She was first introduced this year as an ‘Alabama sweetheart’
on the Saturday of the Maverick Festival and what a fine ambassador for her
home state Debbie Bond has proved to be. Since that glorious day at the
beginning of July, Debbie and her husband/musical partner Rick Asherson have
stayed in the country playing countless gigs to continue to promote the state
via their brand of inspirational blues music. This evening they swapped the idyllic
surroundings of rural Suffolk for a more down to earth pub in Bromsgrove,
Worcestershire without any let up in their mission to thrill, inform and most
of all entertain.
Debbie wasn’t the first Alabama based artist to tread the boards of the Hop Pole this year as Hannah Aldridge payed the venue in March. Co-incidentally Hannah also appeared at the Maverick Festival as part of the themed Alabama feature. While Hannah’s heady mix of country, folk and soul music ventures heavily into Americana territory, Debbie keeps her feet firmly planted in the tradition of maintaining the blues as a relevant art form. This she does with exhilarating passion and a skill to make the notes buzzing out her guitar fizz with electrifying twang. Of course this is in tandem with her exemplary band known as the Trudats and this evening comprising of Rick on keyboards/harmonica, backing and occasional lead vocal, with London based drummer Sam Kelly undertaking the percussion role.
Debbie wasn’t the first Alabama based artist to tread the boards of the Hop Pole this year as Hannah Aldridge payed the venue in March. Co-incidentally Hannah also appeared at the Maverick Festival as part of the themed Alabama feature. While Hannah’s heady mix of country, folk and soul music ventures heavily into Americana territory, Debbie keeps her feet firmly planted in the tradition of maintaining the blues as a relevant art form. This she does with exhilarating passion and a skill to make the notes buzzing out her guitar fizz with electrifying twang. Of course this is in tandem with her exemplary band known as the Trudats and this evening comprising of Rick on keyboards/harmonica, backing and occasional lead vocal, with London based drummer Sam Kelly undertaking the percussion role.

To equate the Hop Pole with an Alabama juke joint is
stretching the comparison a touch, but Debbie was unfazed by the surroundings
as she was determined to inject a high dose of blues passion to a fairly sedate
gathering. To be fair audience participation from the venue was probably
maximised by the time Debbie and the guys played their encore version of Muddy
Waters’ classic ‘Got My Mojo Workin’’. Debbie
was keen to share her definition of the blues as being as much about uplifting
your spirits as the alternate view and also to glow about her association with
respected Alabama based bluesman Willie King, whose band she played in until
his death in 2009.

With London born Rick’s links to his homeland and Debbie’s almost evangelical mission to spread the word of her beloved state, a return UK visit in 2016 is likely to be on the cards. So if a Debbie Bond gig appears at a venue close by, you could do a lot worse than buying into her belief and pride of a musical style moulded to thrive in any live setting.