Showing posts with label Calvin Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calvin Jones. Show all posts

Thursday, October 26, 2017

Barrelhouse Chuck - Slowdown Sundown

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:08
Size: 117.1 MB
Styles: Chicago blues, Piano blues
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[3:12] 1. I Keep On Drinking
[3:45] 2. Mt. St. Helens Blues
[1:06] 3. Farfisa B3 Boogie For Steve Winwood
[3:01] 4. Searching For My Baby
[2:10] 5. Viola's Stomp
[1:26] 6. Iza Mae
[3:27] 7. Depression Blues #2
[4:07] 8. What's Wrong
[5:54] 9. You Told Me Baby
[2:07] 10. Ain't Got No Money Now
[3:40] 11. Ain't Nobody's Business
[1:27] 12. Nutty Boogie
[2:07] 13. Walk Don't Run 69
[7:25] 14. B.B.Q. Girl (Live)
[6:06] 15. Gigilo

Barrelhouse Chuck – Piano; Ben Andrews - Guitar; John Carpenter - Drums; Steve Cushing - Drums; Willie J. Davis - Guitar; Billy Flynn - Bass, Guitar; Erwin Helfer - Piano; Rick Holmes - Bass (Acoustic); Robert Hunter - Vocals; Calvin "Fuzz" Jones - Bass; Willie Kent - Bass, Vocals; S.P. Leary - Drums; Todd Levine - Harmonica; Josh Miller - Guitar; Leslie Milton - Drums; Johnny B. Moore - Guitar; Kenny Smith & The Loveliters - Drums; Otis Smokey Smothers - Guitar, Vocals; John Tanner - Harmonica; Larry Thompson - Drums; Rich Yescalis – Bass.

This is what Chicago blues used to sound like back in the old days. Barrelhouse Chuck should get lots more credit than he gets for his fine work! Who else does what he does? He never over plays. His playing is so lowdown and blue. I love your voice and the songs you write! Thanks for staying true to the music. Buy this to hear the way blues piano should sound like! ~ Lee Thomas

Slowdown Sundown

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Willie 'Big Eyes' Smith - Way Back

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:19
Size: 108.3 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 2006/2014
Art: Front

[4:07] 1. Don't Say That No More
[4:17] 2. I Don't Trust You Man
[3:01] 3. Read Way Back
[4:03] 4. Tell Me Mama
[3:40] 5. If You Don't Believe I'm Leaving
[4:48] 6. Lowdown Blues
[5:15] 7. Woman's World
[4:12] 8. Don't Start Me Talkin'
[4:40] 9. Blues And Trouble
[2:37] 10. I Want You To Love Me (Trust Me)
[6:34] 11. Eye To Eye

Willie "Big Eyes" Smith is most often recalled as the longtime drummer in the Muddy Waters Band (he occupied the drum chair in the group from 1961 through 1980), but he was a harmonica player well before he was a drummer (his hard-charging harmonica can be heard on Bo Diddley's "Diddy Wah Diddy" from 1955) and he has led his own blues ensembles from time to time. Way Back, a pleasant set recorded in 2005 and produced by Bob Corritore, puts Smith front and center, and while no one would accuse him of being the equal of Muddy Waters as a bandleader, the 73-year-old Smith projects an intangible joy through the 11 songs here, half of which he wrote. Backed by what amounts to a superstar blues band, with the great, unsung Bob Margolin on guitar, a seemingly ageless 93-year-old Pinetop Perkins on piano, and guest shots by James Cotton and others, Smith delivers several variations on the good, old and undeniably durable Chicago blues shuffle, including the opener, a cover of Jimmy Reed's "Don't Say That No More" and a gleeful version of Waters' "Read Way Back," both of which feature Smith's steady and somehow endearingly fragile vocals, and his strong, unhurried harmonica lines. Smith does play drums on a pair of tracks, "Lowdown Blues" and "I Want You to Love Me (Trust Me)," as well, but most of the drumming is from Kenny "Beady Eyes" Smith, Willie's son. The clear highlight is a wonderfully simple, atmospheric, and haunting Willie Smith original, "Blues and Trouble," which builds powerfully on just Smith's vocal and harmonica and Margolin's brilliant electric slide guitar playing. Nothing here is going to reshape the contemporary blues world, and truthfully, these kinds of Chicago blues shuffles have been done a thousand times by a thousand blues bands. But maybe that's the point, actually. Smith is one of the musicians who helped create and shape those rhythms, and this album is evidence that he still knows what to do with them. ~Steve Leggett

Way Back mc
Way Back zippy

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

James Cotton - Live At Antone's Night Club

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:40
Size: 106.8 MB
Styles: Electric Chicago blues
Year: 1988/2013
Art: Front

[7:49] 1. Blow Wind
[2:33] 2. Juke
[6:31] 3. It Ain't Right
[5:56] 4. Gone To Main Street
[4:11] 5. Oh Baby
[3:51] 6. Hoochie Coochie Man
[7:57] 7. Eyesight To The Blind
[7:49] 8. Midnight Creeper

Reuniting Cotton with his former guitarists Matt Murphy and Luther Tucker, pianist Pinetop Perkins, and Muddy Waters' ex-rhythm section (bassist Calvin Jones and drummer Willie Smith) looks like a great idea on paper, and it worked equally well in the flesh, when this set was cut live at Antone's Night Club in Austin, TX.

Live At Antone's Night Club mc
Live At Antone's Night Club zippy

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Ronnie Earl - 2 albums: Hope Radio / Eye To Eye

Album: Hope Radio
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 78:17
Size: 179.2 MB
Styles: Jazz blues, Modern electric blues
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[5:08] 1. Eddie's Gospel Groove
[5:55] 2. Bobby's Bop
[8:32] 3. Blues For The Homeless
[8:15] 4. I Am With You
[3:35] 5. Katrina Blues
[8:08] 6. Wolf Dance
[6:39] 7. Kay My Dear
[8:49] 8. Blues For The West Side
[8:46] 9. Beautiful Child
[9:52] 10. Blues For Otis Rush
[4:34] 11. New Gospel Tune

Other than jazz and classical, there are few other musical genres where vocals don't dominate, but Ronnie Earl sets out to prove that blues can be another. This entirely instrumental album never lags for a second of its hour-and-a-quarter playing time, all without a word being sung. Instead, Earl uses his magnificent guitar tone -- a stinging combination of Santana, Hubert Sumlin, Mike Bloomfield, Otis Rush, and Albert King -- and command of dynamics to wring more soul from his material than all but a handful of vocalists could ever achieve. He does this without the blinding speed or enhanced volume of the most popular blues six-stringers, but by the sheer intensity of his playing on these 11 tracks. Recording live in the studio with an invited audience (the session was also captured for a DVD release) provides the cliff-hanging excitement of a concert, allowing Earl, whose multiple health problems prevent him from touring, to tear it up in a more controlled setting. A few acoustic tracks such as "Katrina Blues" provide a changeup from the spark-shooting electric solos that dominate this dazzling performance. All Earl needs is a touch of reverb and bandmembers who understand when to lay low to let him soar. That's what happens during this session, cherry-picked from two days of concerts in April 2007. Drummer/producer Lorne Entress deserves recognition for a light touch on percussion and, perhaps more importantly, letting Earl stretch out for extended periods of whispering solos, as he does on the eight-minute Howlin' Wolf/Hubert Sumlin tribute "Wolf Dance." He opens up on the following slow blues of "Kay My Dear," laying back with smooth yet tensile jazzy licks over the faintest of backing at the song's start, only to gradually build to a dull roar by the track's end. Few guitarists could capture a listener's interest so confidently over longer tunes, but Earl pulls it off with an effortless precision that seems second nature. Six of the selections break the eight-minute mark, but none are needlessly drawn out with the directionless riffing so endemic to less inventive blues guitarists. The tempos, especially in the album's middle third, stay restrained and perhaps a few more upbeat tracks would have helped the disc's flow. Regardless, it's unlikely any listener will complain when Earl tears into the nearly ten-minute "Blues for Otis Rush," as he whips off a frenzy of soul-drenched notes that machine gun out of his fingers. The live environment adds thrilling high-wire tension to a guitarist who is already in the upper echelon of his peers. ~Hal Horowitz

Hope Radio

Album: Eye To Eye
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 68:27
Size: 156.7 MB
Styles: Modern electric blues
Year: 1996
Art: Front

[7:12] 1. How Long
[4:48] 2. Country Girl
[3:41] 3. Tops Boogie Woogie
[5:06] 4. Eye To Eye
[4:52] 5. Yonders Wall
[5:41] 6. Ronnie's Blues
[4:31] 7. Shake For Me
[5:49] 8. Miss Ida B
[5:07] 9. Kidney Stew
[5:53] 10. I Woke Up This Morning
[4:29] 11. Take It Easy Baby
[6:46] 12. Anna Lee
[4:27] 13. Forty Four Blues

This CD is a fine showcase for guitarist Ronnie Earl, who is teamed with three members of the Legendary Blues Band (pianist Pinetop Perkins, bassist Calvin Jones and drummer Willie "Big Eyes" Smith), plus organist Bruce Katz. Although pianist Perkins takes vocals on most of the songs and bassist Jones sings on two of the numbers, nearly each selection has plenty of solo space for Earl and Perkins. Sticking exclusively to the blues at a variety of tempos, the fine program (which has superior instrumental playing that overshadows the personable vocals) should be of strong interest to both blues and jazz collectors.

Eye To Eye

Friday, December 20, 2013

Muddy Waters - King Bee

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 40:02
Size: 91.7 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1981/2008
Art: Full

[3:51] 1. I'm A King Bee
[4:31] 2. Too Young To Know
[3:46] 3. Mean Old Frisco Blues
[4:33] 4. Forever Lonely
[3:44] 5. I Feel Like Going Home
[4:36] 6. Champagne & Reefer
[5:25] 7. Sad Sad Day
[3:19] 8. (My Eyes) Keep Me In Trouble
[4:09] 9. Deep Down In Florida #2
[2:04] 10. No Escape From The Blues

This 1981 recording found Waters being produced by rocker Johnny Winter, who had brought Muddy back to form on the Hard Again album. Winter was smart enough to surround the great one with musicians who knew his music intimately -- regular band members like Calvin Jones, Willie "Big Eyes" Smith, Luther "Guitar Jr." Johnson, and Bob Margolin dot the lineup -- and Johnny keeps his own excesses in check on a nice brace of tunes. While most of the tunes here are recuts of older Chess material, Muddy's versions of Slim Harpo's title track and his own "Champagne & Reefer" are worth checking out. Not the place to start a Muddy Waters collection, but a good one to add to the collection after you've absorbed the classics on Chess. ~Cub Koda

thank you mrwalker.
King Bee