Second Chance

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Track Listing

10 tracks

  • Lonely Man

    Track 1 03:47

  • Rock Me Baby

    Track 2 04:23

  • Bluesman

    Track 3 03:01

  • Outskirts of Town

    Track 4 03:36

  • Sweet Music

    Track 5 03:16

  • Wham Bam

    Track 6 03:41

  • Since I Met You Baby

    Track 7 04:20

  • Poor Boy

    Track 8 03:28

  • Solitary Midnight

    Track 9 03:53

  • Second Chance

    Track 10 03:53

Insight

Wes Mackey was a South Carolina-born blues singer, guitarist, songwriter and bandleader whose long road in music eventually made him a fixture of the Canadian blues scene. Born on December 12, 1942, in the Big State community near Yemassee, South Carolina, Mackey grew up around the Combahee River, where his father, a preacher, also worked as caretaker and guide at a fishing camp. The world he came from was rural, segregated and hard, but it was also full of music. Blues, gospel and the informal lessons of older Southern players formed the foundation of everything he later carried onto the stage.

At his father’s urging, Mackey left home as a young man and made his way to Augusta, Georgia. He bought his first guitar on credit, paying a dollar a week, and began learning from older musicians who had come out of the big-band and road-band tradition. Around Club Desoto on Ninth Street, those players taught him more than chords and songs. They showed him how to listen, how to carry himself on a bandstand, and how to survive the road as a professional musician. His first group, Guitar Wes and the Houserockers, played a juke joint gig that paid 50 cents and a chicken sandwich.

Those early Georgia years gave Mackey a working musician’s education. He later joined larger bands, including the Rock and Roll Kings, and played clubs across Georgia and the American South. In those settings he found himself around touring blues and R&B greats, and his own recollections and later profiles connect him with backing-band work for artists such as Muddy Waters, Jimmy Reed, John Lee Hooker, Stevie Wonder and others. It is best understood as the life of a sideman and road musician: learning fast, adapting to every room, and absorbing the older blues language first-hand.

Canada became the second great chapter of his life. Mackey first experienced the country during the Expo ’67 era and later made it his home, spending time in Halifax, Nova Scotia before eventually settling in Vancouver, British Columbia. There he became part of the West Coast blues community, working both as a solo act and with strong regional players. Toronto Blues Society later described him as a Vancouver bluesman with South Carolina roots who had restarted his solo career in Canada after years of sideman work in the United States.

On stage, Mackey had a style all his own. He could work as a bandleader, but he was also known as a one-man-band performer, singing, playing guitar and supplying his own steady rhythms on bass pedals. Reviewers often noted his seated stage posture, headset microphone, polished but unflashy guitar work and easy way of connecting with an audience. His singing was mellow and sincere, his guitar tone direct, and his approach was rooted more in feel than display. He could move through the room, draw people into the song, and make familiar blues material sound personal.

Mackey’s recording career in Canada began to gather strength with Second Chance, released in 2002 on Bluesline Entertainment & Music. The title was more than a slogan. It marked his return after difficult years away from music, and it presented him as a seasoned performer with a deep understanding of both traditional blues and contemporary R&B. The album included “Bluesman,” “Wham Bam,” “Solitary Midnight” and the title track, with songs written by Laura Fisher, Wes Mackey and others, and with contributions from musicians including Candus Churchill, Camille Henderson, Saffron Henderson, Peter Honeychurch, Robbie King, Jack Lavin, Darrell Mayes, David Say and Kenny “Blues Boss” Wayne.

Mr. Blues followed in 2005, placing Mackey’s identity plainly at the centre of the music. Its mixture of blues standards, soul-rooted material and original songs showed the range of a performer who could honour the older repertoire while still writing from his own experience. Songs such as “Born in Carolina,” “Who Do Da Voodoo?,” “Bright Lights Big City,” “A Change is Going to Come” and “In My Neighborhood” fit naturally into the larger story he was telling: the South, the road, memory, survival and the search for belonging.

By the time of Beyond Words in 2009, Mackey’s recordings were drawing more deeply on his Vancouver circle, with Laura Fisher continuing as a key creative partner. The album featured musicians such as Kenny “Blues Boss” Wayne, Dave “Hurricane” Hoerl, Christopher Allen, Loren Etkin, Chris Norquist, Sandy Scofield, Geoff Hicks and Dawn Pemberton. It also showed Mackey’s strength as a writer, with originals such as “Blues Shack,” “Beyond Words,” “Be A Man Boy” and “Full Moon In Lamanon.”

“Full Moon In Lamanon” carried a story of its own. In 2008, Mackey was honoured in Lamanon, Provence, receiving a “Citizen of Honor” medal connected to the song and his relationship with the town’s Festival des Alpilles. The honour underlined the unusual reach of his career. A musician who had begun in South Carolina juke joints had become warmly received in France, Germany, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Hong Kong and other international settings, while still remaining better known abroad than in much of North America.

Life Is a Journey, released in the early 2010s, brought the travelling theme fully into view. Songs such as “Thank You Carolina,” “Blue In Paris,” “Ganges Blues,” “Train,” “Blues Carry Me Home” and the title track looked back across the places, losses and turns that had shaped him. The album connected Carolina roots with international movement, including European imagery and wider world-music touches, while keeping Mackey’s blues voice at the centre. It was a mature late-career statement: reflective, soulful and personal.

In 2017, Back to the Shack: Retro Collection gathered material from his earlier recordings and underlined the part of his catalogue that Mackey considered closest to the blues. By then he was in his seventies, still recognized for his laid-back delivery, spare guitar phrasing and ability to make familiar blues forms feel lived-in rather than merely revived. Toronto Blues Society noted that the collection drew from four earlier discs and represented what Mackey called the “bluest of his blues.”

Wes Mackey died on February 15, 2019. He left behind a catalogue that deserves far more attention: a body of work rooted in the American South, rebuilt in Canada, and carried across the world by a musician who understood the blues not as a pose, but as experience, endurance and return.

-Robert Williston

John Valentyn of TBS Maple Blues Magazine. ..On the strength of this CD he certainly deserves his second chance...and I am looking forward to future CD's Mark T. Smith kjlu Jefferson City Missouri I want to thank you for one of the best CD's I have had the pleasure to broadcast. Pick a track cause they are all from the heart by a real bluesman man. few left but Wes is one of the few. Roots Music Report. Wes can sing a song...(and )....plays his Gibsons guitar with the expertise of a man that knows his blues. A fine CD" Jean Claude Mondo Ce titre clôture, par ailleurs, cet album d’excellente facture…

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CD-Wes Mackey-Second Chance INSERT BACK

CD-Wes Mackey-Second Chance JEWEL BACK

CD-Wes Mackey-Second Chance INSERT FOLDOUT

CD-Wes Mackey-Second Chance CD

Second Chance

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Credits

Musicians
Wes Mackey: bass pedals, guitar, vocals
Candus Churchill: backing vocals
Camille Henderson: backing vocals
Saffron Henderson: backing vocals
Peter Honeychurch: special guitar on “Second Chance”
Robbie King: keyboards
Jack Lavin: bass guitar
Darrell Mayes: drums
David Say: saxophone
Kenny “Blues Boss” Wayne: keyboards

Songwriting
“Lonely Man” written by Campbell and Lyons
“Rock Me Baby” written by Josea and King
“Bluesman” written by Laura Fisher
“Outskirts of Town” written by Jacobs and Weldon
“Sweet Music” written by Weathersby
“Wham Bam” written by Laura Fisher and Wes Mackey
“Since I Met You Baby” written by Hunter
“Poor Boy” written by Terry and McGhee
“Solitary Midnight” written by Laura Fisher
“Second Chance” written by Laura Fisher and Wes Mackey

Production
Executive produced by Wes Mackey and Laura Fisher
Produced by Bluesline Music Entertainment
Recorded at Izik’s Music, Blue Wave Productions, and Say What Studios, Vancouver, Canada
“Second Chance”, “Wham Bam” and “Bluesman” produced by the Amazing Ike Stubblefield at Izik’s Music
“Lonely Man”, “Rock Me Baby” and “Solitary Midnight” engineered by Ken Burke at Blue Wave Productions
Special producer Tom Lavin
Arrangements by Wes Mackey and Robbie King
All other recording, engineering, mixing, remixing and mastering by David Say at Say What Studios

Publishing
“Lonely Man” published by Conrad Music
“Rock Me Baby” published by Powerhouse Music
“Bluesman” published by Mackfish Publishing SOCAN
“Outskirts of Town” published by MCA Music Publishing
“Sweet Music” published by Weathersby Music
“Wham Bam” published by Mackfish Publishing SOCAN
“Since I Met You Baby” published by Unchappell Music Inc.
“Poor Boy” published by Ireco Music
“Solitary Midnight” published by Mackfish Publishing SOCAN
“Second Chance” published by Mackfish Publishing SOCAN

Artwork
Photography by James Loewen
Graphics and design by Doug Cuthbert

Special Thanks
A special thanks to Robbie King for his support and help to pull it all together.

Liner notes
Wes Mackey hails from South Carolina where he learned to play the guitar from the seasoned old players of the Deep South. He worked his way up from local honky tonks to a gig in Paris to playing in back up bands for many greats including Muddy Waters, Stevie Wonder and John Lee Hooker. After some daunting personal setbacks, he was away from the music scene for several years. On his return, he had to start all over again. “I had to work some pretty seedy joints,” he says with his trademark stutter, “but I think it gave me a deeper understanding of the blues experience....about real life.” A warm, wise and funny man, he’s worked hard at his craft and has emerged with a unique blend of traditional blues and contemporary R&B. From soloist to bandmaster, Wes Mackey is a hardworking musician and an incredible performer.

Release Info
© 2002 Bluesline Entertainment & Music
Manufactured in Canada
All rights reserved
www.bluesline.mu
bluesline@usa.net

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