
Turn The Music Up
Turn The Music Up — original music from The James Pitts Band.
MUSIC
The James Pitts Band is not only a live blues act. It is an original music project built on nearly three decades of playing, writing, performing, and carrying the blues forward.
The catalog sits inside the Full Service Blues identity: blues-rooted, guitar-driven, soulful, sometimes gritty, sometimes grooving, always connected to songs that are meant to live on stage.
THE CATALOG
Each release shows another part of the band's identity. Some songs lean into blues rock. Some carry soul-blues weight. Some move with groove. Some dig into hard-time blues. Some are built for the room. Together, they show a band that is not trying to escape the blues, but to keep building inside it.

Turn The Music Up — original music from The James Pitts Band.

Born In Voodoo adds a darker, deeper flavor to the catalog. It carries the mystery, groove, and atmosphere that can sit naturally inside a Full Service Blues identity when the song is handled with conviction.

Fire In My Hands brings the guitar identity into sharper focus. Blues roots, live energy, emotional weight, and guitar playing meant to be felt, not just heard.

Hit The Road continues the band's blues-rooted story with songs shaped by movement, survival, guitar, and the road-tested attitude of a working band.

Come To Play The Blues is the record that put the statement right in the title — a guitar-driven blues album built around original songs, live feel, and the conviction of a band stepping forward with its own voice.
ORIGINAL MUSIC
The next chapter is about building the catalog. The 50 Songs / 50 Years project is a long-form original music mission: new songs, new recordings, new stories, and a deeper body of work that expands the James Pitts Band identity without losing the blues foundation.
The goal is not to chase trends. The goal is to create a lasting body of original music that belongs in the Full Service Blues world and gives the live show more original fire to draw from.

The recordings tell part of the story. The stage tells the rest.