Little Walter, Sonny Boy Williamson, Howlin’ Wolf, and Otis Rush. But after the first generation of white artists brought the music to a wider public, it became codified into lazy shuffles and 12-bar toss-offs. Now there’s a generation who think that’s the blues. Period. Thomas and his four-man crew’s suit-and-tied look may be dated, but they’re the rare breed who aim to give their vintage sounds a timeless edge. Guitarist Nick Adams played a long, sweet, slow sensitive solo in “Standing on a Corner” that drew in the half-full room, and Thomas exhibited casual charisma blowing harmonica lines and growling vocals through his amped harp mike. They played standards by Wolf and Waters, but the highs came when they tore into originals like the stomping rocker “Dance with Your Daddy.” It was blues, but full of energy and soul. The way the music used to be.
Racky Thomas featured artist in BarrelHouse Blues
Sat, Jan. 1 2005
http://barrelhouseblues.com/racky_thomas.htm
Ain't It Lonesome Selected as IMA Finalist!
Fri, Dec. 3 2004
http://www.musiciansatlas.com/newsletter/december/MRGNewsArticle12_04.htm

Tune into the jukebox at: http://www.disclogic.com/imafinalists.jsp

Great reviews from Bruce Iglauer at Alligator
Sat, Nov. 29 2003
Live At The Yardrock – Recorded over 2 nights Feb 1st & 2nd 2001 at the The Yard Rock Blues Club, Quincy, MA. Courtesy of Mr, Joe Hajjar, Proprietor.
Racky interviewed by French Magazine - Blues & Co
Sun, Nov. 2 2003
Also see the link to a rave review from Toton Erick of Blues & Co on the Home Page
Racky featured in Boston Herald
Fri, Oct. 3 2003
Racky was quoted in the Boston Herald "Mo Better Blues" article
Racky Thomas gets roots right with Last of the Big Spenders
Fri, Jan. 8 1999
With a decade of performing on the New England blues circuit (and a 15 month stint playing solo gigs in Denmark) under his belt, Racky Thomas has graduated from a reverential genre-imitator to an original talent...
Racky Thomas wins the Blues battle
Sat, Jul. 19 1997
The Racky Thomas Band easily won the 11th annual Battle of the Blues Bands at Harpers Ferry Thursday night ...
Thomas's blues act aces Harpers battle
Sat, Jul. 19 1997
Thursday, the Racky Thomas Band became the clear winner of the 11th annual Battle of the Blues Bands at Harpers Ferry...