Showing posts with label Detroit Junior. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit Junior. Show all posts

Thursday, September 15, 2022

Howlin' Wolf & His Wolf Gang - Howlin' Wolf At 1815 Club 1975

Size: 185.5 MB
Time: 79:32
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2022
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Front & Back

01. Highway 61 Bound (Live) (Feat. Eddie Shaw) (3:41)
02. Fannie Mae Jones (Live) (Feat. Eddie Shaw) (4:43)
03. Built For Comfort (Live) (Feat. Eddie Shaw) (3:50)
04. Little Red Rooster (Live) (Feat. Eddie Shaw) (6:09)
05. Got To Go Now (Live) (Feat. Eddie Shaw) (3:12)
06. Big House (Live) (Feat. Howlin' Wolf) (6:20)
07. Take A Walk With Me (Live) (Feat. Howlin' Wolf) (5:30)
08. Laid Down Last Night (Live) (Feat. Howlin' Wolf) (5:09)
09. After A While (Live) (Feat. Howlin' Wolf) (6:21)
10. Don’t Deceive Me (Live) (Feat. Howlin' Wolf) (6:03)
11. Call My Job (Live) (Feat. Detroit Junior) (4:06)
12. Race Track (Live) (Feat. Detroit Junior) (4:20)
13. You’ve Been Laid (Live) (Feat. Detroit Junior) (4:20)
14. You Can’t Change Me (Live) (Feat. Hubert Sumlin) (6:53)
15. No Place To Go (Live) (Feat. Hubert Sumlin) (4:22)
16. I’ve Been Gone (Live) (Feat. Hubert Sumlin) (4:24)

Memories of hearing Howlin Wolf at the New 1815 Club are so strong that no one could ever forget what a privilege it was to be able hear such an iconic bluesman up close in a West Side club setting every weekend. But few may remember how few weekends he actually played there. Living Blues magazine reported on Wolf’s appearance at the club’s grand opening, June 6–8, 1975. Wolf’s bandleader, saxophonist Eddie Shaw, had leased the club and was presenting Wolf on weekends and Jimmy Dawkins, Casey Jones and Wolf imitator James “Tail Dragger” Jones on weeknights. The big club at 1815 West Roosevelt Road was, for a while, a mainstay of the 1970s Chicago blues scene. Usually just called the 1815, it became the New 1815, also known as Eddie’s Place or Eddie Shaw’s Place. It carried a West Side blues legacy as the Club Alex (or Alex Club) before that, when it moved from a location four blocks east where a blues fan once made tapes Magic Sam that ended up on a Delmark album. I was told that the long, sturdy bar on the east wall of the club had been salvaged from another historic club where Sam played, Mel’s Hideaway (the namesake of Freddie King’s hit single “Hideaway”). In 1963 the 1815 building served as the hall of the “Prestige Social Club of the Near West Side” and in an earlier era that block of Roosevelt Road was a residential zone. Wolf had been hitting the road with Shaw and the rest of the Wolf Gang in the 1970s, in between playing Chicago clubs on the North, South and West Sides, as he traveled to nightclubs, colleges and festivals in Canada, New York, Boston, Philadelphia, New Orleans and elsewhere and sometimes taking time off to spend in the West Point area of Mississippi where he was born. An enthusiastic, predominantly white audience often flocked to hear him, but he also put black venues like the Harlem Dukes Social Club in Prichard, Alabama, on his schedule, as well as festivals promoted by disc jockey Pervis Spann that attracted a black following.

In 1975 the New 1815 was drawing visitors from around the world who sat alongside bornand-bred Chicagoans to witness the howling of The Wolf. But Wolf felt a special connection to one segment of his audience. As he confided in his introduction to “Big House”: “I ain’t playin’ this music to you townspeople. I’m playin’ this music to the Mississippi people, down through Arkansas folk, Down South people. This is what I’m playin’, down where we used to chop cotton around.” Wolf was still one of the big names in the blues, and here he was in a West Side neighborhood when other blues stars were out touring, raking in much better pay at big venues in America and overseas—and even they couldn’t earn anything close to the popular rock bands who had recorded Wolf’s songs. Wolf had his own health-related reasons for coming off the road, but he chose to keep performing for his friends and neighbors even as he survived heart attacks and endured the rigors of regular dialysis. And in Eddie Shaw he found another Mississippi-born man he could trust not only to run his band but also to run a club where he felt comfortable performing. (Talk was that it was really Wolf’s club.) Ironically, despite the energy Wolf had to expend onstage, it was also a place where he could rest. I remember him sitting alone at that long bar, even when the club was packed. Many fans were too shy or intimidated to approach him (needlessly so since Wolf had a kind and gentle side regardless of the ferocity of his music or the tales we heard about him). And others recognized that he needed his moments of peace and privacy.

On the July 25–27 weekend the audience included Hannes Folterbauer and Christoph Steffl from the Vienna Blues Fan Club. Folterbauer writes: “We had a tape recorder (Sony TCD 5 PRO2) with cassettes, medium quality, but a good microphone. I talked to Eddie Shaw about bringing Wolf to Europe and other things – so he let me tape the Wolf concert for private reasons.” With the microphone placed to highlight Wolf’s vocals and harmonica, the rest of the band sounded more distant, but the recordings conveyed the sense of purpose and pride of a blues master who still had plenty to give, and the audible audience chatter imbued the tapes with a true West Side blues club ambiance. The songs selected for this CD reveal that Wolf was not content with a run-through of greatest hits. Sometimes, as on many of his records, he just seemed to sing whatever was in his thoughts and memories, often about heartaches, breakups and mistreatment. He also enhanced his repertoire with classics from Robert Lockwood (“Take a Walk With Me”) and Chuck Willis (“Don’t Deceive Me”). Four of his tracks were on the LP “Live In 1975” (Wolf 120.000) and have been remixed for CD release along with the previously unissued “Don’t Deceive Me (Pleas Don’t Go).” In the 1980s, when Hannes Folterbauer founded a record label in Austria he named his label Wolf Records and began making frequent trips to Chicago to record blues artists. He also met with Howlin’ Wolf’s widow, Lillie Burnett, who signed an agreement authorizing the release of Wolf’s live recordings. Back in July of 1975, as it happened, the Rolling Stones, who idolized Wolf, had also been in town that week playing concerts at the Chicago Stadium (July 22–24). Bob Greene of the Chicago Sun-Times talked to Wolf and quoted him as saying he hadn’t been invited to a Stones show and couldn’t afford a ticket—but the poverty ploy, at least, was a joke, according to Wolf’s friends and family who knew he had money and property. Bill Wyman of the Stones later recalled in the Express: “I gave him tickets for a Stones concert and, as I’d heard in the media that he didn’t have any money, I arranged a limo to collect him and his wife Lillie. He came backstage then when he went into the auditorium, they all stood and applauded him. “His wife said it was one of the most wonderful moments of his life and the next night he invited the whole band to his house. Can you believe that nobody wanted to go except me? So I ended up going along with my son Stephen, who was 13 at the time, and we had the most wonderful night – eating soul food and talking about music.” Several weeks later other Englishmen sought to see Wolf. A BBC-TV crew came to town and from September 2 to 4 filmed blues artists performing in clubs, including Otis Rush, Jimmy Dawkins and Fenton Robinson at the New 1815. But Wolf turned down their offer. According to Eddie Shaw, Wolf claimed he was “tired of making other people millionaires.” Shaw also said Wolf had declined an offer to record an album with the Rolling Stones. But at that point in his life, Wolf had decided what he wanted to do: play for his people. The Last Summer of The Wolf was a grand one, but as autumn and winter rolled around, health issues began to keep Wolf at home or at the hospital. He summoned his incredible strength to deliver a crowd-pleasing show at Pervis Spann’s International Blues Festival on November 7, and made one final appearance at the New 1815 the following night. But soon he was back in the hospital. U.S. Army veteran Chester Arthur “Howlin’ Wolf” Burnett passed away at the Edward Hines, Jr. Veterans Administration hospital in Hines, Illinois, 10 miles directly west of the 1815 Club, on January 10, 1976. The New 1815 era soon came to a close, but Wolf’s bandsmen carried on, especially Eddie Shaw, who ventured out with the Wolf Gang and probably traveled more highway miles than any other bluesman for the next several decades. Songs about life on the road like “Highway 61 Bound” and “I Got to Go Now” featured prominently on many albums he recorded, as did songs by or about Howlin’ Wolf. Shaw recorded three albums for Wolf Records over the years, and the tracks on this CD are drawn from those releases. Hubert Sumlin, whom Wolf regarded as a son, enjoyed some celebrity status after Wolf’s death in the company of various rock, blues and Hollywood stars. Though he basked in the adulation of fans and musicians who had been astounded by his electric guitar wizardry on Wolf’s classic records, Sumlin had never been a front man or featured vocalist and could rarely summon similar musical magic when on stage or in the studio on his own. But he found sympathetic backing on the Wolf Records CD he shared with Billy Branch, especially from guitarist John Primer (a prolific Wolf Records artist himself). His selections with Primer in an acoustic guitar duet setting yielded some of his most appealing results. His “No Place to Go,” incidentally, is not the same song Howln’ Wolf recorded by that title in 1954 but he does throw in a verse from Wolf’s “I Walked From Dallas.” His tracks are from the 1991 CD “Hubert Sumlin & Billy Branch: Chicago Blues Session, Vol. 22.”

Detroit Junior (Emery Williams Jr.) had his own solo career apart from his few years in the Wolf Gang, and though he never enjoyed the same acclaim as many of his fellow bluesmen, he had a creative songwriting talent that few of them could match. He recorded a live version of his best-known song, “Call My Job,” for the Vienna Blues Fan Club in Austria in 1978, while the accusatory “You’ve Been Laid” and the gambler’s blues “Race Track” are from the 1994 CD “Chicago Blues Legends (Chicago Blues Session Vol. 17).” Even though Shaw, Sumlin and Detroit Junior have passed on, the Howlin’ Wolf legacy lives on, not only in his records and theirs, but in the repertoires of countless bands in Chicago, Mississippi, Arkansas, and around the world—even in Vienna. After Howlin’ Wolf’s funeral in Chicago, Amy van Singel (then Amy O’Neal, my wife and Living Blues magazine co-publisher) wrote an obituary describing how the preacher himself was inspired by Wolf: “In his eulogy the young and fiery Rev. Henry Hardy passionately improvised on Howlin’ Wolf’s evocative song titles, creating an atmosphere not of resignation and despair, but of Wolf’s power to deal with reality and live life. Howlin’ Wolf lives on.”

Howlin' Wolf At 1815 Club 1975 MP3
Howlin' Wolf At 1815 Club 1975 FLAC

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

VA - Cadillac Baby's Bea & Baby Records: The Definitive Collection

Size: 786 MB MB
Time: 4:48:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Blues, R&B, Soul, Gospel
Art: Full

CD 1:
01. Cadillac Baby - Welcome To Cadillac Baby's Show Lounge ( 3:39)
02. Eddie Boyd - I'm Commin' Home ( 2:37)
03. Eddie Boyd - Thank You Baby ( 2:06)
04. L.C. McKinley - Nit Wit ( 1:58)
05. L.C. McKinley - Sharpest Man In Town ( 2:24)
06. The Daylighters - Mad House Jump ( 1:59)
07. The Daylighters - You're Breaking My Heart ( 2:21)
08. Faith Taylor &The Sweet Teens - INeed Him To Love Me ( 2:25)
09. Faith Taylor & The Sweet Teens - I Love You Darling ( 2:31)
10. Bobby Saxton - Trying To Make A Living ( 2:47)
11. Earl Hooker - Dynamite ( 2:22)
12. Cadillac Baby - The Legend Of Cadillac Baby (14:57)
13. Eddie Boyd - Blue Monday Blues ( 2:33)
14. Eddie Boyd - The Blues Is Here To Stay ( 2:45)
15. Eddie Boyd - Come Home! ( 2:40)
16. Eddie Boyd - You Got To Reap! ( 2:47)
17. Little Mac - Times Are Getting Tougher ( 2:24)
18. Little Mac - Don't Come Back ( 2:21)
19. T. Valentine - Little Lu-Lu Frog ( 2:13)
20. T. Valentine - Teen-Age Jump ( 2:16)
21. Cadillac Baby - How Detroit Junior Got Famous ( 4:02)
22. Detroit Junior - Money Tree ( 2:12)
23. Detroit Junior - So Unhappy ( 2:46)
24. Eddie Boyd & The Daylighters - Come On Home ( 2:35)
25. Eddie Boyd & The Daylighters - Reap What You Sow ( 2:38)

CD 2:
01. Hound Dog Taylor - My Baby Is Coming Home (2:41)
02. Hound Dog Taylor - Take Five (2:08)
03. St. Louis Mac - You Mistreated Me (3:02)
04. St. Louis Mac - Broken Heart (2:29)
05. Phil Sampson - It's So Hard (2:29)
06. Singing Sam Feat. Phil Sampson - Sampson (2:34)
07. Singing Sampson - My Story (2:36)
08. Singing Sam - Calvins Reserve (2:35)
09. Sunnyland Slim - Worried About My Baby (2:49)
10. Sunnyland Slim - Drinking And Clowning (3:05)
11. Eddie Boyd - All The Way (3:02)
12. Eddie Boyd - Where You Belong (2:46)
13. Cadillac Baby - Cadillac Baby Gets Into The Record Business (3:03)
14. Lee Jackson - Please Baby (2:44)
15. Lee Jackson - Juanita (2:59)
16. Andre Williams - Please Give Me A Chance (3:14)
17. Andre Williams - I Still Love You (2:49)
18. Little Mac - I'm Your Fool (2:13)
19. Little Mac - Let Hootenanny Blues (Out Of Jail) (2:02)
20. James Cotton - One More Mile (3:06)
21. James Cotton - There Must Be A Panic On (1:47)
22. Kirk Taylor & The Velvets - Your Love (2:15)
23. Kirk Taylor & The Velvets - This World (2:40)
24. Tall Paul Hankins & The Hudson Brothers - Joe's House Rent Party Part 1 (2:35)
25. Tall Paul Hankins & The Hudson Brothers - Joe's House Rent Party Part 2 (2:29)
26. Willie Hudson Feat. Tall Paul Hankins - It's You I'm Going To Miss (2:48)
27. Willie Hudson Feat. Tall Paul Hankins - Red Lips (2:34)

CD 3:
01. Lee Jackson & The Cadillac Baby Specials - The Christmas Song (2:34)
02. Clyde Lasley & The Cadillac Baby Specials - Santa Came Home Drunk (2:58)
03. The Chances, Darla-Moira-Sharonne - One More Chance (2:44)
04. The Chance, Darla-Moira-Sharonne - It Takes More Than Love Alone (2:20)
05. Little Mack & The Hipps - Mother-In-Law Blues (2:18)
06. Little Mack & The Hipps - Woman, Help Me (2:46)
07. Little Mack Simmons - The Sky Is Crying (3:35)
08. Little Mack Simmons - I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man (3:42)
09. Little Mack Simmons - Trouble No More (2:08)
10. Little Mack Simmons - I'm Tore Down (2:59)
11. Arelean Brown - I Love My Man (3:19)
12. Arelean Brown - Hullo Baby (2:35)
13. Sunnyland Slim - House Rock (2:43)
14. Sunnyland Slim - She Got That Jive (2:33)
15. Sunnyland Slim - Little Girl (3:26)
16. Sunnyland Slim - Too Late To Pray (3:47)
17. Sunnyland Slim - I Done You Wrong (3:28)
18. Homesick James - My Baby's Gone (3:08)
19. Homesick James - My Kind Of Woman (3:21)
20. Homesick James - Homesick Sunnyland Special (3:15)
21. Andrew 'Blueblood' McMahon - Lost In The Jungle (3:39)
22. Andrew 'Blueblood' McMahon - Special Agent (2:49)
23. Andrew 'Blueblood' McMahon - Worried All The Time (2:30)
24. Andrew 'Blueblood' McMahon - Potato Diggin' Man (3:23)

CD 4:
01. Willie Williams - Somebody Changed The Lock (2:20)
02. Willie Williams - 38 Woman Blues (3:36)
03. Unknown Blues Band - Raise Your Window Baby (2:42)
04. Unknown Blues Band - Jump This Morning (2:03)
05. 3D - 7402 (5:07)
06. 3D - Here We Go Chi-Town (3:00)
07. Clyde Lasley - Just In Case That You Got A Case (0:20)
08. Clyde Lasley & Unknown Actors - I Bet I Don't Die Tired (1:46)
09. Clyde Lasley & Unknown Actors - The Preacher, A Deacon & A Razor (4:30)
10. Sleepy John Estes & Hammie Nixon - Cadillac Baby Passed So Fast (4:08)
11. Sleepy John Estes & Hammie Nixon - Worry My Mind (2:41)
12. Sleepy John Estes & Hammie Nixon - Spirit Don't Leave Me (3:08)
13. Sleepy John Estes & Hammie Nixon - Lay My Burdon Down (2:26)
14. Cadillac Baby - I Did A Lot Of Spiritual Records (1:28)
15. The Gloryaires - Search Me Lord (3:36)
16. The Gloryaires - Now Lord Don't Drive Me Away (3:20)
17. Eddie Dean & The Biblical Aires - Holy Place (2:27)
18. Eddie Dean & The Biblical Aires - God Has Prepared (3:04)
19. The Norfolk Singers - He's A God (2:19)
20. The Norfolk Singers - Testimonial (2:35)
21. The Pilgrim Harmonizers - Witness There Too (2:43)
22. The Pilgrim Harmonizers - Over The Hill (2:38)
23. Rev. Samuel Patterson - Climbing High Mountains (3:26)
24. Rev. Samuel Patterson - Judgement Day (3:30)
25. Cadillac Baby - Blues Is My Soul (2:05)

Cadillac Baby ran a record label but a better way to think of him is as a hustler -- somebody who figured out how to make a buck by running nightclubs, store fronts and, eventually, a record label. That label, Bea & Baby -- which Narvel Eatmon named after himself and his wife, who was never crazy about her husband's designs on the record business -- launched in 1959, right when his hometown of Chicago was teeming with a bunch of terrific blues and R&B labels, including Chess, Vee-Jay and Delmark. Bea & Baby is never mentioned in the same breath as those imprints, probably because it essentially imploded in 1961, after Cadillac Baby ran afoul of the local musicians' union. He turned his attention to his store, recording the occasional session, then experiencing an unexpected revival in 1971, when Living Blues ran a long interview with Cadillac Baby conducted by Jim O'Neal. That was enough to stir some new interest in the label, so he dressed up some old 45s in the guise of a fake live album -- the only LP the label or its Ronald, Miss, Key, and Keyhole subsidiaries released -- and started to record new acts intermittently from that point until his death in 1991.

Once Cadillac Baby was gone, the legacy of Bea & Baby faded, with only Clyde Lasley's "Santa Come Home Drunk" appearing on a stateside various-artists collection. Earwig Music Company's Michael Frank administered that license, a task that led him to acquire the Bea & Baby catalog from Cadillac's widow. He embarked on the decade-plus mission to assemble Cadillac Baby's Bea & Baby Records: The Definitive Collection, a four-disc set that contains (with just a handful of justifiable exceptions) everything the label and its subsidiaries released, accompanied by a thorough history by O'Neal along with artist-by-artist biographies from Bill Dahl and, for the gospel acts, Robert M. Marovich.

The fact that there is a significant number of gospel tracks on this four-disc set underscores how Cadillac Baby recorded a bit of everything: vocal groups, uptown R&B, even rap in his waning years. Still, his bread and butter was the blues, music that he knew from his birth state of Mississippi and from the clubs he ran. He made deep connections, so he could get Eddie Boyd, Earl Hooker, Sunnyland Slim, James Cotton, and Andre Williams to cut records for his label (reportedly, Muddy Waters thought about jumping ship from Chess to Bea & Baby for a brief moment in 1959). He had a good ear, so he knew to cut Hound Dog Taylor as soon he heard him, waxing "My Baby Is Coming Home" over a decade before the guitarist's epochal debut for Alligator. Cadillac was also a bad businessman and treated artists cavalierly; in the case of Detroit Junior and St. Louis Mac -- both monikers handed to them by Cadillac without the artist's consent -- it could almost qualify as contempt. Despite all this, Bea & Baby and its sister subsidiaries not only recorded some terrific music, but they had a distinct identity. From the outset, Cadillac, his producers, and engineers and musicians recorded things quick and dirty, so the records still seem electrifying; they're greasy and gritty, music made with passion but with hopes of scoring a quick buck. Everybody involved with Bea & Baby was plying their trade, either as musicians or a hustler, and while the results may not always be perfect, that rawness is also why the set is so invigorating. This is down-and-dirty music recorded on the cheap, so it retains its excitement. It's a blessing that Cadillac Baby's Bea & Baby Records: The Definitive Collection has finally arrived, as its existence helps paint a fuller, richer portrait of Chicago's blues & R&B scene of the '50s, '60s, and '70s. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Cadillac Baby's Bea & Baby Records Part 1
Cadillac Baby's Bea & Baby Records Part 2

Monday, February 12, 2018

Detroit Junior - Turn Up The Heat

Year: 1995
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:33
Size: 93,6 MB
Styles: Piano blues
Scans: Full

1. Turn Up The Heat (3:07)
2. Your Family (3:30)
3. Boogie Blues (3:32)
4. Need More, Got To Have (3:08)
5. Killing Floor (3:00)
6. Come Back To Me (2:40)
7. Got High Again (4:11)
8. Bad Bad Whiskey (3:19)
9. You're Begging Too Much (2:46)
10. Anybody Can Have The Blues (3:42)
11. Buy Some Love (3:30)
12. Last Call (4:03)

Emery Williams Jr. is a living link to the great Chicago blues piano players of the 1940s and 1950s. Born on October 26, 1931, in Haynes, AR, Williams was given the name Detroit Junior when be began recording on his own in the 1960s. As a child, Williams was moved around quite a bit, as his family relocated from Arkansas to Memphis, then to Pularski, IL, and finally to Flint, MI, where Williams lived with his grandmother. It was there that he began playing keyboards, learning on his grandmother's organa (a parlor instrument that was part organ, part piano). Soon he was playing piano in the tough clubs and juke joints around Flint, eventually relocating to Chicago in the early '50s, where he began playing with the likes of Eddie Boyd, Jimmy Reed, and Eddie Taylor.

He recorded his first 45 (and earned the name Detroit Junior), "Money Tree" b/w "So Unhappy," in 1960, and also cut a single ("Too Poor" b/w "You Mean Everything to Me") for Chess Records. An album, Chicago Urban Blues, came out on the Blues on Blues label in the early '70s. In 1969 Williams began a long stint as Howlin' Wolf's piano player, a spot he held until Wolf's death in 1976. Alligator Records included a few of Williams' tracks on a Living Chicago Blues compilation in the early '80s. Turn Up the Heat appeared in 1995 on Blue Suit Records, followed by two more albums for the label, Take Out the Time (1997) and Live at the Toledo Museum of Art (2004). Another Detroit Junior album was also released in 2004, Blues on the Internet on Delmark Records. /Bio by Steve Leggett, AllMusic

Turn Up The Heat mc
Turn Up The Heat zippy

Thursday, November 2, 2017

Various - Blue Suit Eleventh Anniversary Collection: 11 Years Of Screwin' Around

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:24
Size: 163.5 MB
Styles: Modern electric blues
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[5:20] 1. Eddie Burns - Dixie Boogie
[2:51] 2. Detroit Junior - Chicken Shack Boogie
[4:11] 3. Howard Armstrong - Lady Be Good
[5:10] 4. Sir Mack Rice - Cadillac Assembly Line
[2:21] 5. The Queens Of Harmony - He's A Mighty Good God To Know
[5:38] 6. Willie D. Warren - Killing Floor
[3:39] 7. Detroit Junior - Take Out The Time
[2:38] 8. David Honeyboy Edwards - Who May Be Your Regular Be
[4:54] 9. Eddie Burns - Orange Driver
[2:16] 10. Big Jack Reynolds - Little Dog
[4:32] 11. Louis Bo Collins - If Trouble Was Money
[2:03] 12. Ellis Kirk - Breakup
[8:25] 13. Detroit Junior - How Blue Can You Get
[4:04] 14. Art & Roman Griswold - I Love The Woman
[6:21] 15. Harmonica Shah - Stubborn As A Mule
[6:52] 16. Sir Mack Rice - Mustang Sally

A collection of 11 years of Blue Suit Records, feat. live cuts never before released & 1 from the vaults, inc. Eddie Burns, Detroit Junior, Howard Armstrong, Honeyboy Edwards, Mr. Bo, Sir Mack Rice +.

Blue Suit Eleventh Anniversary Collection: 11 Years Of Screwin' Around

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Little Mack Simmons - The PM+Simmons Collection 1971-1982

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:21
Size: 140.5 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[4:34] 1. You've Got To Help Me
[2:56] 2. You're So Fine
[3:53] 3. I'm A Streaker Baby
[2:38] 4. Next Time You See Me
[4:38] 5. The Same One
[2:31] 6. Key To The Highway
[2:48] 7. Cryin' The Blues
[2:29] 8. Mother-In-Law Blues
[4:04] 9. Impeach Me
[3:35] 10. Messing With The Kid
[3:30] 11. Mama Was Right
[2:08] 12. Inflation Blues
[2:58] 13. Chicken Man
[4:04] 14. Rainy Night In Georgia
[3:30] 15. Snap Your Fingers
[2:57] 16. I'm Gonna Keep On Searching Till I Find Mine
[3:25] 17. Skin Tight
[4:33] 18. Blue Lite

Little Mack Simmons, harmonica, vocals ; featuring The Simmons Sound Studio Band (Lonnie Brooks, William "Dead Eye" Norris, guitars ; Detroit Junior, piano, organ ; Robert Covington, Danny Ray Simmons, basses ; Billy Davenport, drums ; Willie Henderson, baritone sax ; Butterscotch, tenor sax) ; Arlean Brown, vocals (tracks 3, 9, 13) ; Lee "Shot" Williams, vocals (track 9) ; featuring The Outhouse Band ; Fenton Robinson, vocals, guitar (track 7). Recorded 1971-1982 at Simmons Recording Studio, Chicago.

In his remarkable 47-year career, Little Mack Simmons — Chicago vocalist and harpman extraordinaire — has performed with the some of the brightest lights of the blues world, including Robert Nighthawk, Sunnyland Slim, Eddie Boyd, Willie Mabon, Detroit Junior, Jimmy Dawkins, Lonnie Brooks, Luther Allison, Magic Sam, J.B. Lenoir and Howlin' Wolf. Malcolm Simmons was born on January 25, 1933, in the small cotton-farming community of Twist, Arkansas. He was a childhood friend of James Cotton, who was serving as an apprentice of Sonny Boy Williamson II (Rice Miller) at the time. The two boys persisted in skipping school together for the more enticing lure of jamming on their harmonicas, and Cotton taught Simmons the harp techniques he was learning from the master. Soon school was dropped completely, and Mack picked cotton and drove a tractor full time. Then at 18, he left for St. Louis, where he lived for two years while working on the railroad. It was here that Simmons met the renowned Robert Nighthawk and made his club debut on Nighthawk's stage.

By the late 1960s, Simmons had redefined his musical style, incorporating an intriguing mix of gospel, country and western, funk, soul and rock influences into his blues. From the mid to late 1970s, he owned and operated the Zodiac Lounge in Chicago. He also owned a studio and recorded for his own labels: PM Records and Simmons Records. In addition he cut blues tracks for Biscayne and Dud Sound, and in the 1980s he recorded for Sky Hero Productions, in which he was a partner. By the mid-1990s, Mack was back in the studio, cutting Come Back To Me Baby on the Wolf label in 1994 and High And Lonesome for St. George Records the following year. But it was his 1997 Electro-Fi release, Little Mack Is Back, that proclaimed the revival of Simmons's career, reaping enthusiastic reviews from around the globe. Similarly his current Electro-Fi CD, Somewhere On Down The Line, is racking up worldwide acclaim as word is spreading that Little Mack Simmons is an artist who embodies the best of Chicago blues.

The PM+Simmons Collection 1971-1982

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Detroit Junior - Live At The Toledo Museum Of Arts

Size: 93,7 MB
Time: 40:49
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2003
Styles: Piano Blues
Art: Full

01. Introduction (Spoken Intro) (0:14)
02. Boogie Blues (2:48)
03. Send For Me (2:35)
04. Key To The Highway (2:25)
05. Mabelline/Whole Lotta Shakin' (2:56)
06. Strange Things Happen (3:10)
07. What Am I Living For (1:58)
08. One Scotch, One Bourbon, One B (2:28)
09. If I Hadn't Been High (4:57)
10. Turn Up The Heat (2:26)
11. Caledonia (3:23)
12. Baby What You Want Me To Do (2:56)
13. Just A Matter Of Time (2:39)
14. Everyday I Have The Blues (3:33)
15. Honest I Do (2:13)

Emery Williams Jr. is a living link to the great Chicago blues piano players of the 1940s and 1950s. Born on October 26, 1931, in Haynes, AR, Williams was given the name Detroit Junior when be began recording on his own in the 1960s. As a child, Williams was moved around quite a bit, as his family relocated from Arkansas to Memphis, then to Pularski, IL, and finally to Flint, MI, where Williams lived with his grandmother. It was there that he began playing keyboards, learning on his grandmother's organa (a parlor instrument that was part organ, part piano). Soon he was playing piano in the tough clubs and juke joints around Flint, eventually relocating to Chicago in the early '50s, where he began playing with the likes of Eddie Boyd, Jimmy Reed, and Eddie Taylor.

He recorded his first 45 (and earned the name Detroit Junior), "Money Tree" b/w "So Unhappy," in 1960, and also cut a single ("Too Poor" b/w "You Mean Everything to Me") for Chess Records. An album, Chicago Urban Blues, came out on the Blues on Blues label in the early '70s. In 1969 Williams began a long stint as Howlin' Wolf's piano player, a spot he held until Wolf's death in 1976. Alligator Records included a few of Williams' tracks on a Living Chicago Blues compilation in the early '80s. Turn Up the Heat appeared in 1995 on Blue Suit Records, followed by two more albums for the label, Take Out the Time (1997) and Live at the Toledo Museum of Art (2004). Another Detroit Junior album was also released in 2004, Blues on the Internet on Delmark Records. ~Bio by Steve Leggett

Live At The Toledo Museum Of Arts

Saturday, May 6, 2017

Various - Paula Records Presents Chicago Blues Of The 1960s

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:15
Size: 142.5 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[2:48] 1. Homesick James - Crossroads
[2:14] 2. T.V. Slim - You Can't Love Me
[2:15] 3. J.B. Lenoir - I Feel So Good
[2:19] 4. Koko Taylor - Honky Tonky
[2:43] 5. Detroit Junior - The Way I Feel
[2:58] 6. Detroit Junior - Call My Job
[2:55] 7. Jesse Fortune - Too Many Cooks
[2:47] 8. Jesse Fortune - Good Things
[2:58] 9. Jesse Fortune - Heavy Heart Beat
[2:49] 10. Lillian Offitt - Oh Mama
[2:32] 11. Harold Burrage - I Cry For You
[2:42] 12. Various - Say Your're Leavin
[3:28] 13. Willie Mabon - New Orleans Blues
[2:35] 14. Willie Mabon - Some More
[3:01] 15. Willie Mabon - Something For Nothing
[3:18] 16. Mighty Joe Young - Hard Times
[3:30] 17. Big Moose - Ramblin Woman
[2:59] 18. Andrew Brown - You Better Stop
[2:29] 19. Willie Mabon - Somebody Gotta Pay
[2:56] 20. Willie Mabon - Some Time I Wonder
[3:01] 21. Homesick James - My Baby's Sweet
[2:47] 22. Koko Taylor - Like Heaven To Me

This 22-track collection brings together many of the rare singles from the seldom-anthologized USA label from Chicago. The only exceptions to this are the inclusion of a TV Slim track ("You Can't Love Me") from the Speed label, Lillian Offitt's "Oh Mama" from Chief and Harold Burrage's Cobra recording of "I Cry For You." Kicking off with Homesick James' interpretation of "Crossroads," the compilation also features equally stellar tracks from J.B. Lenoir ("I Feel So Good"), Koko Taylor ("Honky Tonky" and "Like Heaven to Me," her first single), Detroit Junior ("Call My Job"), Jesse Fortune, Fenton Robinson ("Say You're Leavin'"), Big Moose Walker, Mighty Joe Young, Andrew Brown and five tracks from Willie Mabon. The other side of Chicago's heyday away from the Chess studios. ~Cub Koda

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Saturday, March 4, 2017

Barrelhouse Chuck, Detroit Junior, Erwin Helfer, Pinetop Perkins - 8 Hands On 88 Keys

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:11
Size: 110.3 MB
Styles: Chicago piano blues
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[2:42] 1. It's You Baby
[4:31] 2. Four O' Clock Blues
[3:32] 3. I Almost Lost My Mind
[5:13] 4. Grinder Man Blues
[4:41] 5. How Much More
[3:59] 6. How Long Blues
[2:17] 7. Rooster's Blues
[2:04] 8. Pinetop's Blues
[2:57] 9. Miss Ida B.
[2:38] 10. I'm So Unhappy
[2:43] 11. Ella
[2:57] 12. Staggerlee
[4:35] 13. Ain't Nobody's Business
[3:17] 14. Stop Time Boogie

The Chicago label The Sirens has been issuing (or reissuing, as the case might be) compilations of piano blues and Boogie Woogie by the Windy City's leading exponents of that pianistic art. The cuts on this album come from a November 2001 session when the label gathered these extraordinary artists in the studio and turned them loose. The result is almost 50 minutes of the blues as heavy or Boogie Woogie as syncopated as the Chicago versions of these genres can get. Perhaps the last gathering of this many top disciples of the music in a studio came in 1976 when the same label gathered Willie Mabon, Sunnyland Slim, Jimmy Walker, Blind John Davis and the same Erwin Helfer for a session recently reissued as Heavy Timbre - Chicago Boogie Piano. The members of this group play and sing individually or in duet with another member. On "Miss Ida B" Barrelhouse Chuck Goering sings while Detroit Junior plays' the 88's. Detroit Junior does his thing with blues favorite "Ain't Nobody's Business What I Do" to the accompaniment of pianist Erwin Helfer. Helfer's speciality is the Boogie Woogie as he so dazzlingly demonstrates on his composition"Stop Time Boogie" recalling the Chicago genius practitioners of that style, Meade "Lux" Lewis and Albert Ammons. One of the top tracks is Detroit Junior's slurring version of "Staggerlee", the sad tale of what happens when there's disagreement on what the dice read in a crap game. The elder statesman of the group, Pinetop Perkins, appears on four cuts. He truly wrenches the heart and soul dry on "How Long Blues".

Every track on this album is a gem and serves to remind how this music can sound when played by those who were born with the music in their soul and in their hands. Highly recommended. ~Dave Nathan

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Tuesday, January 5, 2016

VA - Blue Boot #1 & Blue Boot #2

Album: Blue Boot #1
Size: 104,9 MB
Time: 39:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

01. Little Jr. Cannaday - I Got My Eyes On You (4:48)
02. Eddie Burns - Baby Please Don't Go (2:50)
03. Detroit Junior - Killing Floor (Live) (4:28)
04. David 'Honeyboy' Edwards - Linda Lou (Live) (2:51)
05. Howard Armstrong - Intro To La Cucaracha (Live) (2:00)
06. Howard Armstrong - La Cucaracha (Live) (4:15)
07. Emmanuel Young - Honest I Do (Live) (5:49)
08. David 'Honeyboy' Edwards - Don't Say I Don't Love You (3:36)
09. Detroit Junior - Harrassment (8:50)

Blue Boot #1

Album: Blue Boot #2
Size: 101,8 MB
Time: 38:34
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

01 The Blues Insurgents - Keep Your Business To Yourself (3:02)
02 David 'Honeyboy' Edwards - Crawling Kingsnake (3:29)
03 Detroit Junior - Christmas Song (Live) (4:46)
04 Howard Armstrong - Intro To Louie Bluie Blues (Live) (0:46)
05 Howard Armstrong - Louie Bluie Blues (6:24)
06 Ron Crawford - Sweet Sixteen (5:43)
07 David Honeyboy Edwards - Things I Used To Do (4:06)
08 Leon Horner - Pretty Girl (Live) (3:44)
09 Little Jr. Cannaday - The Sky Is Crying (6:31)

Blue Boot #2

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

VA - Telephone Blues: 23 Rare Blues Tracks

Size: 229,3 MB
Time: 98:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Modern Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01 Detroit Junior - Some Nerve (3:06)
02 John Hammond - Long Distance Call (3:17)
03 Son Seals - Telephone Angel Aka You're On My Mind (5:24)
04 Saffire: The Uppity Blues Women - 1-800-799-7233 (5:32)
05 Long John Hunter - Trouble On The Line (4:57)
06 Kinsey Report - Answering Machine (5:39)
07 Jimmy Johnson - Your Turn To Cry (5:51)
08 Lonnie Brooks - Wrong Number (3:17)
09 Son Seals - Call My Job (4:40)
10 Shemekia Copeland - Suspicion (3:56)
11 C.J. Chenier - You Used To Call Me (3:57)
12 Hound Dog Taylor - Talk To My Baby Aka I Can't Hold Out (3:13)
13 Lucky Peterson - Can't Get No Loving On The Telephone (3:18)
14 William Clarke - Telephone Is Ringing (4:48)
15 Big Mama Thornton - Private Number (6:20)
16 The Holmes Brothers - He'll Have To Go (2:57)
17 Son Seals - I Can't Hold Out (4:13)
18 Michael Hill's Blues Mob - Wrong Number (5:40)
19 Lil Ed & The Blues Imperials - Don't Call Me (3:06)
20 Bnois King - Don't Lose My Number (3:31)
21 Siegel-Schwall - 334-3599 (2:31)
22 Son Seals - No, No Baby (4:27)
23 The Robert Cray Band - Phone Booth (4:38)

Telephone Blues

Friday, October 17, 2014

Various - Living Chicago Blues Vols 1-4

Every night in Chicago, the sounds of blues bands reverberate from narrow barrooms, basement taverns, and small, modest lounges throughout the city. At black neighborhood bars on the South and West Sides, decorated with Christmas tinsel, day-glo zodiac posters, handwritten signs on the walls; at the more publicized, fashionable nightspots on the North Side; or just at house parties out on the streets- the blues men and women of Chicago are singing, shouting, crying, laughing, celebrating. Songs of hard times, heartbreak, loneliness; songs to drive the blue feelings away, to rock the night and let the good times roll.

This is the living, continuing blues tradition of Chicago. Vibrant music with rich heritage of legendary names and classic songs from years gone by--but music not resigned to mere history. The blues still speaks to neighborhood crowds at clubs like Theresa’s, Florence’s, The Checkerboard, Pepper’s, Porter’s, Queen Bee’s and Morris Brown’s on the South Side, Eddie Shaw’s New 1815 Club, Ma Bea’s, The Majestic, The Golden Slipper, and The Poinciana on the West Side. And in recent years blues has drawn white audiences to popular North Side clubs: The Wise Fools Pub, Elsewhere, Kingston Mines, Biddy Milligan’s and others. The North Side clientele and décor differ, and the atmosphere is not so loose as in the black taverns. But, black or white, the blues clubs are much the same size and offer fine entertainment at similar prices. The small bands echo the sounds of the 1950s and ‘60s, but they’ve updated the music, too, with new patterns, new rhythms. In an era of pervasive rock, soul and disco trends, blues has thrived in the Chicago bars.

On weekends, clubgoers can find live blues at 20 or 30 clubs. Hundreds of singers and instrumentalists appear in the blues joints every year, just as they have ever since the 1940s and ‘50s, when thousands of blacks were arriving in Chicago from Mississippi, Arkansas, Tennessee, Alabama, and Louisiana. Today, black Southern musicians no longer migrate to the city in such numbers, but a whole new generation of bluesmen has grown up in the urban streets. And on the North Side, young white performers from the suburbs, the East and Midwest have moved in to participate with the blues veterans, sharing bands as well as bandstands.

The blues men of the ‘70s, like their predecessors, are men who live the blues, and live for the blues. Many have to work in factories, steel mills, or garages to make ends meet when the local blues gigs pay a man only $15 or $20 a night. But the blues is more than a weekend hobby to these musicians. The wages may be low, but the quality of the music is undeniably high. Chicago tavern musicians have set standards which have influenced popular music the world over. They may be featured as singers and bandleaders one night, while on the next gig they might work as sidemen in another band. Even on their nights off they’re likely to show up at a blues club, where patrons are continually treated to spontaneous jams and unadvertised guest performances. The crowds in the black clubs are mostly working people from the neighborhood. Sometimes they’re still dressed in work clothes. But the cab driver at the next table might also be a blues singer just back from a tour from France; maybe the mechanic sitting at the bar will suddenly be up on stage, blowing a harmonica or rocking the house with a guitar boogie.

Actually, “on stage” is a misnomer when it comes to most blues clubs. Bands often simply stand in a corner, or sit on their amplifiers, just a few feet from the audience. If there is a bandstand, it’s probably tiny and cramped, with barely enough room for four or five musicians at a time. Dressing rooms and special lounging areas for the stars are almost unheard of. Bluesmen share drinks and conversation with friends and neighbors between –and during-sets. In the blues bars, it’s a 9 p.m.-to-2 (or 4) a.m. world of live musical excitement, good natured-banter, friendly crowds, musicians who always have time for their fans, and honest songs wrought with power and emotion. And usually, all it costs to hear some of the world’s great music is a dollar at the door, if admission is charged at all, and 75 cents or a dollar a beer.

Yet most bluesmen have played their blues in taverns, week after week, year after year, unknown to all but the local patrons. There was a period of commercial blues recording in the 1950s, when companies like Chess and VeeJay were turning out hit singles, and the R&B disc jockeys and promoters were pushing the blues artists. But even then, the great majority of Chicago’s bluesmen were never able to record with any regularity, if indeed they recorded at all.

Today the powerful recording conglomerates show little interest in blues, and most blues singers must depend on small, independent companies which operate from storefronts or producers’ homes. The occasional 45s are distributed to ghetto record shops, jukeboxes, and amateur DJs who shout and spin records in the corner taverns. With luck, or enough money, a record might get a little airplay on the radio. The few Chicago companies which issue blues albums deal mainly with a market of white fans, students and collectors. Success in this market can mean gigs in college towns, or European tours which are more grueling than glamorous. Labels such as Delmark, Arhoolie, Prestige/Bluesville, Testament, and Vanguard were instrumental in putting many major Chicago bluesmen on LP for the first time during the 60s. Alligator’s Living Chicago Blues series, in fact, owes its inspirations to a historic sent of Vanguard albums (Chicago/The Blues/Today!), produced by Sam Charters in 1965/66. The men Charters recorded--Otis Rush, Junior Wells, James Cotton, Homesick James, the late Otis Spann, and others--went on to win international recognition and record several albums apiece for other labels. But today, many other excellent artists remain unrecorded, or with a mere handful of obscure releases to their credit. From this deep pool of overlooked or undiscovered talent come the artists who appear on the Living Chicago Blues series.

When Charters produced and annotated Chicago/The Blues/Today! he wrote, “In Chicago, on the South Side, it’s still today for the blues.” More than a decade later, it is still today for the blues in Chicago. As it was yesterday, as it will be tomorrow. Living Chicago Blues.

Album: Living Chicago Blues Vol 1
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 64:40
Size: 148.1 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1978
Art: Front

[5:48] 1. Jimmy Johnson - Your Turn To Cry
[3:56] 2. Jimmy Johnson - Serves Me Right To Suffer Aka Memory Pain
[3:11] 3. Jimmy Johnson - Ain't That Just Like A Woman
[4:42] 4. Jimmy Johnson - Feel Like Breaking Up Someone's Home
[2:50] 5. Eddie Shaw - It's Alright
[3:18] 6. Eddie Shaw - Out Of Bad Luck
[3:59] 7. Eddie Shaw - Stoop Down, Baby
[3:40] 8. Eddie Shaw - Sittin' On Top Of The World
[3:27] 9. Eddie Shaw - My Baby's So Ugly
[4:00] 10. Left Hand Frank - Come Home, Darling
[2:29] 11. Left Hand Frank - Blues Won't Let Me Be
[4:28] 12. Left Hand Frank - One Room Country Shack
[4:10] 13. Left Hand Frank - Linda Lu
[2:39] 14. Carey Bell - Too Late
[4:29] 15. Carey Bell - Laundromat Blues
[2:48] 16. Carey Bell - One Day
[4:40] 17. Carey Bell - Woman In Trouble

Living Chicago Blues Vol 1 mc
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Album: Living Chicago Blues Vol 2
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 65:05
Size: 149.0 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1978
Art: Front

[4:13] 1. Lonnie Brooks - Don't Answer The Door
[3:26] 2. Lonnie Brooks - Two Headed Man
[4:42] 3. Lonnie Brooks - Cold, Lonely Nights
[4:11] 4. Lonnie Brooks - Move Over, Little Dog
[3:23] 5. Johnny 'Big Moose' Walker - Would You, Baby
[4:14] 6. Johnny 'Big Moose' Walker - Worry, Worry
[2:48] 7. Johnny 'Big Moose' Walker - Sunnyland Blues
[3:19] 8. Johnny 'Big Moose' Walker - Cry, Cry Darling
[4:23] 9. Magic Slim - Stranded On The Highway
[5:06] 10. Magic Slim - Dirty Mother For You
[4:19] 11. Magic Slim - Spider In My Stew
[3:41] 12. Magic Slim - Don't Say That No More
[3:28] 13. Pinetop Perkins - Take It Easy, Baby
[5:00] 14. Pinetop Perkins - Blues After Hours
[5:15] 15. Pinetop Perkins - Little Angel Child
[3:30] 16. Pinetop Perkins - How Much More Long

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Album: Living Chicago Blues Vol 3
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 70:43
Size: 161.9 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1980
Art: Front

[3:16] 1. A.C. Reed - Hard Times
[4:15] 2. A.C. Reed - She's Fine
[3:51] 3. A.C. Reed - Moving Out Of The Ghetto
[3:35] 4. A.C. Reed - Going To New York
[3:38] 5. Scotty & The Rib Tips - Big Leg Woman
[3:00] 6. Scotty & The Rib Tips - Careless With Our Love
[2:47] 7. Scotty & The Rib Tips - Road Block
[3:13] 8. Scotty & The Rib Tips - Poison Ivy
[2:45] 9. Lovie Lee - I Dare You
[5:15] 10. Lovie Lee - Nobody Knows My Troubles
[3:12] 11. Lovie Lee - Sweet Little Girl
[3:00] 12. Lovie Lee - Naptown
[4:37] 13. Lacy Gibson - Drown In My Own Tears
[2:46] 14. Lacy Gibson - Crying For My Baby
[3:51] 15. Lacy Gibson - Feel So Bad
[2:53] 16. Lacy Gibson - Wish Me Well
[6:06] 17. Sons Of The blues - Have You Ever Loved A Woman
[4:23] 18. Sons Of The blues - Berlin Wall
[4:11] 19. Sons Of The blues - Prisoner Of The Blues

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Album: Living Chicago Blues Vol 4
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 69:28
Size: 159.0 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1980
Art: Front

[4:02] 1. Detroit Junior - If I Hadn't Been High
[3:03] 2. Detroit Junior - Some Nerve
[5:19] 3. Detroit Junior - Somebody To Shack
[2:35] 4. Detroit Junior - I Got Money
[3:01] 5. Luther 'Guitar Junior' Johnson - Somebody Have Mercy
[3:17] 6. Luther 'Guitar Junior' Johnson - Got To Have Money
[3:01] 7. Luther 'Guitar Junior' Johnson - Just Like Mama Said
[3:48] 8. Luther 'Guitar Junior' Johnson - Look What You Done
[4:57] 9. Queen Sylvia Embry - Going Upstairs
[2:05] 10. Queen Sylvia Embry - Blues This Morning
[2:52] 11. Queen Sylvia Embry - Tired Of Being Pushed Around
[4:29] 12. Queen Sylvia Embry - Please Let Me Stay
[3:31] 13. Big Leon Brooks - Blues For A Real Man
[3:03] 14. Big Leon Brooks - Thirteen Years In Prison
[4:21] 15. Big Leon Brooks - Country Boy
[3:16] 16. Big Leon Brooks - My Life Ain't The Same
[4:58] 17. Andrew Brown - I Got News For You
[3:40] 18. Andrew Brown - Morning, Noon And Night
[4:00] 19. Andrew Brown - Two Years

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Living Chicago Blues Vol 4 zippy

Monday, October 6, 2014

Various - The USA Records Blues Story

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 70:17
Size: 160.9 MB
Styles: Chicago blues, Detroit blues
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[2:44] 1. Lonnie Brooks - Figure Head
[2:24] 2. Eddy Clearwater - The Duck Walk
[2:55] 3. Willie Mabon - Some Time I Wonder
[2:58] 4. Fenton Robinson - From My Heart
[3:12] 5. Ricky Allen - Going Or Coming
[2:34] 6. Jimmy Burns - Forget It
[3:06] 7. Detroit Junior - It's Bad To Make A Woman Mad
[2:53] 8. Andrew Brown - You Better Stop
[3:12] 9. Mighty Joe Young - Hard Times (Follow Me)
[2:36] 10. Koko Taylor - Like Heaven To Me
[2:13] 11. J.B. Lenoir - I Feel So Good
[2:45] 12. A.C. Reed - I'd Rather Fight Than Switch
[2:38] 13. Willie Mabon - Just Got Some
[2:48] 14. Jesse Fortune - Too Many Cooks
[2:44] 15. Homesick James - Crossroads
[2:58] 16. Ricky Allen - I Have Made A Change
[2:59] 17. Junior Wells - She's A Sweet One
[2:14] 18. Jimmy Burns - Through All Your Faults
[2:53] 19. Detroit Junior - Call My Job
[2:24] 20. Eddy Clearwater - Momee, Momee
[2:05] 21. Andrew Brown - Something Can Go Wrong
[2:34] 22. Lonnie Brooks - I'm Not Going Home
[2:37] 23. Fenton Robinson - Say You're Leavin'
[2:55] 24. Homesick James - My Baby's Sweet
[2:05] 25. Koko Taylor - Honky Tonky
[2:40] 26. Jesse Fortune - Good Things

More than a decade before Alligator Records began reviving the careers of Koko Taylor, Fenton Robinson, Lonnie Brooks, and Detroit Junior, among others in the 1970s, these cats were cutting killer sessions for little labels that you probably have never heard of, including USA Records (not to be confused with Leonard Allen's twin labels United and States from the '50s). Recorded between 1963 and 1966, The USA Records Blues Story captures a dozen of Chicago's best at their peak, often in the midst of some kind of historic transition artistically -- witness Koko Taylor a couple years shy of "Wang Dang Doodle," Fenton Robinson a couple years shy of "Somebody Loan Me a Dime," and Junior Wells a couple years shy of his Hoodoo Man Blues breakthrough. But USA also lured more bankable talent, including Willie Mabon and J.B. Lenoir, who were both still going strong long after their stints with Chess Records. If USA Records ever cut any duds, you wouldn't know it from the way Bill Dahl compiled the reissue; this one hits the jackpot all the way through. ~Ken Chang

The USA Records Blues Story

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Various - The Alligator Records Playlists: Drinking

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 91:03
Size: 208.4 MB
Styles: Assorted
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:45] 1. Little Charlie & The Nightcats - I Don't Drink Much
[4:47] 2. Roy Buchanan - Beer Drinking Woman
[3:06] 3. Lee Rocker - Crazy When She Drinks
[4:24] 4. Lil Ed & The Blues Imperials - 20% Alcohol
[4:07] 5. Albert Collins - I Ain't Drunk
[3:18] 6. Cephas & Wiggins - No Ice In My Bourbon
[3:48] 7. Bob Margolin - Brown Liquor
[3:54] 8. Joe Louis Walker - Too Drunk To Drive Drunk
[2:39] 9. Roomful Of Blues - Juice, Juice, Juice
[4:27] 10. A.C. Reed - Don't Drive Drunk
[4:02] 11. Detroit Junior - If I Hadn't Been High
[3:30] 12. Koko Taylor - Beer Bottle Boogie
[2:41] 13. Johnny Jones - Sloppy Drunk Blues
[5:16] 14. Carey Bell - When I Get Drunk
[4:28] 15. Billy Boy Arnold - Whiskey, Beer And Reefer
[2:51] 16. Koko Taylor - Hey Bartender
[2:40] 17. Johnny Otis - Drinkin' Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee
[7:09] 18. Son Seals - The Woman I Love
[4:51] 19. Rusty Zinn - Drinking My Last Dime
[5:46] 20. William Clarke - Drinking By Myself
[3:16] 21. Corey Harris - Moosemilk Blues
[2:33] 22. Saffire The Uppity Blues Women - Let The Gin Do The Talking
[2:34] 23. Lonnie Brooks - One More Shot

The Alligator Records Playlists: Drinking

Thursday, August 14, 2014

Various - The Story Of Piano Blues: From The Country To The City

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 74:54
Size: 171.5 MB
Styles: Piano blues
Year: 1978/2013
Art: Front

[4:03] 1. Pinetop Perkins - Five Long Years
[4:12] 2. Henry Gray - Cold Chills
[5:27] 3. James Crutchfield - Sittin On Top Of The World
[3:14] 4. Abe _Boogaloo_ Ames - Tommy Dorsey's Boogie Woogie
[5:19] 5. Jimmy Walker - Come On, Get Your Morning Exercise
[3:51] 6. Pinetop Perkins - Everyday I Have The Blues
[2:35] 7. Robert Shaw - The Cows
[4:01] 8. Henry Gray - Blues Won't Let Me Rest
[3:52] 9. Abie _Boogaloo_ Ames - After Hours
[2:16] 10. Mose Vinson - Good Morning Memphis
[4:21] 11. Big Joe Duskin - If You Want To Be My Woman
[4:43] 12. Pinetop Perkins - Kansas City
[3:57] 13. Booker T. Laury - Big Legged Woman
[4:28] 14. Henry Gray - When My First Wife Left Me
[3:58] 15. Pinetop Perkins - Kidney Stew
[4:10] 16. Big Joe Duskin - Key To The Highway
[2:22] 17. Jimmy Walker - I Had Lots Of Troubles
[3:54] 18. Booker T. Laury - You Can Go Your Way
[4:00] 19. Detroit Junior - Call My Job

All ten of the artists featured on this new Wolf Records’ release had different levels of success and accolades through their careers, yet share similar upbringings and stories. They honed their chops out of necessity in labor camps, house parties and juke joints – synthesizing individual styles that cannot simply be classified as “Blues,” as their music also incorporates Boogie, Jazz and Gospel. They came from rural communities but brought their talents to the city, where they helped to define the Blues scenes in Chicago, Memphis and Houston. And just as they were influenced by the phantom performers of a pre-war era, they too have influenced many legends of 60s and 70s Rock N’ Roll. So if you are a fanatic, enthusiast and archaeologist of music such as me, you will thoroughly enjoy and appreciate the unique piano styles found on these 20 amazing and thoroughly enjoyable tracks of pure Blues and Boogie Woogie.

The Story Of Piano Blues: From The Country To The City mc
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Thursday, October 24, 2013

Eddie SHAW - Moovin' And Groovin' Man / Have Blues Will Travel

Album: Moovin' And Groovin' Man
Styles: Modern Electric Chicago Blues
Recorded: 1982
Released: 1993
Bitrate: 320k/s
Size: 90.36 MB
Time: 38:41
Art: Full

1. Highway Bound (3:13)
2. Blues Dues (5:59)
3. Blues For Tomako (3:23)
4. Dunkin' Donut Woman (2:45)
5. Louisiana Blues (5:00)
6. Movin' And Groovin' Man (2:12)
7. Sad And Lonesome (6:11)
8. Big Leg Woman (3:19)
9. I've Got To Tell Somebody (2:46)
10. My Baby And Me (3:43)

Personnel: Eddie SHAW - Alto, Tenor Saxophones, Harmonica, Vocals
Melvin Taylor - Guitar
Ken Saydak - Piano
Harlan Terson - Bass
Merle Perkins - Drums
with:
Eddie "Cleanhead' Vinson - Alto Saxophone tr.3

Note: Tenor saxophonist Eddie Shaw is a rarity in blues circles- a first-class instrumentalist who is not a guitarist or pianist. Shaw is a soulful, exuberant player whose lusty licks make a solid counterpoint to his rough-hewn vocals and narratives. While Shaw carries the majority of the load on this 10-cut date from 1982 previously recorded for Isabel (reissued on CD by Evidence) it is guitarist Melvin Taylor who is the revelation as second soloist. Between his work with Lucky Peterson, his own CD, and his brisk, sizzling solos and accompaniment here, Taylor merits high praise as a workmanlike, flexible contributor. The others, with the exception of the great Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, are heady pros capably handling limited support duties.

                                                     Moovin' And Groovin' Man
____________________________________________________________________________

Album: Have Blues Will Travel
Styles: Modern Electric Chicago Blues  
Recorded: 1966 & 1977
Released: 1977
Bitrate: 320k/s (Vinyl ripp!)
Size: 67.21 MB
Time: 29:20
Art: Full

1. I've Got To Tell Somebody (2:19)
2. This Little Voice (2:53)
3. Blues Men Of Yesterday (2:52)
4. I Can't Stop Loving You (2:42)
5. Big Leg Woman (3:53)
6. Back Door Wolf (3:58)
7. I Don't Trust Nobody (2:47)
8. Blues For The West Side (2:51)
9. Riding High (2:07)
10. I've Got To Tell Somebody-tk.2 (2:58)

Personnel: Eddie SHAW - Saxophones, Harmonica, Vocals
Hubert Sumlin - Guitar
Detroit Junior - Piano
Lafayette 'Shorty' Gilbert - Bass
Chico Chism - Drums
on tr.8,9 from 1966 SP
Magic Sam - Guitar
Mac Thompson - Bass
Bob Richey - Drums

Notes: This is first release of Shaw, after his Master - Howlin' Wolf died. On tracks 8, 9 to release on this album added his first single (45 rpm) released on Colt with Magic Sam on guitar(!). Album is a little vocals and instrumentals.

                                                            Have Blues Will Travel
___________________________________________________________________

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Detroit Junior - Take Out The Time

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 49:33
Size: 113.5 MB
Styles: Piano blues, Modern Chicago blues
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[3:36] 1. Take Out The Time
[5:22] 2. I Got High Last Night
[2:54] 3. Chicken Shack Boogie
[3:29] 4. We're Through
[3:42] 5. Baby Workout
[3:12] 6. Trouble In Mind
[6:00] 7. What I Say
[3:48] 8. I Don't Know
[5:34] 9. Slow Dancing
[4:12] 10. Bring It On Home
[4:46] 11. Please Don't Leave
[3:08] 12. Blueberry Hill

Emery “Detroit Junior” Williams, Jr. (October 26, 1931 – August 9, 2005) was an American blues pianist, vocalist, and songwriter. He is known for songs such as “So Unhappy”, “Call My Job”, “If I Hadn’t Been High”, “Ella” and “Money Tree”. His songs have been covered by Koko Taylor, Albert King and other blues artists.

Born in Haynes, Arkansas, Detroit recorded his first single, “Money Tree” with the Bea & Baby label in 1960. His first full album, Chicago Urban Blues, was released in the early 1970s on the Blues on Blues label. He also has recordings on Alligator, Blue Suit, The Sirens Records, and Delmark.

Detroit Junior began his career in Detroit, Michigan, backing touring musicians such as Eddie Boyd,John Lee Hooker, and Amos Milburn. Boyd brought him to Chicago, Illinois in 1956, where he spent the next twelve years. In the early 1970s, Detroit toured and recorded with Howlin’ Wolf. After the death of Wolf in 1976, Detroit returned to Chicago, where he lived and performed until his death from heart failure in 2005.

Recorded at Zeta Recording, Holland, Ohio.

Detroit Junior (vocals, piano); Maurice John Vaughan (guitar, tenor saxophone, background vocals); Eddie Burns (harmonica); B.J. Emery (trombone, background vocals); Kenny Baker (bass); Mike McGee (drums).

Take Out The Time