Showing posts with label Big Jay McNeely. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Jay McNeely. Show all posts

Thursday, April 10, 2025

Big Jay McNeely - Blow The Wall Down

Album: Blow The Wall Down
Size: 116,1 MB
Time: 50:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1990/1991
Styles: Blues/R&B/Funk
Art: Full

1. Everybody Needs Somebody (3:16)
2. Blow The Wall Down (3:38)
3. Country Boy (4:19)
4. Zydeco Stroll (3:38)
5. Tequila (1:58)
6. Going To Paint The Town Red (3:49)
7. Harlem Nocturne (4:01)
8. Something On Your Mind (3:28)
9. Tough (5:10)
10. Jay Jay (3:20)
11. Young Girl (4:36)
12. Pretty Girls (Bonus Track) (3:30)
13. Summertime (Bonus Track) (5:28)

As one of the titans who made tenor sax the solo instrument of choice during rock's primordial era, Big Jay McNeely could peel the paper right off the walls with his sheets of squealing, honking horn riffs. His mighty tenor sax squawking and wailing with wild-eyed abandon, McNeely blew up a torrid R&B tornado from every conceivable position -- on his knees, on his back, even being wheeled down the street on an auto mechanic's "creeper" like a modern-day pied piper.

Cecil McNeely and his older brother Bob (who blew baritone sax lines with Jay in unison precision on some of Jay's hottest instrumentals) grew up in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Watts, where jazz reigned on the bustling nightlife strip. Inspired by Illinois Jacquet and tutored by Jack McVea, McNeely struck up a friendship with Johnny Otis, co-owner of the popular Barrelhouse nitery. Ralph Bass, a friend of Otis, produced McNeely's debut date for Savoy Records in 1948 (Savoy boss Herman Lubinsky tagged the saxist Big Jay, in his eyes a cooler and more commercial name than Cecil). McNeely's raucous one-note honking on "The Deacon's Hop" gave him and Savoy an R&B chart-topper in 1949, and his follow-up, "Wild Wig," also hit big for the young saxist with the acrobatic stage presence.

From Savoy, McNeely moved to Exclusive in 1949, Imperial in 1950-1951, King's Federal subsidiary in 1952-1954 (where he cut some of his wildest waxings, including the mind-boggling "3-D"), and Vee-Jay in 1955. McNeely's live shows were the stuff that legends are made of. He electrified a sweaty throng of thousands packing L.A.'s Wrigley Field in 1949 by blowing his sax up through the stands and then from home plate to first base on his back. A fluorescently painted sax that glowed in the dark was another of his showstopping gambits.

In 1958, McNeely cut his last hit in a considerably less frantic mode with singer Little Sonny Warner. The bluesy "There Is Something on Your Mind" was committed to tape in Seattle but came out on L.A. disc jockey Hunter Hancock's Swingin' imprint the next year. McNeely's original was a huge smash, but it was eclipsed the following year by New Orleans singer Bobby Marchan's dramatic R&B chart-topping version for Fire. Since then, it's been covered countless times, including a fine rendition by Conway Twitty.

Honking saxists had fallen from favor by the dawn of the '60s, so McNeely eventually became a mailman and found religion, joining the Jehovah's Witnesses. Happily, his horn came back out of the closet during the early '80s. McNeely went on to record for his own little label and tour the country and overseas regularly. Big Jay remained active well into the 21st century; in 2014 he released a collaboration with the group the Engenius, and in 2016 he dropped an album that mixed re-recordings of his classic hits along with new material titled Blowin' Down the House: Big Jay's Latest & Greatest. Big Jay McNeely died in September 2018 at the age of 91. /Biography by Bill Dahl, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Blow The Wall Down mc
Blow The Wall Down gofile

Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Big Jay McNeely - Direct-To-Disc Sessions [Vinyl] (APO 027)

Size: 45.5 MB
Time: 19:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues, Soul
Art: Full

01. Country Boy (3:14)
02. There Is Something On Your Mind (4:05)
03. Party Time (4:59)
04. Jay Opening (2:05)
05. I Can't Stop Loving You (2:32)
06. All The Wine Is Gone (2:47)

All tracks were recorded live, direct-to-disc at Blue Heaven Studios, Salina, Kansas.

"Rock 'n' Roll saxophone pretty much begins with Big Jay McNeely. He's the king of the honkin', squealin', bar walkin', flat-on-his-back Blowin' tenor men — the Number One 'real gone guy' of the '50s." — Black & White Blues

Tenor saxophonist Cecil "Big Jay" McNeely has been "the king of the honkers" for more than 60 years, and he's still blowing his horn like a man craving someone he can't have. Born in Watts, California, in 1927, he formed his own band with jazz legends Sonny Criss (alto saxophone) and Hampton Hawes (piano) while still in high school. But in late 1948, when he was asked to record for Savoy Records, he abandoned jazz for something more raucous and struck pay dirt when his second release, a honked-up instrumental called "Deacon's Hop," went to No. 1 on the national R&B charts in February 1949.

For the next several years, Big Jay, according to The New Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll, "was famed for his playing-on-this-back acrobatics and his raw, hard-swinging playing."

In 1959 Big Jay enjoyed a huge hit with a blues ballad called "There Is Something On Your Mind," featuring Haywood "Little Sonny" Warner on vocals. The record stayed on the R&B charts for six months and reached as high as 44 on the pop charts. The song was later a hit for Bobby Marchan and has been recorded by B.B. King, Etta James, Freddy Fender, The Hollywood Flames, Gene Vincent, Albert King and Professor Longhair among others.

In 2000 the Experience Music Project in Seattle installed a special Big Jay McNeely exhibit that includes his original Conn saxophone; the Smithsonian magazine put the horn on its June 2000 issue cover, along with Jimi Hendrix's hat, Janis Joplin's feather boa and Eric Clapton's Stratocaster.

Direct-To-Disc Sessions (APO 027) MP3
Direct-To-Disc Sessions (APO 027) FLAC

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Various - Mule Milk 'N' Firewater

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:31
Size: 134.0 MB
Styles: R&B, Jump blues, Dirty blues
Year: 2005
Art: Front & Back

[2:24] 1. Rudy Moore - Ring-A-Ling-Dong
[2:55] 2. Roy Brown - Hurry Hurry Baby
[2:24] 3. Little Tommy Brown - Goodbye I'm Gone
[2:30] 4. Fred Clark - Bobby Sox Rocker (Take Two)
[3:01] 5. Big Jay McNeely - Mule Milk
[2:37] 6. The Checkers - Can't Find My Sadie
[2:41] 7. Five Jets - Everybody Do The Chicken
[2:00] 8. The Midnighters - That Woman
[2:15] 9. Fred Clark - Ground Hog Snooper
[2:17] 10. Rufus Gore - Fire Water
[3:03] 11. Jack Dupree - Stumbling Block
[2:37] 12. Joe Tex - Davy, You Upset My Home
[2:14] 13. The Lamplighters - Bo Peep
[2:25] 14. The Gardenias - My Baby's Tops
[2:15] 15. Joe Perkins - How Much Love Can One Heart Hold
[2:37] 16. Danny Cobb - Hey Mr. Warden
[2:21] 17. Tiny Topsy - Aw Shucks Baby (Take 2)
[2:18] 18. Joe Benson - Rock 'n' Roll Jungle
[2:07] 19. Little Wille John - Look What You've Done To Me
[2:05] 20. Little Wille John - Uh Uh Baby
[2:17] 21. H-Bomb Ferguson - Midnight Ramblin' Tonight
[2:17] 22. Ronnie Molleen - Fat Mama
[2:33] 23. Willie Wright - Got A Feelin'
[2:05] 24. Hank Ballard - Come On Baby Let's Shake It

This is an outstanding collection from the vaults of King and its subsidiary labels, Federal and Deluxe. These 24 tracks collect jump blues, doo wop, piano boogie, and outright bizarre novelties stretching from the late '40s through the early '60s. There is not a bad track on Mule Milk 'N' Firewater, featuring plenty of well-known names on mainly wild up-tempo songs by Roy Brown, Big Jay McNeely, Little Willie John, Hank Ballad & the Midnighters, and Jack Dupree. There are a few standouts amongst these rarities that may raise a few eyebrows. "Ring a Ling Dong" is from 1955 by Rudy Moore aka Rudy Ray Moore of Dolomite fame, and "Davy, You Upset My Home" finds a young Joe Tex vividly describing how his domestic situation is being torn apart by his girlfriend's unhealthy obsession with all things Davy Crockett! Unbelievable! ~Al Campbell

Originally posted on Dec 30th 2017. Updated to FLAC by Bluestender.

Mule Milk 'N' Firewater MP3
Mule Milk 'N' Firewater FLAC

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Big Jay McNeely - Blues & Rhythm Series 5170: The Chronological Big Jay McNeely 1953-1955

Size: 262 MB
Time: 50:05
File: FLAC
Released: 2006
Styles: Blues, R&B, Jazz
Art: Full

01. 3-D (2:45)
02. Nervous Man Nervous (2:35)
03. Rock Candy (2:40)
04. Texas Turkey (3:04)
05. She Don't Work (2:16)
06. Hot Cinders (2:37)
07. Mule Milk (3:12)
08. Ice Water (2:17)
09. Whipped Cream (2:55)
10. Beachcomber (2:12)
11. Let's Work (2:10)
12. Strip Tease Swing (2:44)
13. Hardtack (2:24)
14. Hometown Jamboree (2:05)
15. Teen Age Hop (2:11)
16. Catastrophe (2:02)
17. Calamity (1:47)
18. Jay's Rock (2:37)
19. Big Jay's Hop (2:53)
20. Three Blind Mice (2:30)

Though Big Jay McNeely is one of the lesser-known 1950s R&B saxophonists, his outsized, crowd-pleasing style, which incorporated long, swooping notes and blustering honks set against a raw, swinging backbeat, is still immensely appealing. The second volume of the French Classics R&B label's McNeely retrospective includes cuts like "Nervous Man Nervous," for which a pre-"Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" Platters supplied background vocals, as well as several previously released sides with overdubbed crowd noise added to simulate a live performance. ~AMG

The Chronological Big Jay McNeely 1953-1955

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Big Jay McNeely - Blues & Rhythm Series 5058: The Chronological Big Jay McNeely 1951-1952

Size: 165 MB
Time: 52:35
File: FLAC
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues, R&B, Jazz
Art: Full

01. Insect Ball (2:36)
02. Sad Story (3:24)
03. All That Wine Is Gone (2:56)
04. Don't Cry Baby (2:28)
05. Let's Do It (2:25)
06. I'll Never Love Again (2:59)
07. Love From The Heart (2:52)
08. Old Black Mule (2:42)
09. The Deacon Blows For Ray (3:05)
10. Tall, Brown Woman (1:50)
11. Deacon Rides Again (2:47)
12. Blow Blow Blow (2:04)
13. Jay Walk (2:44)
14. Night Ride (2:09)
15. Jet Fury (2:18)
16. Deacon's Express (2:48)
17. The Goof (2:23)
18. Penthouse Serenade (3:03)
19. Just Crazy (2:34)
20. Big Jay Shuffle (2:18)

A collection of all the sides Big Jay McNeely recorded for Imperial Records in 1951 and 1952, along with his first few Federal Records tracks from that year, this anthology, although chronological, is neatly divided into vocal and instrumental pieces. The first half dozen or so selections feature the Three Dots and a Dash vocal group, while the rest of the disc is made up of the muscular tenor and baritone-driven saxophone instrumentals that were McNeely's stock in trade. The lead track, "Insect Ball," is probably the most striking of the vocal sides, while the instrumental highlights include "Deacon Rides Again," the cranked-up "The Goof," "Penthouse Serenade" (which shows that McNeely can play soft and pretty when the piece calls for it), and the proto-rock & roll of "Big Jay Shuffle." ~Steve Leggett

The Chronological Big Jay McNeely 1951-1952

Monday, June 1, 2020

Big Jay McNeely - Blues & Rhythm Series Classics 5009: The Chronological Big Jay McNeely 1948-1950

Size: 176 MB
Time: 60:27
File: FLAC
Released: 2001
Styles: Blues, R&B, Jazz
Label: Classics Records
Art: Full

01. Wild Wig (2:41)
02. Sunday Dinner (2:30)
03. Deacon's Groove (Cool Blood) (2:43)
04. Man Eater (2:36)
05. California Hop (2:36)
06. Cherry Smash (2:37)
07. The Deacon's Hop (2:50)
08. Artie's Jump (2:42)
09. Midnight Dreams (3:11)
10. Blow Big Jay (2:51)
11. Boogie In Front (2:29)
12. Willie The Cool Cat (2:46)
13. Gingercake (2:27)
14. K & H Boogie (2:36)
15. Roadhouse Boogie (2:54)
16. Hoppin' With Hunter (2:32)
17. Tandelayo (2:47)
18. Junie-Flip (2:38)
19. Jay's Frantic (3:04)
20. Let's Split (2:39)
21. Real Crazy Cool (2:50)
22. Deacon's Blowout (3:17)

It is somehow fitting that a musician responsible for such gutsy, uncompromising music was born and raised in the Watts district of Los Angeles, CA. "Deacon" Big Jay McNeely helped establish rock & roll by hammering out a stream of jump records that were perfect for dancing and carousing purposes. Most of these tunes are grandstand blowouts, tempered with occasional slow and substantial essays in blue like "Deacon's Groove (Cool Blood)." Between the rips and roars it's interesting to examine the personnel involved in all of these dynamite recordings. John Anderson seems to have been McNeely's primary trumpeter, while the trombones were handled by either Earl Hines alumnus John "Streamline" Ewing or the mighty Britt Woodman, a musician greatly admired by Charles Mingus. The combination of Woodman's trombone and Jay's brother Bob McNeely's baritone sax is powerful, creating a vertigo effect during "The Deacon's Hop." Beginning with the Exclusive Records session of February 1949, Leonard "Tight" Hardiman was established as the drummer, with Charles McNiles socking the bongos on "Blow Big Jay" and the relatively laid-back "Tondelayo." Jimmy O'Brien plays exceptionally fine piano behind Clifford Blivens' blues shouting on "Midnight Dreams" and "Junie Flip." He is featured on "K & H Boogie" and adds spice to the mix throughout this exciting collection. Bassist Ted Shirley sings gruffly on "Roadhouse Boogie." McNeely's debut session for Aladdin Records provided him with greater exposure and apparently inspired him to blow hotter than ever, while his brother roared almost demonically behind him on the baritone. "Let's Split" sounds almost identical to the 1950 Johnny Otis hit "Turkey Hop." Its apparent sequel, "Real Crazy Cool," seems downright demented! Generally speaking, this is good time music that won't quit. ~arwulf arwulf

The Chronological Big Jay McNeely 1948-1950

Monday, November 4, 2019

VA - Mighty Instrumentals R&B Style 1959-1960-1961

Size: 243,1 MB
Time: 103:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Front

01 Carter Bros. - Pacoima Stomp (2:14)
02 Gus Jenkins - Cutting Out (2:46)
03 The Swinging Earls - Yum Yum (2:43)
04 The Bim Bam Boos - Can't Sit Down (2:35)
05 Doc Starkes & His Nite Riders - Talk To Me Baby (2:18)
06 Carter Bros. - Voodoo Cha Cha (1:49)
07 Gus Jenkins - Spanky (2:39)
08 Harmonica George - Sputnik Music (2:13)
09 Walter J. Westbrook & His Phantom 5 - Midnight Jump (2:27)
10 The Poor Royales - Wash Board (2:28)
11 The Red Tops - Caravan (2:55)
12 Bill Elliot Combo - Slow Freight, Pt. 1 (2:07)
13 Bill Elliot Combo - Slow Freight, Pt. 2 (2:23)
14 Gus Jenkins - Off The Road (2:12)
15 Albert & Charles - Weird (2:35)
16 Big Bo Thomas & His Arrows - Big Bo's Twist (2:38)
17 Haze Hart - Red River Shuffle (2:07)
18 Sonny Thompson - Hangout, Pt. 1 (2:56)
19 Sonny Thompson - Hangout, Pt. 2 (1:51)
20 Big Walter And The Thunderbirds - Watusi Freeze, Pt. 1 (2:49)
21 Ace Holder & His Blues Rockers - Lonesome Harmonica (2:16)
22 Big Jay Mcneely, Leon Haywood - The Squat (2:21)
23 Jimmy Forrest, Chick Foster - Night Walk (2:27)
24 Daddy Goodloe - Jamil, Pt. 1 (2:23)
25 Daddy Goodloe - Jamil, Pt. 2 (2:27)
26 Elliott Shavers & His Blazers - Way Down Home Blues (2:57)
27 The Jim Conley Combo - Nite-Lite Slop (2:44)
28 Jimmy Oliver - Slim Jim Pt. 1 (2:37)
29 Willie Wright & His Sparklers - Bloodhound Pt. 1 (2:30)
30 Kid King's Combo - Shaggy Dog (2:26)
31 Curley Hamner & Cooper Bros - Piano Tuner (3:41)
32 Jimmy Liggins - Last Round (2:12)
33 Googie Rene - The Slide Pt. 2 (2:17)
34 Young Guitar Red - Red Hot Red (1:42)
35 James Booker - Cool Turkey (2:17)
36 James Rivers - The Blue Eagle Pt. 1 (2:50)
37 James Rivers - The Blue Eagle Pt. 2 (2:44)
38 Shakey Jake Harris - Jake's Cha Cha (2:06)
39 Little Vincent - Honk Honk Honk Pt. 1 (2:17)
40 Little Vincent - Honk Honk Honk Pt. 2 (2:15)
41 Clifford King - Chicken Shack Boogie (2:33)
42 Henry Clement - Trojan's Walla (2:31)

Mighty Instrumentals R&B Style 1959-1960-1961

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Big Jay McNeely & The Rocket 88s - AZ Bootin'

Year: 1988/2009
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:34
Size: 101,1 MB
Styles: Blues/R&B
Scans: Front

1. Gila Moon (2:56)
2. Zydeco Stroll (4:10)
3. Summertime (3:22)
4. Phoenix Hambone (3:05)
5. All That Wine Is Gone (2:42)
6. Short On Bread (3:38)
7. Young Girl Blues (4:58)
8. Mercury Falling (2:33)
9. Mean Man Blues (3:02)
10. Camelback Drive (3:51)
11. Big Jay's Shuffle (3:43)
12. Scooby-Doo Blues (5:29)

As one of the titans who made tenor sax the solo instrument of choice during rock's primordial era, Big Jay McNeely could peel the paper right off the walls with his sheets of squealing, honking horn riffs. His mighty tenor sax squawking and wailing with wild-eyed abandon, McNeely blew up a torrid R&B tornado from every conceivable position -- on his knees, on his back, even being wheeled down the street on an auto mechanic's "creeper" like a modern-day pied piper.

Cecil McNeely and his older brother Bob (who blew baritone sax lines with Jay in unison precision on some of Jay's hottest instrumentals) grew up in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Watts, where jazz reigned on the bustling nightlife strip. Inspired by Illinois Jacquet and tutored by Jack McVea, McNeely struck up a friendship with Johnny Otis, co-owner of the popular Barrelhouse nitery. Ralph Bass, a friend of Otis, produced McNeely's debut date for Savoy Records in 1948 (Savoy boss Herman Lubinsky tagged the saxist Big Jay, in his eyes a cooler and more commercial name than Cecil). McNeely's raucous one-note honking on "The Deacon's Hop" gave him and Savoy an R&B chart-topper in 1949, and his follow-up, "Wild Wig," also hit big for the young saxist with the acrobatic stage presence.

From Savoy, McNeely moved to Exclusive in 1949, Imperial in 1950-1951, King's Federal subsidiary in 1952-1954 (where he cut some of his wildest waxings, including the mind-boggling "3-D"), and Vee-Jay in 1955. McNeely's live shows were the stuff that legends are made of. He electrified a sweaty throng of thousands packing L.A.'s Wrigley Field in 1949 by blowing his sax up through the stands and then from home plate to first base on his back. A fluorescently painted sax that glowed in the dark was another of his showstopping gambits.

In 1958, McNeely cut his last hit in a considerably less frantic mode with singer Little Sonny Warner. The bluesy "There Is Something on Your Mind" was committed to tape in Seattle but came out on L.A. disc jockey Hunter Hancock's Swingin' imprint the next year. McNeely's original was a huge smash, but it was eclipsed the following year by New Orleans singer Bobby Marchan's dramatic R&B chart-topping version for Fire. Since then, it's been covered countless times, including a fine rendition by Conway Twitty.

Honking saxists had fallen from favor by the dawn of the '60s, so McNeely eventually became a mailman and found religion, joining the Jehovah's Witnesses. Happily, his horn came back out of the closet during the early '80s. McNeely went on to record for his own little label and tour the country and overseas regularly. Big Jay remained active well into the 21st century; in 2014 he released a collaboration with the group the Engenius, and in 2016 he dropped an album that mixed re-recordings of his classic hits along with new material titled Blowin' Down the House: Big Jay's Latest & Greatest. Big Jay McNeely died in September 2018 at the age of 91. /Biography by Bill Dahl, AllMusic

AZ Bootin' mc
AZ Bootin' zippy

Friday, November 23, 2018

Big Jay McNeely - I'm Still Here: Big Jay Sings The Blues

Size: 128,1 MB
Time: 54:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: West Coast Blues, R&B
Art: Front

01. You Never Miss The Water (Till The Well Runs Dry) (5:01)
02. Baby, Please Don't Go (4:05)
03. I'm Still Here (3:50)
04. Once I Had A Woman (2:35)
05. Please Don't Turn Me Away (5:18)
06. I Was Too Blind To See (5:26)
07. I'm Gonna Make It Alright (4:38)
08. Woman, Woman, Woman (4:56)
09. I Love To Feel Free (3:08)
10. For My Baby (6:55)
11. Way Back In The Old Days (5:59)
12. Still Got A Long Way To Go (Going Back To L.A.) (3:00)

The final album from R&B/jazz/early rock saxophone legend, Big Jay McNeely, recorded earlier this year just months before his passing on September 16th!

This is Big Jay’s first ever true blues album and he uses it to reflect on his life growing up in Watts (“Way Back In The Old Days”), his many loves (“You Never Miss The Water” and “Once I Had A Woman”), his career (“I’m Still Here” and “Still Got A Long Way To Go” and everything in between!

I'm Still Here

Thursday, October 11, 2018

First Class Blues Band - First Class Blues

Size: 150,8 MB
Time: 64:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1993
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Full

01. First Class Shuffle (3:16)
02. Little Bluebird (6:05)
03. Crazy 'bout You (3:03)
04. Saturday Morning Jump (2:48)
05. Early In The Morning (3:35)
06. Vicksburg Blues (5:03)
07. Vintage Shuffle (1:56)
08. Don't Let The Green Grass Fool You (4:34)
09. Honey Boy (2:29)
10. Standing On Shakey Ground (3:58)
11. M.C. Blues (5:35)
12. Confessin' The Blues (4:08)
13. Spend It While You Can (3:26)
14. Kevin's Groove (4:28)
15. Evening News (3:53)
16. Georgia (6:01)

Personnel:
Christian Rannenberg: piano, vocals
Thomas Feldmann: sax, harmonica
Jan Hirte: guitar, back-up vocals
Kevon DuVernay-Shipman: bass, vocals
Tommie Harris: drums
Karen Carroll: vocals
Big Jay McNeely: sax

The First Class Bluesband starring Big Jay McNeely and Karen Carroll presents First Class Blues, an extraordinary blues album. The founder of the group is Christian Rannenberg, who is probably the blackest among the white blues pianists, who lived for years in the USA with blacks in their environment and learned the blues there. For a long time he has been playing with all single members of the First Class Bluesband in different instrumentations. His collaboration with Big Jay McNeely brought the preliminary high point with the album "Blues At Daybreak" (quarterly list in the Preis der Deutschen Schallplattenkritik). For First Class Bluesband musicians have teamed up, which you just listen, because? they have known each other for a long time. And the heavyweight Blueslady Karen Carroll sets with her powerful voice additional accents.

Anyone who calls themselves "First Class Blues Band" raises the bar. For the five thoroughbred musicians, this is not a problem: each one a fixed size of the German blues scene, they have shown with the first album in 1991, what's up. The critics were impressed, followed by the "Preis der Deutschen Schallplattenkritik", as well as tours with Buddy Ace, Johnny Heartsman, Johnny Copeland, Big Jay McNeely, Angela Brown, Karen Carroll and others. For a blues band, the truth is on the stage, and so shows especially in the legendary Franz Club in Berlin live recorded CD the quality and joy of the band.

Not easy to get these five together, because everyone is now with their own projects and different bands on the road: Christian Rannenberg is a Blues & Boogie pianist worth every trip, Jan Hirte now has his own band "Blue Ribbon", Thomas Feldmann is a guest of bands like BB & The Blues Shacks u.a. on the sax and the harp and the rhythm section with Kevin DuVernay and Tommie Harris is a well-booked duo - it impresses with solid grooves and vocal accents. As the jury of the record price put it: Pradicatore "Especially valuable".

This year, the band celebrates its 20th anniversary and has decided to revive the old times. In February, the band played in front of an enthusiastic audience in Schwalbach, a new CD is planned and further festivals follow. Have fun with the First Class Blues Band! ~Online translation from Germany

First Class Blues MP3
First Class Blues FLAC

Monday, July 30, 2018

Leon Levy - United We Stand

Size: 165,5 MB
Time: 70:49
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Blues, R&B, Jazz
Art: Front

01. Oh, Suwanna Fuma La Mota (Feat. Carolyn Gaines, Rob Stone & Big Jay McNeely) ( 3:40)
02. Baby Please (Feat. Carolyn Gaines, Rob Stone & Big Jay McNeely) ( 7:46)
03. I Don't Believe It (Feat. Carolyn Gaines, Rob Stone & Big Jay McNeely) (10:27)
04. Just A Little Bit Of Love (Feat. Wanda Ray-Willis & Carolyn Gaines) ( 6:52)
05. United We Stand (Feat. Carolyn Gaines, Rob Stone & Big Jay McNeely) ( 7:59)
06. Unconditional Love ( 3:36)
07. Smile ( 3:01)
08. Heart Breaker (Feat. Big Jay McNeely) ( 6:38)
09. Is It Love ( 4:51)
10. Open The Door To Your Heart ( 3:40)
11. Everyday I Need Your Love (Feat. Big Jay McNeely) ( 5:17)
12. Mustafa ( 6:58)

R/B..Blues...Jazz..Latin Jazz.. Carolyn Gaines sang deep, raw- Blues on 'UNITED WE STAND' so solid...bringing back Billie Holiday, Big Jay McNeely Tenor Sax Legend. Leon Levy various instruments played : Guitar, Piano, Organ, Clarinet SOLO on Mustafa.

The music is entertaining and enjoyable to listen to and dance to especially Carolyn Gaines blasting the blues whom is daughter of legendary blues, jazz great guitarist Roy Gaines child. The music has the feeling and tempo that makes you want to move and dance the night away. Listen to Big McNeely brings back the bebop days and rock n roll days.

United We Stand

Saturday, May 5, 2018

Various Artists - 1983 R&B Jamboree

Year: 1983
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:07
Size: 125,1 MB
Styles: R&B
Scans: LP front & back

1. Willie Egan - Wow Wow (4:15)
2. Willie Egan - Driftin' Blues (5:24)
3. Willie Egan - Lawdy Miss Clawdy (2:35)
4. Chuck Higgins - Pachuko Hop (3:18)
5. Chuck Higgins - Baby What You Want Me To Do (5:31)
6. Chuck Higgins - Aw Shucks (4:48)
7. Young Jessie - It's Love Baby (24 Hours A Day) (3:09)
8. Young Jessie - It Don't Happen No More (3:25)
9. Young Jessie - Lonesome Desert (5:35)
10. Big Jay McNeely - Night Train (4:52)
11. Big Jay McNeely - There Is Something On Your Mind (6:11)
12. Big Jay McNeely - 3D (4:58)

Willie Egan and Young Jessie accompanied by Juice On The Loose.
Chuck Higgins and Big Jay McNeely accompanied by Red Beans And Rice.

Note: Haven't been able to find any specific info/review for this LP, the music speaks for itself though. I have however included biographies (from AMG) for the featured artists which might be of some interest.

1983 R&B Jamboree mc
1983 R&B Jamboree zippy

Monday, March 5, 2018

Various - Roc-King Up A Storm

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:03
Size: 130.6 MB
Styles: Jump blues, Soul, R&B
Year: 1999/2005
Art: Front

[2:34] 1. The Lamplighters - Ride Jockey Ride
[2:31] 2. Five Jets - Please Love Me Baby
[2:32] 3. Big Jay McNeely - Nervous Man Nervous
[2:00] 4. Roy Byrd - Rockin' With Fes
[2:44] 5. The Midnighters - Rock, Granny, Roll
[2:19] 6. Joe Tex - She's Mine
[2:13] 7. Big John Greer - Come Back Uncle John
[2:29] 8. Rudy Moore - Set It Up And Go
[2:06] 9. Billy Gayles - Do Right Baby
[2:26] 10. Jackie Brenston - Much Later
[2:30] 11. Tiny Topsy - You Shocked Me
[2:48] 12. Big Daddy - Bacon Fat
[2:40] 13. Little Willie John - Spasms
[2:10] 14. Cecil McNabb Jr - Clock Tickin' Rhythm
[2:27] 15. Boyd Bennett - Move
[2:44] 16. Hank Ballard - Broadway
[2:05] 17. Tiny Topsy - Miss You So
[1:53] 18. Ronnie Molleen - Rockyn Up
[2:00] 19. Otis Redding - Fat Gal
[2:43] 20. Hank Ballard - Nothing But Good
[1:42] 21. Ba Ba Thomas - Miss Shake It
[2:19] 22. Eddie Clearwater - A Real Good Time
[1:52] 23. Ba Ba Thomas - Why Don't You Leave It Alone
[3:05] 24. Little Willie John - You Hurt Me

Fantastic swingin' and groovin' compilation! Red Hot Flamin' Rhythm & Blues and Rock'n'Roll for Bright Pink Suit Swingers and Real Gone Hep Cats!

Roc-King Up A Storm mc
Roc-King Up A Storm zippy

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Various - Honkin' The Boogie

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:58
Size: 128.1 MB
Styles: R&B, Jazz-blues
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[2:37] 1. Wild Bill Moore - We're Gonna Rock
[3:10] 2. Joe Morris - Chuck-A-Boogie
[2:25] 3. Jay McShann - Kicks (Scotty Can Blow)
[2:51] 4. Big Jay McNeely - Roadhouse Boogie
[2:54] 5. Hal Singer - Cornbread
[3:02] 6. Eddie Chemblee & Orchestra - Last Call
[2:26] 7. King Porter & His Orchestra - Chitlin' Ball
[2:50] 8. Buddy Banks - Banks Boogie
[3:12] 9. Paul Williams - 35-30
[2:36] 10. Dick Davis Orchestra - Screamin' Boogie
[2:47] 11. Eddie Chemblee & Orchestra - Back Street
[2:09] 12. Sonny Thompson - Late Freight
[2:59] 13. Jim Wynn's Bobalibans - Shipyard Woman
[3:20] 14. Erskine Hawkins & His Orchestra - After Hours
[3:08] 15. Wild Bill Moore - Bubbles
[2:28] 16. King Porter & His Orchestra - Should Have Rationed Myself
[2:24] 17. Buddy Banks - Name It & Claim It
[3:08] 18. Cee Pee Johnson & Band - The 'g' Man Got The 't' Man
[2:33] 19. Big Jay McNeely - K & H Boogie
[2:50] 20. Joe Morris - Weasel Walk

Here are 20 tracks of pure honking, shouting, bar walking, burning Kansas City blues and R&B from the great bandleaders of the late 1940s and early '50s. Big Jay McNeely, Joe Morris, Jay McShann, Buddy Banks, Eddie Chamblee and Cee Pee Johnson are here, just to name a few. The sound on this bad boy is more than adequate and the music is pure intense hedonism form a golden era in jazz that is not represented as well as it should be on compact disc. Acrobat does a fine job with sequencing, representation and track by track info. This is one not to miss. ~Thom Jurek

Honkin' The Boogie mc
Honkin' The Boogie zippy

Friday, January 19, 2018

Carolyn Gaines - Beware Of My Dog

Size: 100,8 MB
Time: 42:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. Beware Of My Dog (Feat. Big Jay McNeely) (3:20)
02. I'm Your Cat, Baby (Feat. Big Jay McNeely) (4:36)
03. Stone Out Your Raggly Mind (Feat. Grady Gaines, Jr.) (4:08)
04. Catch That Train (Feat. Grady Gaines, Jr.) (3:30)
05. Hoochie Coochie Woman (3:29)
06. Done Got Old (4:12)
07. I Want Your Money, Honey (3:48)
08. Mr. Dill Pickle (3:34)
09. Jerry Rice 'busy Man' (3:03)
10. Charlie Mae & Chicago (4:39)
11. Something On Your Mind (Feat. Big Jay McNeely) (4:27)

With the release of her debut album, Beware Of My Dog, Carolyn Gaines has revealed herself to be a blues singer of purpose. She is joined by guitarist Fred Clark, Glen Doll on harmonica, organist Rudy Copeland, bassist Del Atkins and drummer Chad Wright with her cousin, tenor-saxophonist Grady Gaines Jr., performing on two numbers. Special guest is the legendary Big Jay McNeely, who plays tenor on three other selections. The recording is engineered and mixed by Bill Dashiell, who worked the same magic on Carl Carlton’s She’s A Bad Mama Jama, produced by the late great Leon Haywood. The album is mastered by Robert Honablue, who was the studio recording engineer on projects by Dave Brubeck, Miles Davis, Janis Joplin, Barbra Streisand, Ike & Tina Turner, George Benson, Hubert Laws, Carlos Santana and many other major names.

It is obvious from the beginning of the opener ‘Beware Of My Dog,’ that Carolyn Gaines is both a student of the blues from earlier eras and a singer, who does not copy her predecessors. The tune has a connection to Big Mama Thornton’s & Elvis Presley’s ‘Hound Dog’ and a 1950s blues vibe. However, Ms. Gaines’ voice sounds unlike anyone else. Big Jay McNeely’s short solo, which features his distorted tone, fits the song well. The lowdown one-chord blues ‘I’m Your Cat, Baby’ has Carolyn Gaines displaying a menacing, yet alluring, voice similar to the 1961 ‘Back Door Man’ by Howlin’ Wolf, with its growls and rasps. ‘Stone Out Your Raggly Mind,’ akin to Jimmy Reed’s 1960s hit ‘What You Want Me To Do,’ is an infectious Chicago blues featuring Grady Gaines Jr. on his tenor sax. Listen to how the singer’s bent notes sound as natural as talking. ‘Catch That Train,’ inspired by John Lee Hooker’s 1962 ‘Boom Boom,’ has the vocalist having a call and response with the band during the first section, before it becomes a cooking blues number.

Carolyn Gaines transforms Muddy Waters’ Chess Records ‘I’m Your Hoochie Coochie Man’ into ‘Hoochie Coochie Woman,’ modernizing and revising the lyrics into a version that Muddy Waters would have enjoyed. David Junior Kimbrough’s ‘Done Got Old’ is an intense country blues given a fresh new spin, intimate but quietly fiery with its own brand of restrained passion. On the lowdown blues ‘I Want Your Money Honey,’ Carolyn Gaines sounds quite dangerous (a little like Ma Rainey), a bit demanding and exciting, growling up a storm. One knows that she is going to get the money!

The singer’s ‘Mr. Dill Pickle’ (inspired by Blind Boy Fuller’s ‘I Want A Piece Of Your Pie’ from 1939) is good time blues where her lyrics sound topical and contemporary. The performance with Glen Doll’s harmonica has the flavor of a 1930s Chicago blues jam session. ‘Jerry Rice – Busy Man’ is a country blues dedicated to the great football player: inspired by first-class father & son Carey & Lurrie Bell’s style of harmonica & guitar. There are lots of appealing bent notes from Carolyn Gaines along with some fine harmonica playing from Doll. ‘Charlie Mae & Chicago’’ dedicated to her mom Charlie Mae & Buddy Guy has some highly expressive singing. The closer, a remake of the Big Jay McNeely’s hit ‘Something On Your Mind,’ is an excellent revival that features a haunting, catchy bass line of Dale Atkins, along with strong contributions from Ms. Gaines’ vocals – sexy, smooth, passionate in a deep slightly-alluring-updated way – and McNeely blows the roof off his 1959 hit song.

Formerly behind the scenes, Carolyn Gaines shows on Beware Of My Dog that she is ready to take the blues center-stage! ~Scott Yanow

Beware Of My Dog

Saturday, September 16, 2017

Big Jay McNeely - Honkin' & Jivin' At The Palomino

Size: 96,7 MB
Time: 41:38
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. Palomino Hop (3:26)
02. I Can't Stop Loving You (4:58)
03. All That Wine Is Gone (3:33)
04. There's Something On Your Mind (7:22)
05. Pretty Girls Everywhere (3:53)
06. Honky Tonk (7:08)
07. Young Girl Blues (5:39)
08. Big Jay Shuffle (5:35)

A vintage concert recording from the king of honkin’ sax, Big Jay McNeely, performing a raucous live show at the legendary Palomino club in North Hollywood, August 15, 1989!

Honkin’ & Jivin’ At The Palomino features a killer concert performance put together as part of Ronnie Mack’s well-loved Barn Dance, a musical showcase that drew everyone from Bruce Springsteen to Screamin’ Jay Hawkins.

Big Jay McNeely’s incredible career began in the ‘40s and saw him play with several major R&B and blues legends of the late ‘40s and early ‘50s such as Little Richard, B.B. King, Etta James and Junior Wells. He scored his first major hit with the 1949 smash hit instrumental “Deacon’s Hop” and scored again with a R&B vocal ballad “There Is Something On Your Mind” featuring Little Sonny Warner. He pioneered the flamboyant playing style called “honking” and is widely acknowledged as one of the first musical entertainers to make showmanship an important element of the live concert experience.

Honkin' & Jivin' At The Palomino

Saturday, July 15, 2017

Big Jay McNeely - Blowin' Down The House: Big Jay's Latest & Greatest

Size: 102,2 MB
Time: 41:46
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Soul, R&B
Art: Front & Back

01. Love Will Never Fail (3:20)
02. Love Is Stronger Than Hurt (2:42)
03. My Love Never Ended (3:34)
04. I've Been Mistreated (4:00)
05. You Don't Have To Go Home (4:53)
06. Party (Live) (3:35)
07. Big Jay's Hop (2:50)
08. Blow Blow Blow (2:01)
09. Willie The Cool Cat (2:43)
10. Rock Candy (2:37)
11. Nervous Man Nervous (2:32)
12. Get On Up & Let's Boogie (Live) (6:52)

Opening with club style funky track, Love Will Never Fail, McNeely shows his trademark squeal and rich horn work that has made him stand out among horn players. On soul track, My Love Never Ended, McNeely hits a solid groove with one of the best tracks on the release and soulful sax honking. Very cool. I've Been Mistreated has a real aggressive sound like early James Brown, Ike Turner or Hendrix. With rockin' guitar work and fat sax work, this track is way cool. Hard driving, Party, really jams with fluid guitar riffs over a rumbling bass lines, Mcneely really gets the place screaming for an exceptional jammer. Swing track, Big Jay's Hop, is a bit more contained but no less rockin'. McNeely's trademark lead sax work is unmistakable and fat fat fat. Blow, Blow, Blow is really hopping with sax sax sax. Excellent! Willie The Cool Cat is a great swinger with super guitar and sax lead. Step back and let it fly! Nervous, Man, Nervous has a great swing as is chocked full of super lead sax as well as fat, fat bari sax. With multiple male voices "shouting" out the lyrics, this track really gets rocking. Wrapping the release is Get On Up & Let's Boogie, a fast paced rocker with super piano getting it rolling. Trumpet punctuation behind the lead vocals brings you up to the hot guitar soloing and then ultimately McNeely taking a hot flying solo carrying the release to the end. Excellent closer to a sweet taste of Big Jay McNeely. ~Bman's Blues Report

Blowin' Down The House

Thursday, May 19, 2016

Big Jay McNeely & Christian Rannenberg - Blues At Daybreak

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:21
Size: 117.6 MB
Styles: Jazz/blues
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[3:13] 1. J.R. Boogie
[3:11] 2. Catfish, Greens And Mashed Pot
[6:39] 3. So Hard To Be In Love
[4:20] 4. Tennessee Shuffle
[2:28] 5. Car Crash
[4:28] 6. Big Fat Mama
[5:52] 7. Blues At Daybreak
[4:22] 8. The Claps
[3:04] 9. Rock 'n' Roll And Boogie Woogie All Night Long
[5:34] 10. Jive Turkey
[2:48] 11. Let The Back Door Hit You
[5:18] 12. I Believe In Love

Piano – Christian Rannenberg; Saxophone – Big Jay McNeely; Vocals – Angela Brown (6), Big Jay McNeely.

His mighty tenor sax squawking and bleating with wild-eyed abandon, Big Jay McNeely blew up a torrid R&B tornado from every conceivable position -- on his knees, on his back, being wheeled down the street on an auto mechanic's "creeper" like a modern-day pied piper. As one of the titans who made tenor sax the solo instrument of choice during rock's primordial era, McNeely could peel the paper right off the walls with his sheets of squealing, honking horn riffs.

Cecil McNeely and his older brother Bob (who blew baritone sax lines with Jay in unison precision on some of Jay's hottest instrumentals) grew up in Los Angeles, where jazz reigned on Watts' bustling nightlife strip. Inspired by Illinois Jacquet and tutored by Jack McVea, McNeely struck up a friendship with Johnny Otis, co-owner of the popular Barrelhouse nitery. Ralph Bass, a friend of Otis, produced McNeely's debut date for Savoy Records in 1948 (Savoy boss Herman Lubinsky tagged the saxist Big Jay, in his eyes a more commercial name than Cecil). McNeely's raucous one-note honking on "The Deacon's Hop" gave him and Savoy an R&B chart-topper in 1949, and his follow-up, "Wild Wig," also hit big for the young saxist with the acrobatic stage presence.

From Savoy, McNeely moved to Exclusive in 1949, Imperial in 1950-1951, King's Federal subsidiary in 1952-1954 (where he cut some of his wildest waxings, including the mind-boggling "3-D"), and Vee-Jay in 1955. McNeely's live shows were the stuff that legends are made of -- he electrified a sweaty throng of thousands packing L.A.'s Wrigley Field in 1949 by blowing his sax up through the stands and then from home plate to first base on his back! A fluorescently painted sax that glowed in the dark was another of his showstopping gambits.

In 1958, McNeely cut his last hit in a considerably less frantic mode with singer Little Sonny Warner. The bluesy "There Is Something on Your Mind" was committed to tape in Seattle but came out on disc jockey Hunter Hancock's Swingin' imprint the next year. McNeely's original was a huge smash, but it was eclipsed the following year by New Orleans singer Bobby Marchan's dramatic R&B chart-topping version for Fire. Since then, it's been covered countless times, including a fine rendition by Conway Twitty!

Honking saxists had fallen from favor by the dawn of the '60s, so McNeely eventually became a mailman and joined Jehovah's Witnesses (no, that's not the name of a combo). Happily, his horn came back out of the closet during the early '80s. McNeely went on to record for his own little label and tour the country and overseas regularly. ~bio by Bill Dahl

Nur wenige deutsche Bluesmusiker genießen international ein so hohes Ansehen wie der (wie der aus Osnabrück stammende und nun in Berlin lebende) Pianist CHRISTIAN RANNENBERG und kaum ein anderer - egal weicher Nationalität - kommt an seine Finesse heran, wenn es darum geht, ein Klavier in den Kontext einer Bluesband einzubinden. Nun hat er durch seine langjährige Duoarbeit (mit Gary Wiggins und auch Big Jay McNeely), durchaus auch die Fähigkeit, den Rhythmus und die Bassbegleitung alleine zu bestreiten, was natürlich zu seinem Erfolg beiträgt

Blues At Daybreak

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Various - Savoy Blues 'n' Boogie

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:35
Size: 111.2 MB
Styles: Soul/R&B/Blues
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. Big Jay McNeely - Man Eater
[2:54] 2. Tommy Brown - Double Faced Deacon
[2:46] 3. Budd Johnson's Orchestra - Did You Ever Love A Woman
[2:40] 4. Lavern Baker - I Want To Rock
[2:24] 5. H-Bomb Ferguson - Bookie's Blues
[2:24] 6. Sonny Wilson - The Rainy Day Blues
[2:29] 7. Dexter Gordon - Airplane Blues
[3:07] 8. Dallas Bartley - You're The Greatest
[2:39] 9. Doc Pomus - My Good Pott
[2:49] 10. Milton Buggs - Fine Brown Frame
[2:22] 11. Tiny Bradshaw - Take The Hands Off The Clock
[2:34] 12. Dallas Bartley - I Know What It's All About
[2:42] 13. Melvin Moore - I'm Still In Love With You
[2:32] 14. Billy Wright - Married Woman's Boogie
[3:00] 15. Doc Pomus - My New Chick
[2:51] 16. Gatemouth Moore - I Ain't Mad At You Pretty Baby
[2:54] 17. Tommy Brown - V-Eight Baby
[2:43] 18. Dexter Gordon - Helen's Advice

Savoy compiled these solid blues and boogie woogie sides, including tracks by Tiny Bradshaw, Gatemouth Moore, and others. While these tracks are available elsewhere, Blues N' Boogie is still a nice budget-priced introduction to some raw, postwar sounds. ~Matt Collar

Savoy Blues 'n' Boogie mc
Savoy Blues 'n' Boogie zippy

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Big Jay McNeely - Life Story

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:31
Size: 111.1 MB
Styles: R&B, Jump blues
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[ 3:02] 1. Rock And Roll
[ 2:47] 2. Mellow Dry
[ 4:14] 3. Go On
[ 2:38] 4. Funky Bug
[ 3:45] 5. We Gonna Boogie
[ 3:33] 6. Deacon In Minor
[ 3:16] 7. That's Bad Boogie
[ 2:43] 8. Blow Your Brains Out
[ 3:05] 9. The Jam
[11:32] 10. The Story Of Big Jay's Life
[ 1:41] 11. 1-2-3-4
[ 5:18] 12. Da Groove
[ 0:49] 13. We Gonna Boogie

The history of R&B and rock and roll would be incomplete without mentioning Big Jay McNeely—father of the honking tenor sax sound. Incredibly, Big Jay still has not been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. If he were scandal-ridden or white, I suppose that would have happened a long time ago given who has slid in. For shame, Fame voters.

Miraculously, Big Jay at age 85 is still touring and recording—mostly in Europe, where musicians and audiences recognize and appreciate his gifts and importance. But he can't seem to get gigs or kudos here. A few weeks ago Big Jay called to tell me about his new album—Life Story (Brisk). Big Jay is backed by Ray Collins' Hot-Club & Friends—12 German musicians who live and breathe jump-boogie and swing rock-and-roll. This is R&B before vocalists—when the music and energy rested on the shoulders of a single star instrumentalist. Early on, the music appeared on 78-rpm records, since the 45's popularity with teens was still a few years off. Big Jay recreates the sound beautifully, knowing how to work a lick and enthrall listeners.

I hope someone from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is reading this. If Abba, the Ventures and Donovan can wind up crowned, isn't there room for Big Jay? ~Marc Myers

Life Story mc
Life Story zippy