Showing posts with label Bob Gaddy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bob Gaddy. Show all posts

Sunday, February 2, 2025

Bob Gaddy & Friends - Bicycle Boogie

Album: Bicycle Boogie
Size: 111,1 MB
Time: 47:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1987
Styles: Blues
Art: LP front & back

1. Bob Gaddy - Slowdown Baby (2:44)
2. Bob Gaddy - You Are The One (2:31)
3. Bob Gaddy - Bicycle Boogie (3:06)
4. Bob Gaddy - Early One Morning (2:36)
5. Brownie McGhee - Cherry Red (2:43)
6. Bob Gaddy - No Help Wanted (2:42)
7. Bob Gaddy - Blues Has Walked In My Room (2:44)
8. Bob Gaddy - I Believe (2:17)
9. Jack Dupree - Heartbreaking Woman (2:43)
10. Bob Gaddy - Little Girl's Boogie (2:19)
11. Brownie McGhee - Real Good Feeling (3:03)
12. Jack Dupree - Rocky Mountain (2:11)
13. Brownie McGhee - Pawnshop Blues (2:39)
14. Larry Dale - What Your Love Means To Me (2:30)
15. Brownie McGhee - I'm Talking About It (2:56)
16. Jack Dupree - Lollypop Baby (2:24)
17. Brownie McGhee - Dissatisfied Woman (2:27)
18. Bobby Sue - Relief Check Blues (3:03)

Bob Gaddy (February 4, 1924 – July 24, 1997) was an American East Coast blues and rhythm-and-blues pianist, singer and songwriter. He is best remembered for his recordings of "Operator" and "Rip and Run," and musical work he undertook with Larry Dale, Wild Jimmy Spruill, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee.

Gaddy was born in Vivian, West Virginia, a small town based on coal mining. He learned to play the piano at an early age, playing and singing in his local church. In 1943, he was conscripted and served in the Navy, being stationed in California. He progressed from learning the blues and, using his gospel background, graduated towards the boogie-woogie playing style. He played in blues clubs in Oakland and San Francisco, but after World War II ended he relocated to New York, in 1946. Gaddy later commented, "I came to New York just to visit, because I was on my way to the West Coast. Somehow or other, I just got hooked on it. New York got into my system and I've been stuck here ever since."

He found work as a blues pianist, and in the late 1940s, provided accompaniment to both Brownie McGhee and Sonny Terry. He later backed Larry Dale, and befriended Champion Jack Dupree. Dupree wrote "Operator" for Gaddy, one of his best-selling numbers. Gaddy first recorded for Jackson Records; his debut single, "Bicycle Boogie", was released in 1952. He later recorded for the Jax, Dot and Harlem record labels, before joining Hy Weiss's Old Town Records in 1956. It was here that Gaddy had his most commercially successful period, particularly with "I Love My Baby", "Paper Lady", and "Rip and Run". For Gaddy's early recordings, McGhee was often in the recording studio with him; for his Old Town recordings, he used the guitarists Jimmy Spruill and Joe Ruffin and the saxophonist Jimmy Wright.

Gaddy stopped recording around 1960. However, along with his longtime friend Larry Dale, he remained a mainstay of the ongoing New York blues scene. In April 1988, Gaddy, Dale and Spruill reunited to play at the Tramps nightclub in New York. Gaddy died of lung cancer in July 1997, at the age of 73, in the Bronx, New York. /Wikipedia

Bicycle Boogie mc
Bicycle Boogie gofile

Monday, January 6, 2025

Bob Gaddy - Harlem Blues Operator

Size: 242 MB
Time: 54:45
File: Flac
Released:
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

1. come on little children (2:21)
2. stormy monday blues (2:58)
3. operator (2:38)
4. out of my mind (2:23)
5. forgive me (2:42)
6. could i (2:38)
7. what wrong did i do (2:23)
8. paper lady (2:57)
9. gonna be at the station (2:32)
10. you are the one (2:29)
11. the girl who promises (2:49)
12. the things that i used to do (2:40)
13. i love my baby (2:30)
14. take my advice (2:31)
15. rip and run (2:19)
16. early one morning (2:36)
17. what would i do (2:44)
18. till the day i die (2:58)
19. don't tell her (2:07)
20. woe woe is me (2:52)
21. i'll go my way (2:29)

Most of Gaddy's recordings were done for Old Town in 1955-60, and this 21-track CD covers that era comprehensively, including everything from his singles and four outtakes. Gaddy was a likable but average blues and R&B pianist and singer, covering jump blues, emotional slow electric blues, uptempo R&B that crossed over into rock & roll, Jack Dupree-style piano blues (indeed Dupree wrote some of the material here), and more, although he never got to an elite class in any particular subgenre. The great Jimmy Spruill plays stinging guitar on some of the songs, which gives some of the material, like the Willie Dixon-penned "Could I," a lift, though "Could I" sounds a bit like a Howlin' Wolf track with a way-too-polite vocal. On the other hand, some tracks are clearly trying to simulate the sound of big hits, such as the "The Girl Who Promises," with its direct ripoff of Wilbert Harrison's "Kansas City" shuffle; "Gonna Be at the Station," a very close relative of Hank Ballard's "Let's Go, Let's Go, Let's Go"; and "I Love My Baby," which is close to being "Lawdy Miss Clawdy" with another title. Perhaps when they were recorded, it was hoped that listeners not familiar with the prototypes would be taken in, but there's a problem when these show up on reissues: the people most likely to buy reissues such as these are also the most likely listeners to know what songs from which these riffs were lifted. This is a fair set of R&B-blues crossover, and one of the relatively few single-artist compilations devoted to a New York-based blues performer of the 1950s, but can't qualify as a major collection.

harlem blues operator Flac

Friday, June 3, 2016

VA - Risque Rhythm 'n' Blues

Size: 103,0 MB
Time: 36:21
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Front

01 Cecil Gant - We're Gonna Rock (2:12)
02 Mooah - All Shook Out (2:46)
03 Bob Gaddy - Slow Down, Baby (2:41)
04 Paula Watson - Hidin' In The Sticks (2:47)
05 Sammy Cotton - We're Gonna Ball This Mornin' (2:20)
06 Todd Rhodes - Your Daddy's Doggin' Around (2:36)
07 Cootie Williams - Mercenary Papa (2:12)
08 Jim Wynn - Butter For My Roll (3:12)
09 Doc Sausage - Sausage Rock (2:38)
10 Roy Brown - Butcher Pete, Pt. 1 (2:27)
11 Otis Blackwell - Daddy Rollin' Stone (2:40)
12 Fats Noel - Ride, Daddy, Ride (2:06)
13 Jimmy Wilson - Lemon Squeezer (3:07)
14 Annisteen Allen - My Baby Keeps Rollin' (2:30)

Risque Rhythm 'n' Blues

Friday, February 7, 2014

Mojo Blues Band - Blues Parade 2000 Vol. 1 & 2

Size: 161,8+158,6 MB
Time: 68:20+66:56
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1999
Styles: Modern Electric Blues, Chicago Blues
Art: Full

Vol. 1:
01. Wee Baby Blues (3:13)
02. Where Did You Go Last Night (3:13)
03. Going Crazy Over Tv (3:18)
04. You Can't Win'em All (3:52)
05. Anna Lee (4:42)
06. They Must Have Seen Me Comin' (3:46)
07. Come On Little Children (4:13)
08. Arkanas (2:43)
09. Rocket In My Pocket (3:11)
10. Keep On Rockin' Me Baby (4:01)
11. Call You On The Phone (3:28)
12. Last Time Around (3:57)
13. Big Muddy (4:04)
14. Irene (4:36)
15. Roll Over Beethoven #1 (5:39)
16. Operator (7:19)
17. Pull Down The Shades (2:57)

Vol. 2:
01. No No (3:06)
02. Roll Over Beethoven #2 (4:39)
03. I'm Movin' On (2:20)
04. Sunnyland Train (4:56)
05. A. C.'s Big Fat Woman (3:30)
06. I Wanna Boogie (2:58)
07. I Wonder Why (5:36)
08. Rock A While (3:38)
09. Baby You Don't have To Go (4:48)
10. Mack's Cruise (3:11)
11. Baby What You Want Me To Do (3:43)
12. The Fisherman (3:36)
13. Going Through The Park (4:09)
14. All Shucks (3:41)
15. Playgirl (4:47)
16. I Got A Brand New Mojo (5:20)
17. Coal Miner's Shift (2:48)

Chicago Blues with guests: Jimmy Mc Cracklin, A.C. Reed, Nappy Brown, Larry Dale, Jimmy Anderson, Bob Gaddy and more.

With their new double CD that you are now holding in your hands, the Mojo Bluesband continues this tradition and shares the spotlight with some of their guests of recent years. Compiled from sessions and concerts recorded between 1992 and 1998, the band is by itself on 7 tracks of this double CD set. Six tracks are sung by the group’s founder, Erik Trauner, whose strong, experienced, unaffected vocals match his instrumental prowess on guitar and harmonica. On one track, bassist Dani Gugolz is the lead singer with his distinctive high-pitched voice. “Sunnyland Train” and “Anna Lee” are both features for Trauner’s exceptional slide guitar work, inspired by Elmore James and Tampa Red/Robert Nighthawk, respectively. The stylistic diversity of the band is taken one step further on this CD with the inclusion of material from the area of western swing (Hank Snow’s “I’m Movin’ On”) and rockabilly (“Rocket In My Pocket”).

Blues Parade 2000 Vol. 1
Blues Parade 2000 Vol. 2