Showing posts with label Big Smokey Smothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Smokey Smothers. Show all posts

Monday, July 16, 2018

Smokey Smothers - Sings The Backporch Blues

Year: 1962/2002
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:38
Size: 162,8 MB
Styles: Blues, Chicago blues
Scans: Full

1. I Can't Judge Nobody (2:45)
2. Come On Rock Little Girl (2:49)
3. Honey I Ain't Teasin' (3:03)
4. You're Gonna Be Sorry (3:05)
5. (What I Done For You) Give It Back (2:51)
6. Smokey's Love Sick Blues (2:56)
7. I've Been Drinking Muddy Water (2:29)
8. Crying Tears (3:24)
9. Midnight And Day (3:00)
10. Blind And Dumb Man Blues (3:04)
11. What Am I Going To Do (2:06)
12. I Ain't Gonna Be No Monkey Man No More (2:27)
13. The Case Is Closed (Bonus) (2:48)
14. Way Up In The Mountains Of Kentucky (Bonus) (2:53)
15. Hello Little School Girl (Bonus) (3:02)
16. Twist With Me Annie (Bonus) (3:09)
17. I've Been Drinking Muddy Water (Alt. Take) (Bonus) (2:29)
18. Blind And Dumb Man Blues (Take 1) (Bonus) (4:07)
19. Honey I Ain't Teasin' (Take 2) (Bonus) (2:59)
20. Smokey's Love Sick Blues (Take 1) (Bonus) (3:01)
21. Come On Rock Little Girl (Alt. Incomplete Take) (Bonus) (1:40)
22. Midnight And Day (Take 1, Incomplete) (Bonus) (2:04)
23. (What I Done For You) Give It Back (Take 1) (Bonus) (2:40)
24. I Ain't Gonna Be No Monkey Man No More (Take 2) (Bonus) (2:29)
25. You're Gonna Be Sorry (Take 1) (Bonus) (3:04)

Otis "Smokey" Smothers's 1962 LP Sings the Backporch Blues is a rare and coveted blues album. This CD puts it into wide circulation and then some, not only presenting all 12 of the songs from the original album (as the first dozen tunes on the disc), but adding nine alternate takes and four tracks from 1962-1963 singles. The album is perhaps overestimated due to its rarity, but it's solid Chicago blues, owing much to the sort of mid-tempo shuffle that Jimmy Reed had made so much in vogue by the early '60s.

Smothers has a relaxed, almost effortless vocal style, and the LP is a rare chance to hear Freddy King working as a session guitarist. King actually plays in a slightly more restrained and traditional style here than he did on his solo recordings. King Records wanted Smothers to play in a Jimmy Reed style, and frankly it did on the whole sound too close to Reed, sharing the flaw of songs that were too similar to each other. Occasionally he breaks out of that mold, as in the minor-key "Crying Tears," though that sounds rather close to some of Otis Rush's early sides, or "I Ain't Gonna Be No Monkey Man No More," which has the kind of jerky R&B feel that Reed usually didn't mine.

The 1962-1963 singles are somewhat more fully produced and Smothers seems a little more at ease, with the grooves flowing in a nice punchy shuffle, though "Twist With Me Annie" suffers from sounding like the umpteenth attempt to make a takeoff on Hank Ballard's old "Work With Me Annie" series of R&B hits. All nine of the alternate takes are alternates of songs from Sings the Backporch Blues itself, and these are thoughtfully separated from the dozen official takes themselves to enhance listening pleasure. /Richie Unterberger, AllMusic

Sings The Backporch Blues mc
Sings The Backporch Blues zippy

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

Thursday, July 14, 2016

Boston Blackie & Otis 'Big Smokey' Smothers - ABC Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:59
Size: 144.2 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[4:33] 1. I Can't Judge Nobody
[5:19] 2. Hello Little School Girl
[5:21] 3. Sad, Sad Day
[3:38] 4. Do The Thing
[4:52] 5. Abc Blues
[4:05] 6. Louise
[4:59] 7. Hey Baby
[4:03] 8. How Much More Long
[4:54] 9. Give Me Back That Way
[7:54] 10. Blues All Day Long
[6:25] 11. I've Been Drinking Muddy Water
[4:24] 12. ABC Blues
[2:26] 13. Find Me Another Babe

Boston Blackie, voc, g; Luther Adams, g; Willie Kent or Michael Riley, b; Cleo Williams, dr. Boston Blackie recorded January 29, 1992 at ACME Recording in Chicago, IL by Paul Smith.

Otis 'Big Smokey' Smothers tracks rec. 1984 & 1991. Smokey was a singer and a guitar player and also a master of the Slide guitar! He played on this CD with Eddie Big Town Playboy Taylor & John Primer! Boston was a great West Side Chicago artist, before he got killed from his buddy Tail Dragger! He played on this CD with a great band included John Primer & Willie Kent! These musicians also wrote blues history!

ABC Blues

Friday, June 3, 2016

Big Smokey Smothers - That's Alright

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 2016
Styles: Blues
Time: 48:26
Size: 111,2 MB
Art: Full (Front, Tray, CD)

(6:46) 1. Big Smokey - That's Alright
(6:56) 2. Big Smokey - I Need Your Lovin
(5:28) 3. Big Smokey - Take A Little Walk With Me
(4:32) 4. Big Smokey - Sugar Pie
(7:50) 5. Big Smokey - Can't Hold Out Much Longer
(3:12) 6. Big Smokey - 41st Street Boogie
(6:16) 7. Bobby Johnson - Black Nights
(3:17) 8. Bobby Johnson - Hard Hearted Woman
(4:04) 9. Bobby Johnson - Greasy Gravy

One of the pioneers of Chicago Blues, Otis Smothers (1929-1993) made many key contributions to the genre, writing songs, backing up and recording with Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, Little Walter, Jimmy Rogers, Willie Dixon and Freddie King! This is Smokey's final known studio recording (from 1992), backed by the fine support of a Minneapolis based blues band, The Crowns. Also included are tracks 7-9 by Bobby Johnson & The Crowns from various dates. Vocalist Bobby Johnson (1939-2001), originally from Mississippi, made Minneapolis his home for decades. In 1990 he recorded a 7" for Blue Moon Records.

That's Alright