Showing posts with label Boozoo Chavis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boozoo Chavis. Show all posts

Sunday, January 10, 2021

Boozoo Chavis - Hey Do Right!

Size: 102.7 MB
Time: 43:23
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1996
Styles: Blues Zydeco
Art: Full

01. Zydeco Cha Cha (3:05)
02. Bosco Stomp (2:34)
03. You're Gonna Look Like A Monkey (3:16)
04. What You Gonna Do (3:15)
05. I Got A Camel (3:11)
06. Mother's Blues (2:28)
07. Jump The Boogie (1:01)
08. Goin' To The Zydeco (2:47)
09. Pass Me A Dozen Eggs (3:10)
10. Hey Do Right! (3:55)
11. Crying Waltz (6:35)
12. The Spotted Cow Died (2:36)
13. Message From The Master (1:53)
14. Zydeco Lady (3:29)

Boozoo Chavis (born Wilson Anthony Chavis) was one of the pioneers of zydeco, the Cajun and blues hybrid originating in southwest Louisiana. Although his self-composed 1954 single, "Paper in My Shoes," was the first zydeco hit, Chavis was distrustful of the music industry and refused to perform publicly or record again until 1984. In an interview featured in the 1990 book, The New Folk Music, Chavis explained, "I got gypped out of my record. I get frustrated, sometimes. I love to play, but, when I get to thinking about 1955... They stole my record. They said that it only sold 150,000 copies. But, my cousin, who used to live in Boston, checked it out. It sold over a million copies. I was supposed to have a gold record." After leaving the music business, Chavis devoted his attention to raising champion racehorses in Shrevesport and Lafayette, LA and TX. Chavis waited until 1984 before returning to music. Signing a five-year contract with the Maison de Soul label, he recorded four albums -- Louisiana Zydico Music, Boozoo Zydeco!, Zydeco Homebrew, and Zydeco Trail Ride. Chavis' 1997 album, Hey, Do Right, was produced by Terry Adams, keyboardist for NRBQ, who paid tribute to Chavis in their 1989 song, "Boozoo, That's Who."

Chavis' performances, with his band, the Majic Sounds, included a much-heralded appearance at the Newport Folk Festival and the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. The New York Times wrote, "(Chavis is) chaos on two feet. A little bullet of a man, he runs around onstage, shouting and yelling....(his) music can achieve a trancelike intensity". In a review of Chavis' performance at the Southwest Louisiana Zydeco Music Festival, Paul Scott wrote, "There are a lot of Boozoo prototypes coming out. They may be smoother than Boozoo but they try to get his hard accordion; that rough, raw, style; and his sore throat type of singing. And with that single-note and triple-note accordion, he's doing a lot to bring a return to basic zydeco."

The son of tenant farmers, Chavis acquired his nickname as a youngster. Chavis was raised by his mother, who cleaned houses and sold barbecue at horse races until raising enough money to buy a three acre tract of land where she and Chavis moved in 1944. Acquiring an accordion from his father and teaching himself to play, Chavis was soon playing at local barn dances and in the dance club opened by his mother, where he often sat in with Morris Chenier and his sons, Clifton and Cleveland. In 1994, Chavis appeared in Robert Mugge's video documentary, The Kingdom of Zydeco. He was inducted into the Zydeco Hall of Fame four years later. Continuing to release music into the new millennium, Chavis issued Johnnie Billy Goat in fall 2000. On May 5, 2001 Chavis died after suffering from complications related to a heart attack he'd had a month earlier. ~Craig Harris

Hey Do Right! MP3
Hey Do Right! FLAC

Monday, September 11, 2017

Various Artists - Bluesin' By The Bayou: Ain't Broke, Ain't Hungry

Year: 2017
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:08
Size: 169,7 MB
Styles: Blues
Scans: Full

1. Mercy Baby - Pleadin' (2:19)
2. Leroy Washington - I've Been In This Prison (2:29)
3. Lightnin' Slim - Little Girl Blues (2:59)
4. Ramblin' Hi Harris - I Haven't Got A Home (3:02)
5. 'Honey Boy' Allen Pierre - Better Start Doin' It (1:59)
6. Slim Harpo - Cigarettes (2:12)
7. Lightnin' Slim - Hoo Doo Blues (2:30)
8. Polka Dot Slim - Ain't Broke, Ain't Hungry (3:04)
9. Lazy Lester - I'm A Lover Not A Fighter (2:52)
10. Joe Richards - Dreaming, Dreaming (2:26)
11. Al Smith - Still In Love With You (2:40)
12. Cookie & The Cupcakes - In The Evening (2:50)
13. Polka Dot Slim - A Thing You Gotta Face (2:59)
14. Jake Jackson - Life Gets Hard (2:40)
15. Barbara Lynn - Sugar Coated Love (2:46)
16. Boozoo Chavis & His Zodico Accordian - Tee Black (2:08)
17. Jimmy Anderson & The Joy Jumpers - Angel Please (2:50)
18. Clarence Garlow - Make Me Cry (2:51)
19. Boozoo Chavis & His Zodico Accordian - Hamburgers & Popcorn (1:33)
20. Lightnin' Slim - I Hate To Leave You Baby (2:55)
21. Al Smith - If I Don't See You (2:28)
22. Ramblin' Hi Harris - Baby, Baby, Baby (2:45)
23. Lightnin' Slim - I Don't Know (2:07)
24. Big Walter - If The Blues Was Money (3:18)
25. Jake Jackson - Somebody Tell Me (3:00)
26. Al Smith - I Love Her So (2:09)
27. T.B. Fisher - Don't Change Your Mind (2:05)
28. Unknown Artist - I'm Gonna Find My Baby (3:01)

The “By The Bayou” series leaps to Volume 18 with a return to the blues of South Louisiana, bringing you rare or previously unissued tracks from stars of the genre such as Lightnin’ Slim, Lazy Lester and Slim Harpo, plus a host of little-known or completely unknown performers. We also have two artists who you would never think performed in the downhome style – Barbara Lynn and Cookie (aka Huey Thierry) – but who sound right at home, with an unknown harmonica player setting the tone on Barbara’s track whilst Cupcakes guitarist Marshall Laday supports Cookie with some mean blues pickin’. In fact there are several tracks here that will have air-guitar virtuosos reaching for their imaginary axes.

We reveal in the booklet that the much-reported birthplace of Lightnin’ Slim may be another creation of this enigmatic performer. Sorting out the different takes of his songs has proven complicated because he was inclined to sing subtle changes in the lyrics whilst performing identical guitar work. This time we have had the support of a dedicated fan who prefers to remain anonymous but provided detailed analysis. As for Slim Harpo, ‘Cigarettes’ is one of my favourites amongst his lesser-known titles.

As always there are a handful of mystery singers. Was there really a “Ramblin’ Hi Harris”, for example, or was his name created later by J.D. Miller? Another rarity is an artist whose record doesn’t appear in that veritable tome The Blues Discography 1943-1970. T.B. Fisher may have escaped notice there but he is proof of what a great ear Huey Meaux had for all manner of music. The man had a real knack for spotting talent and bringing out their best on vinyl, and I’ll wager there will be many a blues aficionado hunting for Fisher’s disc once it’s been heard.

Bluesin' By The Bayou: Aint' Broke, Ain't Hungry mc
Bluesin' By The Bayou: Aint' Broke, Ain't Hungry zippy

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Various - Blues Routes: Heroes & Tricksters Blues & Jazz Work Songs & Street Music

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:35
Size: 157.0 MB
Styles: Blues, Jazz, Ragtime
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[3:57] 1. John Henry Mealing and the Gandy Dancers - Rooster Call
[5:14] 2. John Cephas and Phil Wiggins - John Henry
[2:39] 3. Warner Williams - Step It Up And Go
[3:38] 4. Luther "Guitar Junior" Johnson and Willie 'Pinetop' Perkins - Flipping And Flopping
[4:09] 5. Erbie Bowser, T.D. Bell, and the Blues Specialists - It's Love Baby (24 Hours A Day)
[4:12] 6. Robert Jr. Lockwood - Little Queen Of Spades
[3:42] 7. Etta Baker - One Dime Blues
[2:31] 8. Abner Jay - Bluetail Fly
[4:14] 9. Don Vappie and the Creole Jazz Serenaders - Gut Bucket Blues
[4:32] 10. Claude Williams - That Certain Someone
[2:50] 11. Sammy Price - Harlem Parlor Blues
[3:04] 12. Booker T. Laury - Early In The Morning
[5:08] 13. The White Cloud Hunters Mardi Gras Indians - Sew, Sew, Sew
[4:38] 14. Rapper Dee, C.J. (Carl Jones) and Five Gallons of Fun - My Mind Has No Colour- Do It The Go-Go Way
[2:22] 15. Georgia Sea Island Singers - Hambone, Where You Been
[2:55] 16. Boozoo Chavis & The Majic Sounds - Uncle Bud
[8:42] 17. Joe Louis Walker and the Boss Talkers - Bluesifyin

Blues Routes is a resonant almanac of blues styles and blues-related music and musicians including: Memphis barrelhouse and Harlem parlor piano players; blues guitarists from the Delta and Piedmont, San Francisco and Chicago; Kansas City and New Orleans jazz masters; hambone call-and-response and Mardi Gras Indian chants; Texas jump blues and Louisiana Creole zydeco; minstrel and jazz banjomen; street go-go bucket-drummers and railroad track-lining gandy dancers. In this fin de siècle collection, the diversity of American blues and blues-influenced styles and the unity of their African ancestral heartbeats can be heard in great performances recorded live at the influential Folk Masters concert and radio series.

Blues Routes: Heroes & Tricksters Blues & Jazz Work Songs & Street Music mc
Blues Routes: Heroes & Tricksters Blues & Jazz Work Songs & Street Music zippy

Thursday, August 25, 2016

VA - Louisiana Sounds: 50 Classics Of Louisiana Music (1953-1960)

Size: 152,4+141,3 MB
Time: 64:21+59:33
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues, Rockabilly, R&B, Cajun
Art: Front

CD 1:
01 Clarence 'Bon Ton' Garlow - Bon Ton Roulet (2:53)
02 Sugar Boy Crawford - Jock-A-Mo (2:24)
03 Clifton Chenier - Louisiana Stomp (2:54)
04 Guitar Slim - The Things That I Used To Do (2:57)
05 Clifton Chenier - Country Bred (Nobody Loves Me) (2:25)
06 Boozoo Chavis - Paper In My Shoe (2:12)
07 Hawketts - Mardi Gras Mambo (2:11)
08 Bobby Charles - See You Later, Alligator (2:47)
09 Earl King - Those Lonely, Lonely Nights (2:22)
10 Smiley Lewis - I Hear You Knocking (2:30)
11 Clarence 'Frogman' Henry - Ain't Got No Home (2:22)
12 Bobby Charles - Take It Easy, Greasy (2:10)
13 Slim Harpo - I'm A King Bee (3:01)
14 Al Ferrier - Hey Baby (2:21)
15 Huey 'Piano' Smith - Rockin' Pneumonia And The Boogie Woogie Flu Pt. 1 (2:13)
16 Lloyd Price - Just Because (2:44)
17 Jimmy C. Newman - A Falling Star (2:14)
18 Slim Harpo - I Got Love If You Want It (2:46)
19 The Big Bopper - Chantilly Lace (2:22)
20 Lightnin' Slim - My Starter Won't Work (2:48)
21 Cookie & The Cupcakes - Mathilda (3:09)
22 Lazy Lester - I'm A Lover Not A Fighter (2:42)
23 Lightnin' Slim - It's Mighty Crazy (2:33)
24 Warren Storm - Mama, Mama Look What Your Little Boy's Done (2:19)
25 Jimmy Clanton - A Letter To An Angel (2:51)

CD 2:
01 Frankie Ford - Sea Cruise (2:42)
02 Lazy Lester - Sugar Coated Love (2:43)
03 Huey 'Piano' Smith & The Clowns - Don't You Just Know It (2:28)
04 Jimmy Clanton - Just A Dream (2:28)
05 Warren Storm - Prisoner Song (2:49)
06 Cookie & The Cupcakes - Until Then (2:29)
07 Rod Bernard - This Should Go On Forever (2:43)
08 Jivin' Gene - Breaking Up Is Hard To Do (2:25)
09 John Fred & His Playboy Band - Shirley (1:50)
10 Rod Bernard - Pardon Mr. Gordon (2:05)
11 Lightnin' Slim - Rooster Blues (2:30)
12 Phil Phillips - Sea Of Love (2:20)
13 Al Terry - Watchdog (2:03)
14 Johnny Preston - Running Bear (2:35)
15 Joe Jones - You Talk Too Much (2:29)
16 Slim Harpo - Rainin' In My Heart (2:31)
17 Fats Domino - Walking To New Orleans (2:01)
18 Cleveland Crochet - Sugar Bee (2:29)
19 Johnny Preston - Cradle Of Love (2:18)
20 Big Boy Myles - New Orleans (2:24)
21 Jimmy Clanton - Another Sleepless Night (2:10)
22 Charles Sheffield - It's Your Voodoo Working (1:46)
23 Joe Barry - I'm A Fool To Care (2:17)
24 Clarence 'Frogman' Henry - (I Don't Know Why) But I Do (2:17)
25 Rusty Kershaw - Louisiana Man (2:31)

The leading sounds of New Orleans rub shoulders with the swamp blues of Baton Rouge to get the musical gumbo of blues, pop, Cajun and rockabilly you get recorded her on this superb 2CD set from Jasmine. Features such international stars as Slim Harpo, Fats Domino, Johnny Preston and many more. If you are a fan of diverse and influential music then look no further than the indigenous music that came from the great State of Louisiana.

Louisiana Sounds CD 1
Louisiana Sounds CD 2

Friday, July 10, 2015

Boozoo Chavis - The Lake Charles Atomic Bomb (Original Goldband Recordings)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:10
Size: 73.7 MB
Styles: Cajun, Louisiana blues
Year: 1990
Art: Front

[2:42] 1. Paper In My Shoe
[2:46] 2. Forty One Days
[1:56] 3. Hamburgers And Popcorn
[2:10] 4. Oh Yae Yae
[2:29] 5. My Love Just For You
[2:02] 6. Pallet On The Floor
[2:12] 7. Oh Ho She's Gone
[2:26] 8. Bye Bye Catin
[2:01] 9. Brand New Mojo
[2:16] 10. Telephone Won't Ring
[2:23] 11. Tee Black
[2:07] 12. Bottle Up And Go
[2:28] 13. Comma Lemma Chapo Sha
[2:06] 14. Lost The Paper In My Shoe

Boozoo Chavis cut the first zydeco single in 1954 under the direction of Eddie Shuler. Then he disappeared from the music scene, devoting his time to raising quarter horses.

Like a once thought to be extinct prehistoric fish pulled up from the depths of the ocean, Boozoo Chavis’ reappearance on the zydeco scene in the early 1980s was in music circles considered miraculous. One of the founders of the genre, Chavis disappeared from the public eye for nearly three decades. Nevertheless, his initial brief stint as a recording artist inspired a new generation of zydeco artists. Chavis’ return to the music scene only underlined that he was—next to Clifton Chenier—the most influential and innovative zydeco artist of all time. At the time of his unexpected death on May 5, 2001, he was still one of the genre’s most popular artists.

Chavis usually played unaccompanied, keeping time by stomping on a Coke box. Shuler insisted on backing Chavis with Classie Ballou and the Tempo Toppers, a local R&B band.

“I spent my last $250 on the band,” continued Shuler. “But after three days in the studio I was no closer to a finished product than when I started. The band had no idea what Boozoo was doing. Finally I thought that if I brought a bottle in for Boozoo and the band it might loosen everybody up. After they finished the whiskey they started sounding pretty good. Then I bought another bottle and they really started to cook. I had the tape rolling and all of a sudden I heard a crash inside the studio, but the music kept playing. Boozoo had fallen over with his legs up in the air but was still playing.” ~Jeff Hannusch

The Lake Charles Atomic Bomb (Original Goldband Recordings) mc
The Lake Charles Atomic Bomb (Original Goldband Recordings) zippy

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Boozoo Chavis - S/T

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 43:10
Size: 98.9 MB
Styles: Zydeco-blues, Cajun
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. Boozoo's Theme Song
[3:17] 2. I'm Ready Me
[2:36] 3. Dog Hill
[3:03] 4. Keep Your Dress Tail Down
[3:26] 5. Johnnie Billie Goat
[3:06] 6. Gilton
[3:56] 7. Goin' To La Maison
[3:10] 8. Forty One Days
[3:32] 9. Oh Yae Yae
[3:12] 10. Tee Black
[3:32] 11. Zydeco Hee Haw
[3:17] 12. Don't Worry About Boozoo
[4:19] 13. Bernadette

As part of the American Explorer series, this album of Boozoo Chavis' work came maybe half a decade after his return to the recording scene in the mid-'80s. The tone slides between the slower, more countrified ballads and the more rollicking works toward the mainstream end of zydeco. The focus is rarely on the instrumental virtuosity, nor is it set on the lyrical content or vocal ability. The focus for the listener is the groove that Chavis and his band set up. When they get into it, it's full-fledged dancehall boogie music, and the details only exist to add to the groove's structure. When they slow down, though, the sound can get a little sparse pretty easily. The call and response can get a bit overly burdensome in the slow numbers, but there's an element of the rural sounds of zydeco throughout. This isn't the slicker, refined form from Buckwheat Zydeco, or even the middle-of-the-road basic form embraced by Chenier, but an older form with closer ties to Cajun in some cases, and a deep country feel throughout. Chavis isn't performing the same music that the others do, but that might be just the reason to give it a listen. ~Adam Greenberg

Boozoo Chavis mc
Boozoo Chavis zippy