Showing posts with label Denise Lasalle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denise Lasalle. Show all posts

Saturday, September 21, 2019

Denise LaSalle - Mississippi Woman Steppin' Out Live

Size: 133.6 MB
Time: 56:43
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: R&B, Soul
Art: Front

1. Juke Joints [5:44]
2. Blues Party Tonight [6:11]
3. Give Me the Strongest Whiskey [3:19]
4. You Can Have My Husband [5:27]
5. Drop That Zero [4:14]
6. Mississippi Woman [4:51]
7. This Thing Called Love [5:00]
8. Lady in the Streets [3:29]
9. Downhome Blues-Steppin' In [9:38]
10. My Toot Toot [8:45]

During the blues revival of the 1960s a whole swathe of great blues artists were totally ignored by the revivalist record companies, writers and promoters. These were the Rhythm & Blues stars ' sexy and direct lyrics, sharp suits, swaggering live performances representing the concerns, attitudes and moods of the community they were a part of. What we loosely call 'Soul Blues' has also been largely ignored over the past few decades in favour of the guitar led, often rock influenced end of things. Total credit then to Pierre Degeneffe of the Ecaussines Blues Festival in booking in 2007 the absolute queen of 'Soul Blues' , Denise LaSalle.

Mississippi Woman Steppin' Out Live

Monday, April 30, 2018

Denise Lasalle - Pay Before You Pump (Deluxe Edition)

Size: 179,5 MB
Time: 76:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2007
Styles: Electric Blues, R&B, Soul
Art: Front

01. Pay Before You Pump (3:39)
02. It's Goin' Down (4:40)
03. I Need A Working Man (5:17)
04. Mississippi Woman (3:49)
05. Hold On Tight (5:09)
06. Hell Sent Me You (3:57)
07. Walking On Beale Street And Cryin' (6:00)
08. I'm Hangin' On (4:24)
09. You Don't Live Here Anymore (5:52)
10. I Tried (5:04)
11. It's Goin' Down (Radio Version) (4:34)
12. Mississippi Woman (Delta Blues Mix) (4:09)
13. 24 Hours (4:52)
14. I'm Still The Queen (Blues Mix) (4:53)
15. Mississippi Woman (Delta Blues Mash Up Mix) (6:37)
16. Pay Before You Pump (Remix) (3:43)

Unlike so many other blues vocalists who just reinterpret material given to them by songwriters, Denise LaSalle was a seriously talented songwriter. Although her soul-blues style had strong urban contemporary overtones at times, it's best to think of LaSalle as a modern-day Bessie Smith, because that's really what she was. She wrote funny songs full of sassy attitude, and it's an attitude she carried with her on-stage. Off-stage, LaSalle accommodated all autograph seekers and gladly obliged journalists and radio disc jockeys.

The Jackson, Tennessee-based LaSalle was raised in Belzoni, Mississippi (also home to Joe Willie "PineTop" Perkins some years earlier), but she got started singing in local churches around Leflore County. She was born July 16, 1939, as Denise Craig. Growing up, she listened to Grand Ole Opry radio broadcasts, and then lived across the street from a juke joint in Belzoni. LaSalle's early influences, from the jukeboxes around Belzoni and over the radio, included Ruth Brown, Dinah Washington, and LaVern Baker. LaSalle moved north to Chicago when she was in her early twenties and would attend shows at the Regal Theatre, always returning home to write songs. She got to know blues musicians and began giving her songs to them, until one day a Chess Records executive stopped by at Mixer's Lounge, where LaSalle was working as a bar maid. He listened to one of her songs and took it down to Chess Records, and the company later signed her as a vocalist, but never recorded her. Two years later, LaSalle recorded and produced her own record with the help of Billy "The Kid" Emerson, the Chess executive who'd originally shown an interest in her. After the record made some waves on local radio, Chess stepped in and purchased the master and took it to Europe. Meanwhile, LaSalle continued writing songs and sitting in with blues musicians around the Chicago clubs.

LaSalle's first big hit came about in 1971 when her "Trapped by a Thing Called Love" broke on the radio in Chicago and then Detroit. That record was for the Westbound label, and then she signed with ABC Records in 1975, cutting three albums in three years until the label was sold to MCA. After MCA dropped her because of the label's "difficulty in promoting black acts" at that time, she continued performing as much as she could in Chicago and Memphis. In 1980, a Malaco executive called to ask her to write a song for Z.Z. Hill. A positive relationship with the company quickly developed, which resulted in LaSalle recording 11 discs for the label, including Lady in the Street (1983), Right Place, Right Time (1984), Love Talkin' (1985), Hittin' Where It Hurts (1989), Still Trapped (1990), Still Bad (1994), and Smokin' in Bed (1997).

While her Malaco sides are probably her most important recordings, other than the original of her early-'70s hit "Trapped," she also released excellent gospel crossover material, including This Real Woman (2000) and There's No Separation (2001) on Ordena Records, before she returned to secular music with albums such as Pay Before You Pump (2007) on Ecko Records and 24 Hour Woman (2010) back on Malaco. In January 2018, LaSalle died in Jackson, Tennessee at the age of 78, after suffering serious complications and health issues related to an earlier fall from which she never completely recovered. ~Richard Skelly & Al Campbell

Pay Before You Pump

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Denise LaSalle  - Love Talkin' / Rain & Fire

Album: Love Talkin'
Size: 105,7 MB
Time: 45:15
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1985
Styles: Blues, R&B, Soul
Art: Front & Back

01. Talkin' In Your Sleep (4:00)
02. Someone Else Is Steppin' In (5:15)
03. Nobody Loves Me Like You Do (4:05)
04. Give Me Yo' Most Strongest Whiskey (4:04)
05. Love Is A Five Letter Word (5:05)
06. Love Talkin' (3:21)
07. Get What You Can Get (4:02)
08. Linger A Little Longer (3:56)
09. Keeps Me Runnin' Back (3:54)
10. Too Many Lovers (4:04)
11. My Tu-Tu (3:23)

As with all her Malaco albums, Denise LaSalle mixes things up nicely, going from hard-hitting, trash-talking tunes to heartfelt ballads, bluesy numbers, and country/soul wailers. She's had a string of regionally successful releases since joining Malaco in the '80s, but has never been able to break the embargo on Southern soul. She's been around too long to change at this point, and really shouldn't anyway. Her albums are reliable and enjoyable, even if they're a throwback. ~ by Ron Wynn

Love Talkin'

Album: Rain & Fire
Size: 100,3 MB
Time: 43:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1986/2004
Styles: Blues, R&B, Soul
Art: Front & Back

01. It Be's That Way Sometimes (8:39)
02. I'm Sho' Gonna Mess With Yo Man (4:14)
03. What's Goin' On In My House (4:09)
04. Look What Can Happen To You (If You Get Caught Messin' With My Tutu) (4:04)
05. Shame, Shame, Shame (3:42)
06. Dip, Bam, Thank You Maam (3:19)
07. Learnin' How To Cheat On You (3:26)
08. Rain And Fire (3:40)
09. It Takes You All Night (3:53)
10. Is He Lovin' Someone Else Tonight (3:55)

Denise LaSalle has drawn some fire at times for her frank, no-holds-barred dialogues and album cuts. She also has remained loyal to vintage soul and blues/country-tinged songs that will never get urban contemporary airplay and attention because they're thoroughly Southern in style, sound, and production values. Thus, each Malaco album is almost doomed from the beginning, other than as a regional proposition. That said, here's another one right in that same vein, and it's as fine as all the rest in what it does. ~by Ron Wynn

Rain & Fire

Monday, April 16, 2018

Denise Lasalle - I Get What I Want / Making A Good Thing Better

ALbum: I Get What I Want: The Best Of The ABC/MCA Years
Size: 168,9 MB
Time: 72:12
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001
Styles: Blues, R&B, Soul
Label: Connoisseur Collection
Art: Front & Back

01. I Get What I Want (2:55)
02. Second Breath (3:15)
03. Sit Down And Hurt Awhile (4:41)
04. Love Me Right (3:32)
05. Before You Take It To The (3:19)
06. One Life To Live (5:30)
07. Love Addict (4:11)
08. Workin' Overtime (3:11)
09. Feet Don't Fail Me (5:11)
10. You Ought'a Thank Me (3:43)
11. Talking 'Bout My Best Friend (3:18)
12. A Miracle, You And Me (3:31)
13. Too Little In Common To Be Lovers (6:24)
14. You'll Never Get Your Hooks In My Man (5:21)
15. Tighten Up On Your Good Thing (5:07)
16. Sharing Your Love (4:43)
17. Make Love To Me One More Time (4:10)

ALbum: Making A Good Thing Better: The Complete Westbound Singles 1970-76
Size: 181,0 MB
Time: 76:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Blues, R&B, Soul
Art: Full

01. Hung Up, Strung Out (2:40)
02. Heartbreaker Of The Year (2:51)
03. Trapped By A Thing Called Love (2:44)
04. Keep It Coming (2:36)
05. Now Run And Tell That (3:19)
06. The Deeper I Go (The Better It Gets) (2:26)
07. A Man Size Job (2:51)
08. I'm Over You (2:50)
09. Making A Good Thing Better (3:07)
10. What It Takes To Get A Good Woman (That's What It Takes To Keep Her) (3:01)
11. Do Me Right (2:57)
12. Your Man And Your Best Friend (3:04)
13. What Am I Doing Wrong (3:20)
14. Don't Nobody Live Here (By The Name Of Fool) (3:50)
15. Good Goody Getter (2:21)
16. Get Up Off My Mind (2:33)
17. The Best Thing I Ever Had (5:09)
18. Trying To Forget (3:45)
19. We've Got Love (The Good Part About It) (2:33)
20. My Brand On You (2:58)
21. Any Time Is The Right Time (3:42)
22. Here I Am Again (3:24)
23. Married But Not To Each Other (3:43)
24. Who's The Fool (2:39)
25. Radio Ad For 'trapped By A Thing Called Love' Album (1:03)
26. Radio Ad For 'on The Loose' Album (0:56)

Unlike so many other blues vocalists who just reinterpret material given to them by songwriters, Denise LaSalle was a seriously talented songwriter. Although her soul-blues style had strong urban contemporary overtones at times, it's best to think of LaSalle as a modern-day Bessie Smith, because that's really what she was. She wrote funny songs full of sassy attitude, and it's an attitude she carried with her on-stage. Off-stage, LaSalle accommodated all autograph seekers and gladly obliged journalists and radio disc jockeys.

The Jackson, Tennessee-based LaSalle was raised in Belzoni, Mississippi (also home to Joe Willie "PineTop" Perkins some years earlier), but she got started singing in local churches around Leflore County. She was born July 16, 1939, as Denise Craig. Growing up, she listened to Grand Ole Opry radio broadcasts, and then lived across the street from a juke joint in Belzoni. LaSalle's early influences, from the jukeboxes around Belzoni and over the radio, included Ruth Brown, Dinah Washington, and LaVern Baker. LaSalle moved north to Chicago when she was in her early twenties and would attend shows at the Regal Theatre, always returning home to write songs. She got to know blues musicians and began giving her songs to them, until one day a Chess Records executive stopped by at Mixer's Lounge, where LaSalle was working as a bar maid. He listened to one of her songs and took it down to Chess Records, and the company later signed her as a vocalist, but never recorded her. Two years later, LaSalle recorded and produced her own record with the help of Billy "The Kid" Emerson, the Chess executive who'd originally shown an interest in her. After the record made some waves on local radio, Chess stepped in and purchased the master and took it to Europe. Meanwhile, LaSalle continued writing songs and sitting in with blues musicians around the Chicago clubs.

LaSalle's first big hit came about in 1971 when her "Trapped by a Thing Called Love" broke on the radio in Chicago and then Detroit. That record was for the Westbound label, and then she signed with ABC Records in 1975, cutting three albums in three years until the label was sold to MCA. After MCA dropped her because of the label's "difficulty in promoting black acts" at that time, she continued performing as much as she could in Chicago and Memphis. In 1980, a Malaco executive called to ask her to write a song for Z.Z. Hill. A positive relationship with the company quickly developed, which resulted in LaSalle recording 11 discs for the label, including Lady in the Street (1983), Right Place, Right Time (1984), Love Talkin' (1985), Hittin' Where It Hurts (1989), Still Trapped (1990), Still Bad (1994), and Smokin' in Bed (1997).

While her Malaco sides are probably her most important recordings, other than the original of her early-'70s hit "Trapped," she also released excellent gospel crossover material, including This Real Woman (2000) and There's No Separation (2001) on Ordena Records, before she returned to secular music with albums such as Pay Before You Pump (2007) on Ecko Records and 24 Hour Woman (2010) back on Malaco. In January 2018, LaSalle died in Jackson, Tennessee at the age of 78, after suffering serious complications and health issues related to an earlier fall from which she never completely recovered.

I Get What I Want
Making A Good Thing Better

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Various - On The Chitlin Circuit 2 albums: Southern Soul Hits / Vol. 2: Memphis Soul Blues

The "Chitlin Circuit" is a collection of performance venues throughout the eastern, southern, and upper midwest areas of the United States that were safe and acceptable for African American musicians, comedians, and other entertainers to perform in during the era of racial segregation in the United States (from at least the early 19th century through the 1960s). In the 21st century, the term is applied to the venues, especially in the South, where contemporary African-American blues singers such as Bobby Rush, Denise LaSalle, and O.B. Buchana continue to appear regularly. The name derives from the soul food item chitterlings (stewed pig intestines).

Noted theaters and night clubs on the Chitlin' Circuit included the Royal Peacock in Atlanta; the Carver Theatre in Birmingham, Alabama; the Harlem Duke Social Club in Mobile (Prichard), Alabama; Cotton Club, Smalls Paradise and the Apollo Theater in Harlem, New York City; Robert's Show Lounge, Club DeLisa and the Regal Theatre in Chicago; the Howard Theatre in Washington, D.C.; the Uptown Theatre in Philadelphia; the Royal Theatre in Baltimore; the Fox Theatre in Detroit; the Victory Grill in Austin, Texas; the Hippodrome Theatre in Richmond, Virginia; the Ritz Theatre in Jacksonville, Florida; Club Eaton in historic Eatonville, Florida; Abe's 506 Club in Pensacola, Florida's Historic Belmont-DeVilliers Neighborhood, the Manhattan Casino in St. Petersburg, Florida, the Red Bird Cafe in Frenchtown, Tallahassee, Florida, Club Cherry in Lebanon, Kentucky, The Madam C. J. Walker Theatre on Indiana Avenue in Indianapolis.

Album: On The Chitlin Circuit: Southern Soul Hits
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:44
Size: 139.0 MB
Styles: Retro soul, R&B
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[3:49] 1. Quinn Golden - Party On The Weekend
[5:02] 2. Carl Sims - It Ain't A Juke Joint Without The Blues
[4:17] 3. Bill Coday - On The Chitlin Circuit
[3:25] 4. Lee Shot Williams - Just Another Hole In The Wall
[4:43] 5. Denise Lasalle - X-Rated
[4:26] 6. Lee Shot Williams - Cheatin' Is A Risk
[4:49] 7. Sheba Potts-Wright - Slow Roll It
[4:03] 8. Chuck Roberson - You've Been Caught
[4:03] 9. Dr. Feelgood Potts - Make It Talk
[4:32] 10. Sheba Potts-Wright - Leave Me Alone
[4:23] 11. O.B. Buchana - Sue's Café
[4:05] 12. Denise Lasalle - You Shoulda Kept It In The Bedroom
[4:00] 13. Quinn Golden - Bottoms Up
[5:00] 14. Ollie Nightingale - I'll Drink Your Bathwater Baby

On The Chitlin Circuit: Southern Soul Hits mc
On The Chitlin Circuit: Southern Soul Hits zippy

Album: On The Chitlin' Circuit Vol. 2: Memphis Soul Blues
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:16
Size: 151.7 MB
Styles: Retro-soul, R&B
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[6:15] 1. Rufus Thomas - Big Fine Hunk Of Woman
[6:00] 2. Denise Lasalle - Walking On Beale Street And Crying
[4:45] 3. Carl Sims - It's Just A Party
[3:59] 4. Bill Coday - Her Love Is Good Enough To Put In Collard Greens
[4:16] 5. Quinn Golden - Hole In The Wall
[3:42] 6. Barbara Carr - Stroke It
[4:07] 7. Ollie Nightingale - Cafe Woman
[4:37] 8. Sheba Potts-Wright - I Need A Cowboy To Ride My Pony
[4:40] 9. Denise Lasalle - It's Going Down
[5:21] 10. Charles Wilson - Backdoor Lover
[4:40] 11. Ms. Jody - Big Daddy Don't You Come
[3:43] 12. Quinn Golden - It's Saturday
[6:01] 13. O. B. Buchana - I'm Going Back Home
[4:03] 14. Dr. Feelgood Potts - All Blues Saturday

On The Chitlin' Circuit Vol. 2: Memphis Soul Blues mc
On The Chitlin' Circuit Vol. 2: Memphis Soul Blues zippy

Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Various - The Best Of Southern Soul Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:56
Size: 146.3 MB
Styles: Soul, Blues
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[6:43] 1. Denise Lasalle - Mississippi Woman
[3:48] 2. O. B. Buchana - She's Got The Best Lovin' That Ever Put On A Pair Of Drawers
[3:58] 3. Donnie Ray - Just Give Me My Blues
[4:31] 4. Earl Gaines - Meat And Potatoes Man
[4:15] 5. Ms. Jody - He Takes Me Around The World Without Leaving My Bedroom
[4:33] 6. Chuck Roberson - A Whiskey Glass And A Woman's Ass
[4:40] 7. Barbara Carr - Bo Hawg Grind
[3:57] 8. Carl Sims - Mojo Hand
[3:55] 9. Earl Gaines - Good Old Country Boy
[4:56] 10. Denise Lasalle - They Made A Blues Fan Out Of Me
[4:37] 11. Lee Shot Williams - Caught In The Middle
[4:19] 12. Luther Lackey - The New Orleans Blues
[5:24] 13. Chuck Roberson - She Made A Hoochie Man Out Of Me
[4:12] 14. Rick Lawson - Let The Past Be The Past

Perhaps one of the most modern forms of blues, Soul-Blues fuses disparate elements of black popular music to create a wholly urban amalgam of its own. Artists who wanted to move stylistically beyond the three-chord confines of conventional blues forms found the rhythm & blues strain of the 1950s and the southern soul style of the mid-'60s far more to their creative liking. Soul-blues combines the best elements of the two and blends that with the standard blues band instrumentation -- sometimes augmented with an R&B-styled horn section. The genre also provides more traditional blues artists with a style to visit on occasion, injecting some contemporary life into their recordings. ~AllMusic

The Best Of Southern Soul Blues mc
The Best Of Southern Soul Blues zippy

Sunday, May 22, 2016

VA - Blues From The Montreux Jazz Festival

Size: 177,3 MB
Time: 75:38
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1991
Styles: Blues Soul
Art: Front

01. Bobby 'Blue' Bland - Intro & Stormy Monday (1:39)
02. Bobby 'Blue' Bland - That's The Way Love Is (3:17)
03. Bobby 'Blue' Bland - Farther Up The Road/I Pity The Fool (2:40)
04. Bobby 'Blue' Bland - Share Your Love With Me (2:53)
05. Bobby 'Blue' Bland - I've Got The Right To Know (4:03)
06. Bobby 'Blue' Bland - St. James Infirmary/I'll Take Care Of You (4:50)
07. Denise Lasalle - Lady In The Street/Down Home Blues/The Blues Is Alright (6:37)
08. Denise Lasalle - Make Me Yours - Precious Memories/Trapped By A Thing Called Love (5:43)
09. Denise Lasalle - Don't Mess With My Tu-Tu (3:27)
10. Denise Lasalle - Don't Cry No More (4:20)
11. Johnnie Taylor - Who's Making Love/Blue Bird (5:39)
12. Johnnie Taylor - Cheaper To Keep Her (4:20)
13. Johnnie Taylor - I Believe In You (You Believe In Me) (4:50)
14. Johnnie Taylor - I Found A Love (3:59)
15. Mostley & Johnson - Hold On I'm Coming/Knock On Wood (5:18)
16. Mostley & Johnson - Let's Fall In Love (4:06)
17. Mostley & Johnson - When Something Is Wrong With My Baby (3:52)
18. Mostley & Johnson - Soul Man (3:57)

Recorded at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland, during the Malaco Records European Tour in 1989, it features Bobby Bland, Denise LaSalle, Johnnie Taylor, and Mosley & Johnson. Anything LaSalle has done lately is worth listening to, and it's nice to have a snapshot of her in-concert style. ~ Niles J. Frantz

Blues From The Montreux Jazz Festival