Showing posts with label Chico Chism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chico Chism. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Chico Chism - Chico Chism's West Side Chicago Blues Party

Album: Chico Chism's West Side Chicago Blues Party
Size: 111,2 MB
Time: 47:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2006
Styles: Blues, Chicago blues
Art: Full

1. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - I Don't Trust Nobody (2:51)
2. Highway Man - I Walked From Dallas (2:55)
3. Chico Chism - Coo Fannie Coo (3:25)
4. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - I Got To Tell Somebody (2:24)
5. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - Bluesman Of Yesterday (2:55)
6. Eddie Burks - Operator (3:46)
7. Highway Man - Don't Laugh At Me (3:21)
8. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - This Little Voice (2:57)
9. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - Big Leg Woman (3:57)
10. Willie Davis - Why'd You Leave Me Baby (2:49)
11. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - I Can't Stop Loving You (2:47)
12. Highway Man - Louise (3:39)
13. Highway Man - Killing Floor (3:47)
14. Eddie Burks - Evelina (3:04)
15. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - I Got To Tell Somebody (Alternate Version) (3:02)

Blues as a macrocosm of music has an over-reaching arch that has influenced every American musical art form in some shape or another since its birth from the South. After spending time in the hands of the Delta Blues masters, it migrated north like many of its masters did after WWII in search of better pay and better work. Most of these masters came to Chicago. Chicago is the home of the blues. Blues as a microcosm on the South and West Sides has existed as a way of life since those early post war days. With many musicians coming and going either in or not written in the pages of history, the late 70s era was a very vibrant time for blues and blues musicians. Maxwell Street was still very alive and well, along with its many characters.

One of its many characters was Chico Chism. Chism is widely known as Howlin’ Wolf’s last drummer. However, there was much more to him than that. Shortly after Wolf’s death, Chism along with his fellow band mates sax man Eddie Shaw, guitar legend Hubert Sumlin, blues legend Detroit Junior, and Shorty Gilbert became the first incarnation of Eddie & the Wolf Gang. Probably recorded about a few months after Howlin’ Wolf’s death in 1976, the Gang recorded on Eddie Shaw’s Simmons label Have Blues Will Travel. It would be the only original recording the group would make. Forty years later, the album would make it out of the dusty alleys of the now vacant Maxwell Street and from the back corners to CD for the first time here.

To call this a piece of recorded blues history is an understatement. Hearing a young Eddie Shaw blasting away on vocals and sax, with the unmatched guitar prowess of Sumlin strumming away in the background, as Junior holds the underbelly rhythm with his piano is simply majestic. The remaining eight tracks also have been unearthed too. Many of the 45s and LPs of the remaining recordings were sold of Chico Chism’s briefcase and from bandstands at local gigs on the South & West Sides of Chicago; some of these tracks have probably never been heard out of that area.

Chism started his own label shortly after the disbanding of the original Wolf Gang and called it Cher-Kee after his mother’s Native American heritage. A virtual go-to guy for many of the unheralded musicians on Chicago’s blues scene, Chism recorded the remaining slices and time capsules of what the blues clubs were playing in the late 70s. Guys like Highway Man, Johnny Christian (who’s not included here), Eddie Burks, Willie Davis, and even Chism himself were what we would today consider regional musicians. Due to their location and their music, this recording is without a doubt essential for understanding blues at that time. Chism, like those who captured the godfathers of the Delta, is due some rightful respect for his efforts to record musicians we would otherwise not have heard.

Traditional blues specialist Bob Corritore, who supervised the production of this album, does a fine job in preserving the ambience of the recordings themselves. This CD is a great time capsule and a diamond in the rough of some of the late 70s blues CDs out there. For those new to the blues, these are artists you will probably have never heard of before. That’s okay. Make yourself familiar. Some of the guys playing on here are some names you’ll get to know. In other words, welcome back in time to Chicago. Listen and follow along. These under recorded players are going to give you a lesson on what it was like. Trust me, you’ll enjoy this history lesson. /Ben the Harpman, Juke Joint Soul

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Chico Chism's West Side Chicago Blues Party mc
Chico Chism's West Side Chicago Blues Party gofile

Friday, January 12, 2018

Various - Louisiana Blues: Early 50s And 60s R&B

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:57
Size: 153.3 MB
Styles: Louisiana blues, R&B
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[1:58] 1. Sonny 'Golden Boy' Williamson - Mailman, Mailman
[2:28] 2. Sonny 'Golden Boy' Williamson - Pretty 'lil Thing
[2:28] 3. Sonny 'Golden Boy' Williamson - I Gotta Cry
[2:31] 4. Sonny 'Golden Boy' Williamson - You Better Sit Down
[2:03] 5. June Bug Bailey - Lee Street Blues
[2:16] 6. Elgie Brown - Gimmie Gimmie
[2:54] 7. Banny Price - Rushin'
[3:09] 8. Elgie Brown - You'll Be Back
[2:22] 9. Elgie Brown - Let Me Feel It
[2:29] 10. T-Slim With Eddie Williams - The Fight
[2:37] 11. T-Slim With Eddie Williams - Goin' To Calif
[2:50] 12. T-Slim - The Fight
[2:19] 13. T-Slim With Eddie Williams - Darling Remember
[2:09] 14. T-Slim With Eddie Williams - Flat Foot Sam
[2:08] 15. T-Slim With Eddie Williams - Darling Remember
[2:10] 16. Sherman 'Blues' Johnson - Hey Pretty Baby
[2:21] 17. Little Melvin Underwood - Something's Wrong Baby
[2:28] 18. Little Melvin Underwood - Little Melvin's Gonna Move
[1:58] 19. Vincent Williams - Tryin' To Make A Fool Of Me
[2:40] 20. Vincent Williams - Going Back To Chicago
[2:14] 21. L.C. Steel - Don't Play No Woman For No Fool
[2:18] 22. Chico Chism - Hot Tamales & Bar-B-Que
[2:12] 23. Chico Chism - Romp & Stomp
[2:31] 24. Jesse 'Babyface' Thomas - Watch Out
[2:36] 25. Jesse 'Babyface' Thomas - My Baby
[1:50] 26. Jesse 'Babyface' Thomas - Anything You Want
[3:01] 27. Jesse 'Babyface' Thomas - Guitar Riff
[1:44] 28. Jesse 'Babyface' Thomas - Everything I Do For You

Evolving out of jump blues in the late '40s, R&B laid the groundwork for rock & roll. R&B kept the tempo and the drive of jump blues, but its instrumentation was sparer and the emphasis was on the song, not improvisation. It was blues chord changes played with an insistent backbeat. During the '50s, R&B was dominated by vocalists like Ray Charles and Ruth Brown, as well as vocal groups like the Drifters and the Coasters. Eventually, R&B metamorphosed into soul, which was funkier and looser than the pile-driving rhythms of R&B.

Louisiana Blues: Early 50s And 60s R&B mc
Louisiana Blues: Early 50s And 60s R&B zippy

Monday, April 17, 2017

Sunnyland Slim - Be Careful How You Vote

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:17
Size: 94.5 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1989
Art: Front

[4:40] 1. You Can't Have It All
[3:08] 2. Workin' Two Jobs
[3:47] 3. Have A Good Day Now
[4:13] 4. Chicago Jump
[4:48] 5. Past Life
[3:36] 6. Be Careful How You Vote
[3:47] 7. Johnson Machine Gun
[5:01] 8. Speak Once And Think Twice
[4:06] 9. Midnight Jump
[4:08] 10. Patience Like Job

Lurrie Bell/Guitar; Beau Biley/Trombone; Sam Burckhardt/Sax (Tenor); Chico Chism/Drums; Fred Grady/Drums; Nick Holt/Bass; Eddie Lusk/Organ; Magic Slim/Guitar; Mickey Martin/Drums; Hasson Miah/Drums; John Riley/Bass; Bob Stroger/Bass; Hubert Sumlin/Guitar; Sunnyland Slim/Composer, Piano, Primary Artist, Producer, Vocals; Eddie Taylor/Guitar.

This CD reissues a variety of recordings cut by the veteran blues pianist/vocalist Sunnyland Slim during 1981-83 for his private label Airway Records. In his mid-70s at the time, Slim's energetic vocals and powerful piano playing belie his age. As is typical of the pioneer Chicago bluesman, he allocated plenty of solo space to his sidemen (which include Hubert Sumlin, Eddie Taylor, Lurrie Bell or Magic Slim on guitar) although there was never any doubt about who was in control. The intelligent lyrics, high musicianship, mood variation (including two excellent instrumentals) and spirited playing make this a highly enjoyable and recommeded date despite the LP-length playing time. ~Scott Yanow

Be Careful How You Vote mc
Be Careful How You Vote zippy

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Bob Corritore - All-Star Blues Sessions

Year: 1999
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:02
Size: 131,0 MB
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Scans: Full

1. Hip Shakin' (3:47)
2. Out On The Road (3:49)
3. Naptown Blues (3:21)
4. Everybody's Fishin' (2:50)
5. Hear That Rumblin' (2:24)
6. Five Long Years (4:09)
7. How Many More Years (3:03)
8. Goin' Down South (2:30)
9. Cool Calm Collected (2:54)
10. Coal Black Mare (3:52)
11. Little Girl (3:48)
12. Tired Of Being Alone (1:53)
13. Showers Of Rain (3:29)
14. I Had My Fun (3:18)
15. Jennie Bea (3:38)
16. Nappy's Driftin' Blues (8:09)

Recorded, helmed, and mostly produced by Phoenix, AZ blues renaissance man Bob Corritore (club owner, record label exec, writer, manager, radio DJ, and harp player), this hour-long disc is a potent example of loose, straight-ahead blues played with guts and low-boil intensity. Spanning 1986-1998, these 16 tracks recorded in Phoenix and Tempe studios feature a variety of classic bluesmen such as Lil' Ed Williams, Henry Gray, R.L. Burnside, Bob Margolin, Jimmy Rogers, Pinetop Perkins, and Bo Diddley (who is prominently pictured with Corritore in the CD's tray). It's well-recorded - clean but never slick - and the performances find a genuine and spontaneous rugged midtempo groove. Which is exactly what the blues should be.

So even if you've never heard of such vocalists as Dino Spells, Jimmy Dotson, Clarence Edwards, or Chico Chism, they prove nearly as gifted and freewheeling as some of the more recognizable names. Corritore, who plays prominent harp on every track, is an exceptionally talented musician, even if his instrument seems a little higher in the mix than you might expect. The songs, all of which are covers, are especially well selected. Instead of jaunts through traditional, often stale standards, most are relatively obscure choices that allow the band to stretch out in a variety of established blues tempos. Even when Nappy Brown digs into Charles Brown's oft-covered "Driftin' Blues," (altered here to "Nappy's Driftin' Blues"), the vocalist tears through it with the passion and intensity of someone who wrote the song. A take on Eddie Boyd's popular "Five Long Years" is similarly inspired.

This is a real find for deep blues fans and an enjoyable if not essential listen for everyone else. Bob Corritore has assembled a classy collection that finds all of his players - both popular and obscure - in top form. /Hal Horowitz, AllMusic

(See booklet for recording info and personnel details.)

All-Star Blues Sessions mc
All-Star Blues Sessions zippy

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Various Artists - Red River Blues

The Ram Series continues with a fine collection of blues and R&B recordings, highlighted by the complete sessions of the late Jeff (Sonny Boy) Williamson - the only known recording of this Louisiana harp player. The tiny Shreveport Ram label was the brainchild of the late Myra Smith who, in the mid-50s, recorded country rockabilly and blues at her tiny handbuilt studio. Strapped for money, she was not able to release all her masters on singles and in the 60s she gave up the Ram label to concentrate on publishing and songwriting.

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 1999
Styles: Blues
Time: 68:10
Size: 157,2 MB
Covers: Full

(1:59) 1. Jeff 'Sonny Boy' Williamson - Mailman Mailman
(2:30) 2. Jeff 'Sonny Boy' Williamson - Pretty Lil Thing
(2:31) 3. Jeff 'Sonny Boy' Williamson - I Gotta Cry
(2:33) 4. Jeff 'Sonny Boy' Williamson - You Better Sit Down
(2:05) 5. June 'Bug' Bailey - Lee Street Blues
(2:19) 6. Elgie Brown - Gimmie Gimmie
(2:56) 7. Banny Price - Rushin'
(3:13) 8. Elgie Brown - You'll Be Back
(2:25) 9. Elgie Brown - Let Me Feel It
(2:31) 10. Eddie Williams - The Fight
(2:39) 11. Eddie Williams - Goin to Calif
(2:53) 12. TV Slim - The Fight
(2:22) 13. TV Slim - Darling Remember
(2:12) 14. TV Slim & His Heart Breakers - Flatfoot Sam
(2:11) 15. TV Slim & His Heart Breakers - Darling Remember
(2:13) 16. Sherman Robertson - Hey Pretty Baby
(2:24) 17. Little Melvin Underwood - Something's Wrong Baby
(2:30) 18. Little Melvin Underwood - Little Melvin's Gonna Move
(2:00) 19. Vincent Williams - Tryin ' to Make a Fool of Me
(2:42) 20. Vincent Williams - Going Back to Chicago
(2:16) 21. L.C. Steels - I Didn't Play No Woman for No Fool
(2:21) 22. Chico Chism & His Jetnanairs - Hot Tamales & Bar-B-Que
(2:15) 23. Jerry Garland - Romp & Stomp
(2:34) 24. Jesse Thomas - Watch Out
(2:39) 25. Jesse Thomas - My Baby
(1:53) 26. Jesse Thomas - Anything You Want
(3:04) 27. Jesse Thomas - Guitar Riff
(1:46) 28. Jesse Thomas - Everything I Do for You

Recorded between the mid-'50s and mid-'60s, most of this electric blues and R&B was laid down at Mira Smith's studio in Shreveport, LA, appearing on tiny labels like Ram, Jo, Clif, Speed, and Red River; a dozen of the tracks were previously unreleased. This is pretty tenuous ground for a compilation, and it should be pointed out that Smith also recorded some other styles in her studio that are not represented here; also, the disc is filled out by five cuts done elsewhere in Shreveport by Jesse Thomas in the early '60s. Nonetheless, it's a pretty fair collection of early electric Louisiana blues, TV Slim the only name likely to evince even faint recognition from most collectors. Yes, there are four cuts by Sonny Boy Williamson, but this not John Lee (Sonny Boy I) or Rice Miller (Sonny Boy II) Williamson; it is, hilariously, Jeff "Sonny Boy" Williamson, yet another harmonica-playing guy using the name. He's actually one of the better performers here, although his music is derivative, with flashes of Fats Domino and Bo Diddley here and there. New Orleans R&B, indeed, is a substantial influence on several of the cuts, and the swampy Excello-released blues of Slim Harpo and the like can also be heard from time to time. TV Slim, by contrast, does primitively recorded (even by mid-'50s standards) blues-boogie on his 1955 Speed single, as well as the original version of the rockabilly blues "Flat Foot Sam" (later recut for Chess in New Orleans). Talk about lo-fi: Chico Chism's "Romp & Stomp" instrumental sounds like it was recorded from the opposite end of a school hall. Jesse Thomas finishes things off with some pretty classy, urbane blues which sound a little like early B.B. King. -- Allmusic.

Red River Blues

Sunday, May 31, 2015

Henry Gray - Plays Chicago Blues

Year: 2001/2011
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:07
Size: 110,4 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Scans: Full

1. Talkin' 'Bout You (2:36)
2. Times Are Getting Hard (4:36)
3. Henry's Houserocker (2:09)
4. Trouble Blues (5:34)
5. How Many More Years (3:04)
6. It Hurts Me Too (3:42)
7. How Could You Do It (2:34)
8. I Held My Baby Last Night (4:03)
9. Everybody's Fishin' (2:55)
10. Don't Start That Stuff (4:01)
11. They Raided The Joint (3:05)
12. Ain't No Use (3:18)
13. That Ain't Right (2:58)
14. Showers Of Rain (3:27)

Born and raised in Louisiana, Gray moved to Chicago after service in World War II. A pupil of Big Maceo, he began playing in clubs, first with Little Hudson, later with Morris Pejoe. He also accompanied Jimmy Rogers and other Chess artists, notably Howlin' Wolf, playing in his band from the mid-'50s to the late '60s. He then returned to Louisiana, where he has worked round the Baton Rouge area with local artists like Tabby Thomas and Silas Hogan.

Bluesfans investigating Gray's work for the first time should take note that he has a fairly static repertoire. The tracklist for this albums, is all of which appear somewhere on the previous albums, some more than once. But if you haven't got those albums, you can choose to regard 'Plays Chicago Blues' as a useful roundup of what are obviously his favourite numbers. There's a nod, naturally, to the Wolf and a couple of songs from the Elmore James folio, and are memories of old Memphis. The band plays by the Chicago book, generally but with a good deal of oomph, helping Gray to make the best of what he's got.

Personnel:
Henry Gray - Piano, Vocals
Bob Corritore - Harmonica except tr. 3,6
Johnny Rapp - Guitar
Bob Margolin - Guitar tr. 4,9,12,14
Kid Ramos - Guitar tr. 1,6,8,11
Paul Thomas - Bass except tr. 4,9,12,14
John 'Pops' McFarlane - Bass tr. 4,9,12,14
Chico Chism - Drums

Plays Chicago Blues mc
Plays Chicago Blues zippy