Showing posts with label Earl Hooker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Earl Hooker. Show all posts

Thursday, September 15, 2022

Earl Hooker - Don't Have To Worry [Vinyl]

Source: Vinyl
Size: 95.4 MB
Time: 40:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1970
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front & Back

01. The Sky Is Crying (4:12)
02. Hookin' (4:13)
03. Is You Ever Seen A One-Eyed Woman Cry (3:38)
04. You Got To Lose (5:33)
05. Blue Guitar (3:46)
06. Moanin' And Groanin' (4:36)
07. Universal Rock (4:01)
08. Look Over Yonder Wall (3:03)
09. Don't Have To Worry (4:11)
10. Come To Me Right Away, Baby (3:35)

Personnel:
Guitar – Earl Hooker, Paul Asbell
Harmonica – Jeffrey M. Carp
Piano, Organ – Johnny "Big Moose" Walker
Bass Guitar – Chester E. "Gino" Skaggs
Drums – Roosevelt Shaw
Vocals - Little Andrew "Blues Boy" Odum (1, 6, 10)
Vocals - Johnny "Big Moose" Walker (3, 8)
Vocals - Earl Hooker (4, 9)

Recorded May 29,1969 at Vault Recording Studio, Los Angeles.

If there was a more immaculate slide guitarist residing in Chicago during the 1950s and '60s than Earl Hooker, his name has yet to surface. Boasting a fretboard touch so smooth and clean that every note rang as clear and precise as a bell, Hooker was an endlessly inventive axeman who would likely have been a star had his modest vocal abilities matched his instrumental prowess and had he not been dogged by tuberculosis (it killed him at age 41).

Born in the Mississippi Delta, Hooker arrived in Chicago as a child. There he was influenced by another slide wizard, veteran Robert Nighthawk. But Hooker never remained still for long. He ran away from home at age 13, journeying to Mississippi. After another stint in Chicago, he rambled back to the Delta again, playing with Ike Turner and Sonny Boy Williamson. Hooker made his first recordings in 1952 and 1953 for Rockin', King, and Sun. At the latter, he recorded some terrific sides with pianist Pinetop Perkins (Sam Phillips inexplicably sat on Hooker's blazing rendition of "The Hucklebuck").

Back in Chicago again, Hooker's dazzling dexterity was intermittently showcased on singles for Argo, C.J., and Bea & Baby during the mid- to late '50s before he joined forces with producer Mel London (owner of the Chief and Age logos) in 1959. For the next four years, he recorded both as sideman and leader for the producer, backing Junior Wells, Lillian Offitt, Ricky Allen, and A.C. Reed and cutting his own sizzling instrumentals ("Blue Guitar," "Blues in D-Natural"). He also contributed pungent slide work to Muddy Waters' Chess waxing "You Shook Me." Opportunities to record grew sparse after Age folded; Hooker made some tantalizing sides for Sauk City, WI's Cuca Records from 1964 to 1968 (several featuring steel guitar virtuoso Freddie Roulette).

Hooker's amazing prowess (he even managed to make the dreaded wah-wah pedal a viable blues tool) finally drew increased attention during the late '60s. He cut LPs for Arhoolie, ABC-BluesWay, and Blue Thumb that didn't equal what he'd done at Age, but they did serve to introduce Hooker to an audience outside Chicago and wherever his frequent travels deposited him. But tuberculosis halted his wandering ways permanently in 1970. ~Bill Dahl

Don't Have To Worry [Vinyl] MP3
Don't Have To Worry [Vinyl] FLAC

Thursday, April 7, 2022

Earl Hooker - The Moon Is Rising

Album: The Moon Is Rising
Size: 182,4 MB
Time: 78:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1998
Styles: Blues
Art: Full

1. The Moon Is Rising (7:01)
2. Earl's Blues (3:22)
3. Conversion Blues (4:48)
4. Guitar Rag (4:34)
5. Hooker N' Steve (6:45)
6. I'm Your Main Man (3:38)
7. New Riviera (4:18)
8. Strung Out Woman Blues (4:58)
9. Little Carey's Jump (3:51)
10. Take Me Back To East St. Louis (4:13)
11. Improvisations On Dust My Broom (7:43)
12. Improvisations On Frosty (6:40)
13. Can't Hold Out Much Longer (9:13)
14. Swingin' At Theresa's (7:49)

The first eight tracks of this 79-minute compilation of late-'60s material originally appeared on Arhoolie's Hooker'n'Steve LP; a couple of others showed up on Arhoolie's His First & Last Recordings, while the four remaining cuts were previously unreleased. Hooker didn't have long to live when these were laid down in 1968 and (for the most part) 1969, but he's in real good form on guitar, although he only takes an occasional vocal (other band members help out on other tracks, and some are instrumental).

Indications are from the liner notes that the sessions were run on a no-frills budget, but it's very respectable '60s Chicago electric blues with a shade of funky soul and a hot live feel, and Hooker's guitar has an upfront bite and presence. Actually, the instrumentals are highlights, particularly "Hooker N' Steve" with its smoking guitar-organ duets. /Richie Unterberger, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

The Moon Is Rising mc
The Moon Is Rising zippy

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Earl Hooker - Rockin' Wild: 1952-1963 Recordings

Size: 175,5 MB
Time: 73:28
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. Blue Guitar (2:46)
02. Blues In D Natural (2:14)
03. Rockin' Wild (2:08)
04. Win The Dance (2:04)
05. Rockin' With The Kid (2:08)
06. Universal Rock (With Junior Wells) (2:32)
07. Galloping Horses A Lazy Mule (With Junior Wells) (2:35)
08. Calling All Blues (With Junior Wells) (2:34)
09. Off The Hook (1:42)
10. Frog Hop (2:27)
11. Swear To Tell The Truth (2:33)
12. Apache War Dance (2:18)
13. This Little Voice (2:22)
14. Nothing But Good (With Reggie Boyd) (2:29)
15. The Bright Sound (2:14)
16. That Man (2:32)
17. Oh, Mama (2:48)
18. You'd Better Be Sure (2:19)
19. That Ain't Right (1:59)
20. I Wanna Be Free (2:38)
21. These Cotton Pickin' Blues (2:45)
22. Crying Blues (2:00)
23. I Stay Mad (2:52)
24. Lotta Lovin' (2:49)
25. Race Track (2:30)
26. The Leading Brand (2:36)
27. Want You To Rock Me (With Jackie Brenston) (3:07)
28. Little By Little (With Junior Wells & Willie Dixon) (2:34)
29. Don't You Ever Forget It (2:28)
30. How Long Can This Go On (2:11)

Earl Hooker was the "blues guitarists' guitarist," the most respected six-string wizard in Chicago blues musicians' circles during the 1950s and '60s. A cousin of John Lee Hooker and a protégé of slide guitar master Robert Nighthawk, Hooker was an endlessly inventive axeman who would likely have been a star had his modest vocal abilities matched his instrumental prowess and had he not suffered from chronic tuberculosis, which would lead to his death at the tender age of 41. This collector's CD presents most of Hooker's finest output. It complies 30 remastered tracks, including those sensational and hard-to-find sides he recorded for a variety of labels between 1952 and 1963. EARL HOOKER, electric guitar (and lead vocals on track 4), plus: Junior Wells (vocals & harmonica), Jackie Brenston, Lillian Offitt (vocals), A.C. Reed (vocals & tenor sax), Julian Beasley (alto sax), Earnest Johnson (bass), Lafayette Leake, Pinetop Perkins (piano), Johnny "Big Moose" Walker (organ & piano), Bobby Little (drums), among others. Recorded in Chicago, between 1952 and 1963.

Rockin' Wild MP3
Rockin' Wild FLAC

Friday, February 14, 2020

Earl Hooker - The Chief Sessions

Year: 2020
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 19:44
Size: 46,0 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Front

1. Will My Man Be Home Tonight (2:39)
2. Oh Mama (2:49)
3. Calling All Blues (2:35)
4. Galloping Horses A Lazy Mule (2:34)
5. Blues In D Natural (2:15)
6. Universal Rock (2:32)
7. Rockin' With Kid (2:09)
8. Rockin' Wild (2:09)

If there was a more immaculate slide guitarist residing in Chicago during the 1950s and '60s than Earl Hooker, his name has yet to surface. Boasting a fretboard touch so smooth and clean that every note rang as clear and precise as a bell, Hooker was an endlessly inventive axeman who would likely have been a star had his modest vocal abilities matched his instrumental prowess and had he not been dogged by tuberculosis (it killed him at age 41).

Born in the Mississippi Delta, Hooker arrived in Chicago as a child. There he was influenced by another slide wizard, veteran Robert Nighthawk. But Hooker never remained still for long. He ran away from home at age 13, journeying to Mississippi. After another stint in Chicago, he rambled back to the Delta again, playing with Ike Turner and Sonny Boy Williamson. Hooker made his first recordings in 1952 and 1953 for Rockin', King, and Sun. At the latter, he recorded some terrific sides with pianist Pinetop Perkins (Sam Phillips inexplicably sat on Hooker's blazing rendition of "The Hucklebuck").

Back in Chicago again, Hooker's dazzling dexterity was intermittently showcased on singles for Argo, C.J., and Bea & Baby during the mid- to late '50s before he joined forces with producer Mel London (owner of the Chief and Age logos) in 1959. For the next four years, he recorded both as sideman and leader for the producer, backing Junior Wells, Lillian Offitt, Ricky Allen, and A.C. Reed and cutting his own sizzling instrumentals ("Blue Guitar," "Blues in D-Natural"). He also contributed pungent slide work to Muddy Waters' Chess waxing "You Shook Me." Opportunities to record grew sparse after Age folded; Hooker made some tantalizing sides for Sauk City, WI's Cuca Records from 1964 to 1968 (several featuring steel guitar virtuoso Freddie Roulette).

Hooker's amazing prowess (he even managed to make the dreaded wah-wah pedal a viable blues tool) finally drew increased attention during the late '60s. He cut LPs for Arhoolie, ABC-BluesWay, and Blue Thumb that didn't equal what he'd done at Age, but they did serve to introduce Hooker to an audience outside Chicago and wherever his frequent travels deposited him. But tuberculosis halted his wandering ways permanently in 1970. /Biography by Bill Dahl, AllMusic

The Chief Sessions mc
The Chief Sessions zippy

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

Wednesday, April 3, 2019

VA - Sun Blues Archives & Rarities 1950-1958

Size: 404,7 MB
Time: 171:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

01. Albert Williams - Hoo Doo Man (Memphis Al) (2:48)
02. Albert Williams - Rumble Chillen (2:29)
03. Albert Williams - Shine Boy (2:27)
04. Bonnie Turner - Love Is A Gamble (2:07)
05. Bonnie Turner - Old Brother Jack (2:48)
06. Boyd Gilmore - Believe I'll Settle Down (3:07)
07. David Honeyboy Edwards - Sweet Home Chicago (2:55)
08. Earl Hooker - Blue Guitar (2:47)
09. Earl Hooker - Move On Down The Line (2:15)
10. Earl Hooker - Steel Guitar Rag (2:53)
11. Earl Hooker - The Drive (2:19)
12. Earl Hooker - The Hucklebuck (3:04)
13. Hot Shot Love - Harpin' On It (2:27)
14. Houston Strokes - Carry My Business On (2:34)
15. Houston Strokes - Standing In The Courthouse Crying (3:00)
16. Houston Strokes - Baby's Gone And Left Me (2:11)
17. Houston Strokes - Blue And Lonesome (2:03)
18. James Cotton - Cotton Crop Blues (2:57)
19. James Cotton - Hold Me In Your Arms (2:48)
20. James Cotton - My Baby (2:25)
21. James Cotton - Straighten Up Baby (2:18)
22. Joe Hill Louis - Dorothy Mae (2:06)
23. Joe Hill Louis - Hydramatic Woman (2:32)
24. Joe Hill Louis - I'm A Poor Boy (2:57)
25. Joe Hill Louis - Keep Your Arms Around Me (2:58)
26. Joe Hill Louis - She May Be Yours (Sweetest Gal In Town) (2:52)
27. Joe Hill Louis - Tiger Man (3:13)
28. Joe Hill Louis - When I Am Gone (She Treats Me Mean And Evil) (3:45)
29. Johnny O'Neal - Dead Letter Blues (3:30)
30. Johnny O'Neal - Johnny's Dream (2:54)
31. Johnny O'Neal - Ugly Woman (Peg Leg Baby) (2:22)
32. Kenneth Banks - Blue Man (3:20)
33. Kenneth Banks - High (2:25)
34. L.C. Hubert - Lucy Done Moved (2:28)
35. Little Junior - Feelin' Bad (2:41)
36. Little Milton - Alone And Blue (3:11)
37. Little Milton - Beggin' My Baby (2:27)
38. Little Milton - Homesick For My Baby (2:49)
39. Little Milton - I Love My Baby (2:58)
40. Little Milton - If You Love Me (2:34)
41. Little Milton - Lookin' For My Baby (2:52)
42. Little Milton - Re-Beep (2:35)
43. Little Milton - Rode That Train (Lookin' For My Baby) (2:47)
44. Little Milton - She's My Queen (2:32)
45. Little Milton - Somebody Told Me (2:57)
46. Mose Vinson - 44 Blues (2:31)
47. Mose Vinson - Come See Me (Aka My Love Has Gone) (2:09)
48. Mose Vinson - Mistreatin' Boogie (2:34)
49. Mose Vinson - Reap What You Sow (2:44)
50. Mose Vinson - Worry You Off My Mind (3:09)
51. Pat Hare - Bonus Pay (2:07)
52. Pat Hare - Cheating And Lying Blues (Aka I'm Gonna Murder My Baby) (2:57)
53. Pinetop Perkins - Pinetop's Boogie Woogie (2:47)
54. Raymond Hill - I'm Back Pretty Baby (2:39)
55. Raymond Hill - Long Gone Raymond (2:38)
56. Raymond Hill - My Baby Left Me (2:25)
57. Raymond Hill - Somebody's Been Carryin' Your Rollin' On (2:57)
58. Tot Randolph - Blues Train (2:34)
59. Walter Bradford - Love For My Baby (2:18)
60. Walter Bradford - Reward For My Baby (3:01)
61. Walter Bradford - Too Blue To Cry (2:45)
62. Willie Johnson & Sammy Lewis - Gonna Leave You Baby (2:21)
63. Willie Johnson & Sammy Lewis - I Feel So Worried (2:06)
64. Willie Johnson & Sammy Lewis - So Long Baby Goodbye (2:07)

Sun Blues Archives & Rarities 1950-1958

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Earl Hooker - Blue Guitar: The Chief/Age/U.S.A. Sessions 1960-1963

Year: 2001
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:30
Size: 166,8 MB
Styles: Blues
Scans: Full

1. Will My Man Be Home Tonight (Vocal by Lillian Offitt) (2:39)
2. Oh Mama (Vocal by Lillian Offitt) (2:49)
3. Calling All Blues (w. Junior Wells) (2:35)
4. Swear To Tell The Truth (Vocal by Harold Tidewell) (2:34)
5. Galloping Horses A Lazy Mule (w. Junior Wells) (2:34)
6. Blues In D Natural (2:15)
7. Universal Rock (w. Junior Wells) (2:32)
8. Apache War Dance (2:18)
9. Rockin' With Kid (2:09)
10. Rockin' Wild (2:09)
11. This Little Voice (Vocal by A.C. Reed) (2:23)
12. I Wanna Be Free (Vocal by A.C. Reed) (2:38)
13. That Ain't Right (Vocal by A.C. Reed) (2:00)
14. Blue Guitar (2:42)
15. How Long Can This Go On (2:13)
16. Nothing But Good (w. Reggie Boyd) (2:29)
17. These Cotton Pickin' Blues (2:45)
18. Off The Hook (1:43)
19. That Man (2:32)
20. The Bright Sound (2:15)
21. Win The Dance (2:04)
22. You'd Better Be Sure (Vocal by Ricky Allen) (2:19)
23. Crying Blues (Vocal by A.C. Reed) (2:00)
24. I Stay Mad (Vocal by A.C. Reed) (2:52)
25. Lotta Lovin' (Vocal by A.C. Reed) (2:49)
26. The Leading Brand (2:36)
27. Want You To Rock Me (Vocal by Jackie Brenston) (3:08)
28. Little By Little (Vocal by Ricky Allen) (2:48)
29. Don't You Ever Forget It (Vocal by Ricky Allen) (2:27)

Widespread respect for Earl Hooker, one of the unsung giants of the blues, is long overdue, and his rather limited available discography belies a great original talent. P-Vine Japan has attempted to put this right with Blue Guitar: The Chief and Age Sessions 1960-1963, an intelligent and authoritative collection of Hooker's early-'60s heyday, containing instrumental classics such as "Blue Guitar" and "Blues in D Natural." Both sound quality and packaging supersede all previous reissues of this work and, as such, this release becomes perhaps the cornerstone of any Earl Hooker collection. /Thomas Ward, AllMusic

(For personnel and session details, see artwork included.)

Blue Guitar: The Chief/Age/U.S.A. Sessions 1960-1963 mc
Blue Guitar: The Chief/Age/U.S.A. Sessions 1960-1963 zippy

Monday, October 22, 2018

Earl Hooker - Play Your Guitar Mr. Hooker!

Year: 1985/1993
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:25
Size: 87,1 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. Swear To Tell The Truth (2:08)
2. You Took All My Love (3:42)
3. All Your Love (2:35)
4. Everything Gonna Be Alright (3:36)
5. Frosty (2:47)
6. The Misfit (Got To Keep Movin') (2:25)
7. Earl Hooker Blues (4:12)
8. Reconsider Baby (2:30)
9. Hot And Heavy (Alternate Take) (1:56)
10. She's Fine (2:15)
11. Dynamite (1:53)
12. Hello Baby (2:29)
13. Dust My Broom (4:52)

1964-1967 output by the guitarist that was largely done for the tiny Cuca logo of Sauk City, WI. The normally tight-lipped Hooker proves that he could sing on this romping version of "Swear to Tell the Truth," while A.C. Reed, Little Tommy, Frank Clark, and Muddy Waters, Jr. help out behind the mike elsewhere. A pair of live cuts from 1968 find Hooker stretching out in amazing fashion. /Bill Dahl, AllMusic

Note: CD reissue without the "I Got You (I Feel Good)" track of the '85 vinyl release. "Hello Baby" probably recorded as a demo tape by Earl and Band. For personnel and session details, see artwork included.

Play Your Guitar Mr. Hooker! mc
Play Your Guitar Mr. Hooker! zippy

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Various Artists - Chicago Blues From C.J. Records Vol. 2

Year: 1997
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:03
Size: 116,1 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Scans: Full

1. Earl Hooker - Do The Chicken (2:33)
2. Earl Hooker - Yea Yea (2:00)
3. Earl Hooker - Wild Moments (2:41)
4. Homesick James - Set A Date (2:38)
5. Homesick James - Can't Afford To Do It (2:33)
6. Lee Jackson - Juanita (3:37)
7. Lee Jackson - Apollo 17 (2:47)
8. Lee Jackson - Pleadin' For Love (2:44)
9. Lee Jackson - Chop Suey (2:35)
10. Harold Tidwell - Sweet Suzie (2:05)
11. Harold Tidwell - Senorita Juanita (2:01)
12. Bobby Colquitt & String Bean - Million Dollar Playgirl (2:39)
13. Betty Everett w. Earl Hooker All Stars - Happy I Long To Be (1:54)
14. Morris Jones & Betty Everett - This House (2:59)
15. William Carter - Goin' Out West (3:26)
16. William Carter - Don't Make Me Mad (3:15)
17. Bobby Davis - Sweet Song (2:49)
18. Morris Jones - Her Spare (2:35)
19. Willie Milan - Tell Daddy Baby (2:03)

On this second release of C.J., Colt and Firma recordings of Carl Jones we are treated to six tracks by the legendary Earl Hooker, two of them with Hooker's band backing Little Richard style rocker Harold Tidwell as well as one by Hooker and his band backing Betty Everett. We are also treated to four titles by Lee Jackson who also appears on Wolf's Bea & Baby cds and Wolf's Abco Chicago Blues cds. Two red hot slide guitar rockers are turned in by Homesick James Williamson, Elmore James' cousin and rhythm guitarist (for many a year).

The two preformances by the lesser known Richard Gary with Bombay Carter's Band are superb blues. (Bombay Carter played behind J.B. Hutto as a Hawk on Delmark Records as did Lee Jackson.) Betty Everett's other track on this cd is Betty and none other than Carl Jones himself on vocals under the moniker of "Morris Jones". Of real pleasure and surprise to many fans will be the tunes of Bobby Colquitt & Stringbean, their "Million Dollar Playgirl" could have been a million dollar seller if promoted, and Bobby Davis turns in a nice soulful blues performance on "Sweet Song". /From the liner notes by Ron Bartolucci

Chicago Blues From C.J. Records Vol. 2 mc
Chicago Blues From C.J. Records Vol. 2 zippy

Friday, May 4, 2018

Earl Hooker - The Genius Of Earl Hooker

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:46
Size: 91.0 MB
Styles: Delta blues, Chicago blues
Year: 1967/2006
Art: Front

[5:47] 1. Two Bugs In A Rug
[2:52] 2. Hold On, I'm Comin'
[4:03] 3. Off The Hook
[3:41] 4. Dust My Broom
[1:58] 5. Hot And Heavy
[3:05] 6. The Screwdriver
[3:53] 7. Bertha
[1:54] 8. The Foxtrot
[4:30] 9. End Of The Blues
[2:14] 10. Walking The Floor Over You
[2:34] 11. Hooker Special
[3:09] 12. Something You Ate

This rare circa-1967 album has what you'd expect from a vintage Earl Hooker LP: blues instrumentals with unfailingly stinging guitar, a relaxed groove, and soul-tinged arrangements bolstered by solid organ. If it's mighty reliable in what it delivers, it also has to be said that there aren't many surprises, the tracks coming close to very high-class blues background music in some senses. As that limited genre goes, however, this is at the top of that class, Hooker throwing in enough energetic flourishes, swoops, and musical equivalents of exclamation points to not just keep things interesting, but also keep a smile on your face. A few familiar blues and soul tunes are covered here, including "Dust My Broom," "Hold On, I'm Coming," and "Something You Got," the last of these unappetizingly retitled "Something You Ate." But for the most part the program is original, including one number, "Bertha," that seems to look toward Santo & Johnny's sleepy slide guitar workouts for inspiration. ~Richie Unterberger

The Genius Of Earl Hooker mc
The Genius Of Earl Hooker zippy

Saturday, April 14, 2018

Earl Hooker - Sweet Black Angel

Year: 1970/1994
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:11
Size: 65,5 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. I Feel Good (2:02)
2. Drivin' Wheel (3:19)
3. Shuffle (2:49)
4. Country And Western (3:05)
5. Sweet Home Chicago (2:52)
6. Sweet Black Angel (2:31)
7. Boogie, Don't Blot! (2:26)
8. Cross Cut Saw (2:24)
9. Catfish Blues (2:36)
10. The Mood (1:37)
11. Funky Blues (2:26)

Ike Turner co-produced this set with Blue Thumb Records boss Bob Krasnow. It's a wide-ranging collection, as its oddly generic song titles ("Country and Western," "Shuffle," "Funky Blues") would eloquently indicate. /Bill Dahl, AllMusic

Sweet Black Angel mc
Sweet Black Angel zippy

Thursday, February 1, 2018

Earl Hooker - Hooker And Steve

Year : 1970
Bitrate : 320K/s
Total Time : 39:24
Total Size : 91,2 MB
Styles: Chicago Blues, Electric Blues
Scans: Front

1. The Moon Is Rising (7:00)
2. Earl's Blues (3:22)
3. Conversion Blues (4:48)
4. Guitar Rag (4:33)
5. Hooker n' Steve (6:45)
6. I'm Your Main Man (3:37)
7. New Riviera (4:18)
8. Strung-Out Woman Blues (4:58)

Earl Hooker is considered to be one of the most important blues guitarists of the post-war era.
Credits : Geno Skaggs bass, vocals - Bobby Johnson drums - Earl Hooker guitar, vocals - Stephen Miller organ, piano, vocals - Louis Myers harmonica
https://www.allmusic.com/artist/earl-hooker-mn0000150062/biography

Hooker And Steve

Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Various - Bea And Baby Records Presents The Best Of Chicago Blues (Vol. 1 of 3 Volumes)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:53
Size: 153.1 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1994/2017
Art: Front

[3:04] 1. Homesick James - My Baby Gone
[3:18] 2. Homesick James - My Kind Of Woman
[3:15] 3. Homesick James - Homesick Sunnyland Special
[3:03] 4. James Cotton - One More Mile
[1:45] 5. James Cotton - There Must Be A Panic
[2:42] 6. Hound Dog Taylor - My Baby's Coming Home
[2:06] 7. Hound Dog Taylor - Five 'take Five'
[2:04] 8. Eddie Boyd - Thank You Baby
[2:31] 9. Eddie Boyd - Blue Monday Blues
[2:47] 10. Eddie Boyd - The Blues Is Here To Stay
[2:35] 11. Eddie Boyd - I'm Commin' Home
[3:00] 12. Eddie Boyd - All The Way
[2:47] 13. Eddie Boyd - Where You Belong
[2:19] 14. Little Mack Simmons - Don't Come Back
[2:25] 15. Little Mack Simmons - Times Are Getting Tougher
[2:12] 16. Little Mack Simmons - I'm Your Fool
[2:01] 17. Little Mack Simmons - Let Out Of Jail
[2:23] 18. Earl Hooker - Dynamite
[2:48] 19. Bobby Saxton - Trying To Make A Living
[2:26] 20. L.C. Mc.Kinley - Sharpest Man In Town
[3:45] 21. Sunnyland Slim - Too Late To Pray
[2:44] 22. Sunnyland Slim - House Rock
[2:48] 23. Andrew McMahon In The Wilderness - Special Agent
[3:33] 24. Willie Williams - 38 Woman
[2:21] 25. Willie Williams - Somebody Changed The Lock

For nearly 20 years beginning in 1959, Chicago businessman Narvel Eatmon (aka Cadillac Baby) presided over his Bea & Baby record label, by far the most enduring of his many investments, which included a nightclub, a record store, an appliance repair service, and a confectionary. Some seven years after his demise, Wolf Records released a 24-track sampler from the Bea & Baby catalog. The lineup is very impressive, and reflects the original label's profile pretty well. It includes guitarists Hound Dog Taylor, Homesick James Williamson, L.G. McKinley, Robert Jr. Lockwood, and Earl Zebedee Hooker; pianists Eddie Boyd and Sunnyland Slim; blues harpists James Cotton, Carey Bell, and Little Mack Simmons; singing drummer Willie Williams; and vocalists Bobby Saxton and Andrew McMahon. This compilation is very similar to The Best of Cadillac: Meat & Gravy, a Bea & Baby "best-of" released by Culture Press in 1998. Unfortunately, the two simultaneously issued collections have 16 tracks in common. In 2003, Castle Music compounded the confusion by releasing a double-disc Bea & Baby collection called Meat & Gravy. Public comprehension of Cadillac Baby's legacy was muddled even further when the misleadingly titled Cadillac Records, a film based upon the story of the Chess label, came out in 2008. By then the Bea & Baby catalog was being administered by the Earwig Music Company, Inc., and plans were afoot for more careful, comprehensive, and conscientious reissuing. ~arwulf arwulf

Volume 2 tomorrow.
Bea And Baby Records Presents The Best Of Chicago Blues Vol. 1 mc
Bea And Baby Records Presents The Best Of Chicago Blues Vol. 1 zippy

Saturday, January 16, 2016

Earl Hooker - 2 albums: Two Bugs And A Roach / There's A Fungus Amung Us

Album: Two Bugs And A Roach
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:11
Size: 140.1 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1969/1990
Art: Front

[4:16] 1. Two Bugs And A Roach
[4:34] 2. Wah Wah Blues
[5:35] 3. You Don't Love Me
[5:13] 4. Earl Hooker Blues
[6:27] 5. Anna Lee
[3:48] 6. Off The Hook
[4:56] 7. Love Ain't A Play Thing
[5:11] 8. You Don't Want Me
[4:57] 9. The Hook
[5:12] 10. New Sweet Black Angel
[2:18] 11. Move On Down The Line
[3:09] 12. Sweet Black Angel
[2:53] 13. Guitar Rag
[2:35] 14. Earl's Boogie Woogie

Earl Hooker's Two Bugs and a Roach is a varied lot, with vocals from Hooker, Andrew Odom, and Carey Bell in between the instrumentals, all cut in 1968. All in all, it's one of the must-haves in this artist's very small discography -- a nice representative sample from Chicago's unsung master of the electric guitar, including the title track, "Anna Lee," and the atmospheric instrumental, "Off the Hook." [For a compact disc reissue, Arhoolie added some tracks to the original lineup, including two tracks from stray sessions in late 1968 and July, 1969, along with four very early sides probably recorded in Memphis in the company of Pinetop Perkins, Willie Nix, and an unknown bass player. Of these, "Guitar Rag" is the least together, hampered by a bass player who can't find the changes, but "I'm Going Down the Line" and "Earl's Boogie Woogie" are both top-notch uptempo boogies full of fleet fingered soloing. "Sweet Black Angel" was the A-side of a stray single from the early '50s and appears to be from another session, although it's an excellent example of Hooker playing in the Robert Night Hawk style.] ~Cub Koda

Two Bugs And A Roach mc
Two Bugs And A Roach zippy

Album: There's A Fungus Amung Us
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:34
Size: 90.6 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1972/2006
Art: Front

[3:41] 1. Dust My Broom
[1:52] 2. Hot And Heavy
[3:05] 3. The Screwdriver
[3:52] 4. Dust My Broom
[1:54] 5. The Foxtrot
[4:24] 6. The End Of The Blues
[2:14] 7. The Foxtrot
[2:33] 8. Hooker Special
[3:08] 9. Something You Ate
[5:48] 10. Two Bugs In A Rug
[2:52] 11. Hold On
[4:05] 12. Off The Hook

The liner notes state that the musicians contributing bass, drums, organ and tenor sax are unknown, but that rhythm guitar was probably played by Jimmy Dawkins.

There's A Fungus Amung Us mc
There's A Fungus Amung Us zippy

Friday, September 25, 2015

Various - Memphis Blues: The Backstreets

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:42
Size: 157.3 MB
Styles: Memphis blues
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:35] 1. Johnny O'neal - Dead Letter Blues
[2:44] 2. Earl Hooker - Blue Guitar
[2:49] 3. Gordon, Rosco - The Chicken
[2:56] 4. Little Milton - Homesick For My Baby
[3:05] 5. Houston Boines - Crying In The Courthouse
[2:36] 6. Coy Hot Shot Love - Wolf Call Boogie
[3:11] 7. Sleepy John Estes - Policy Man Blues
[2:58] 8. Raymond Hill - The Snuggle
[1:57] 9. Big Lucky Carter - Gonna Break That Lock
[2:49] 10. Calvin Leary - Cummins Prison Farm
[2:05] 11. Cliff Thomas - Treat Me Right
[2:09] 12. Cliff Jackson - Nine Below Zero
[2:30] 13. Don Hosea - Uh Huh Unh
[2:36] 14. Doctor Ross - Juke Box Boogie
[2:29] 15. Frank Frost - Jelly Roll King
[2:59] 16. Big Walter Horton - Easy
[3:02] 17. Harmonica Frank Floyd - Rockin' Chair Daddy
[2:09] 18. Willie Johnson Combo - So Long Baby Goodbye
[3:14] 19. Handy Jackson - Got My Application Baby
[2:48] 20. Ed Kirby (Prince Gabe) - Mean Old Gin
[2:34] 21. Coy Hot Shot Love - Harmonica Jam
[2:39] 22. Carolyn Porter - Man I'm Looking For
[3:07] 23. Boyd Gilmore - Believe I'll Settle Down
[2:58] 24. Big Memphis Ma Rainey - Call Me Anything, But Call Me
[2:30] 25. Albert Williams - Rhumba Chillen

Memphis Blues: The Backstreets mc
Memphis Blues: The Backstreets zippy

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

VA - Sun Record's Epic Blues Cuts Pt. 1 & Pt. 2

Album: Sun Record's Epic Blues Cuts
Size: 112,3 MB
Time: 48:00
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

01 Howlin' Wolf - How Many More Years (2:48)
02 Howlin' Wolf - Wolf Is At Your Door (2:56)
03 Little Junior Parker - Mystery Train (2:28)
04 Rosco Gordon - Do The Chicken Dance With You (2:49)
05 Rosco Gordon - Cheese And Crackers (2:47)
06 Rufus Thomas - Tiger Man (2:51)
07 Eddie Snow - Ain't That Right (2:38)
08 Little Milton - Beggin My Baby (2:23)
09 Billy 'The Kid' Emerson - Move Baby Move (2:43)
10 Billy 'The Kid' Emerson - Red Hot (2:24)
11 Dr. Ross - Juke Box Boogie (2:31)
12 Earl Hooker - Movin On Down The Line Aka Down The Line (2:15)
13 James Cotton - Hold Me In Your Arms (2:48)
14 James Cotton - Straighten Up Baby (2:19)
15 Joe Hill Louis - We All Got To Go Sometime (2:57)
16 Pat Hare - I'm Gonna Murder My Baby (3:11)
17 Willie Johnson - I Feel So Worried (2:34)
18 Frank Frost - Jelly Roll King (2:29)

Sun Record's Epic Blues Cuts

Album: Sun Record's Epic Blues Cuts Pt. 2
Size: 110,0 MB
Time: 46:50
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

01 Howlin' Wolf - Oh Red (2:42)
02 Little Jr. Parker - Feelin Good (2:58)
03 Little Jr. Parker - Love My Baby (2:35)
04 Rosco Gordon - Shoobie Oobie (2:55)
05 Rufus Thomas - Bear Cat (2:50)
06 The Prisonaires - Just Walking In The Rain (2:42)
07 Willie Nix - Baker Shop Boogie (2:45)
08 Albert Williams - Rhumba Chillen (2:30)
09 Billy 'The Kid' Emerson - When It Rains It Pours (3:08)
10 Hot Shot Love - Wolf Call Boogie (2:35)
11 James Cotton - Cotton Crop Blues (3:02)
12 James Cotton - My Baby (2:21)
13 Kenneth Banks - High But High (2:38)
14 Pinetop Perkins - Pinetop's Boogie (2:56)
15 Big Walter Horton - In The Mood (3:00)
16 Joe Hill Louis - Hydramatic Woman (2:29)
17 Little Milton - Lookin For My Baby (2:36)

Sun Record's Epic Blues Cuts Pt. 2

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Various - Sun Blues Archive

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:15
Size: 119.6 MB
Styles: Assorted blues styles
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[2:47] 1. Rufus Thomas - Tiger Man
[3:09] 2. Howlin' Wolf - Decoration Day
[2:57] 3. James Cotton - Cotton Crop Blues
[2:22] 4. Little Junior Parker - Mystery Train
[2:30] 5. Albert Williams - Rhumba Chillen
[2:56] 6. Pinetop Perkins - Pinetop's Boogie
[2:29] 7. Mose Vinson - Forty Four Blues
[2:57] 8. Walter Horton - Grandma Told Grandpa
[2:44] 9. Earl Hooker - Blue Guitar
[2:45] 10. Willie Nix - Baker Shop Boogie
[3:12] 11. Sleepy John Estes - Policy Man
[2:31] 12. Little Milton - Next Time I See You Baby
[3:18] 13. Kenneth Banks - Blue Man
[2:41] 14. Joe Hill Louis - Gotta Go Baby (Gotta Let You Go)
[2:58] 15. Jimmy And Walter - Before Long
[3:02] 16. Harmonica Frank - Rockin Chair Blues
[1:56] 17. Frank Frost - Crawl Back
[2:21] 18. Billy The Kid Emerson - Feel So Good
[2:31] 19. Dr. Ross - Juke Box Boogie

The Sun Sound began when Sam Phillips launched his record company in February of 1952. He named it Sun Records as a sign of his perpetual optimism: a new day and a new beginning. Sam rented a small space at 706 Union Avenue for his own all-purpose studio. The label was launched amid a growing number of independent labels. In a short while Sun gained the reputation throughout Memphis as a label that treated local artists with respect and honesty. Sam provided a non-critical, spontaneous environment that invited creativity and vision.

As a businessman, Phillips was patient and willing to listen to almost anyone who came in off the street to record. Memphis was a happy home to a diverse musical scene: gospel, blues, hillbilly, country, boogie, and western swing. Taking advantage of this range of talent, there were no style limitations at the label. In one form or another Sun recorded them all. Sam Phillips was responsible for some of the most legendary and influential rock 'n' roll recordings of all time, but blues was his first and greatest love, and so the Sun Records vaults are full of seminal blues sides from which this collection draws quite the bounty!

Sun Blues Archive

Monday, December 15, 2014

Various - Jewel Spotlights The Blues Vols 1 & 2

Album: Jewel Spotlights The Blues Vol 1
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 35:49
Size: 82.0 MB
Styles: Electric blues, Soul blues
Year: 1994
Art: Front

[2:48] 1. Carter Brothers - Southern Country Boy
[2:31] 2. Frank Frost - My Back Scratcher
[2:44] 3. Elmore James - Dust My Broom
[3:57] 4. Lightnin' Hopkins - Back Door Friend
[2:42] 5. Little Joe Blue - Standing On The Treshold
[2:49] 6. George Wild Child Butler - Put It All In There
[3:06] 7. Lowell Fulson - Sleeper
[2:59] 8. Big Joe Turner - Night Time Is The Right Time
[2:48] 9. Mac Big With Hubert Sumlin - Rough Dried Woman Pt. 1
[2:44] 10. Hubert Sumlin - Rough Dried Woman Pt. 2 (Instrumental)
[3:48] 11. Willie Dixon - Sex Appeal
[2:49] 12. J.B. Lenior - The Mojo

Jewel Records was founded by Stan Lewis in 1963, and the company became something of a life raft for artists whose contracts with older companies had ended -- thus, Willie Dixon, Frank Frost, Lightnin' Hopkins, Lowell Fulson, Big Joe Turner, and other internationally known names brushed up against more localized talent such as the Carter Brothers and a mysterious figure named Big Mac. This disc is the first in a series of releases highlighting Lewis' blues recordings, which tended toward extrovert electric blues. All of the artists are in good form, if not the top of their game, including Fulson who sings with a graceful soulfulness, while Turner provides the kind of lean, big-band-based R&B on which he built his reputation, slimmed down slightly for '60s sensibilities. The strangest track here is "Rough Dried Woman" parts one and two, featuring Hubert Sumlin on guitar and Big Mac on vocals. Mac, whoever he was, obviously thought he was Howlin' Wolf, even though his voice lacked the depth and power of Wolf's pipes. He tries hard, however, and Sumlin pitches in with a flashy, crunchy performance behind him (and is featured throughout the instrumental second half in one of his best recorded performances). Also, be warned that Kenny Wayne Shepherd, then 16 years old, redubbed the guitar part on Willie Dixon's "Sex Appeal" -- that kid knows his blues, even if his playing is a little flashier than would've been the case circa 1960-whatever, and Dixon gives one of his more charismatic vocal performances. The sound needs no apologies, nor does the series, which is first-rate and starts off really well with this disc. ~Bruce Eder

Jewel Spotlights The Blues Vol 1 mc
Jewel Spotlights The Blues Vol 1 zippy

Album: Jewel Spotlights The Blues Vol 2
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 44:30
Size: 101.9 MB
Styles: Electric blues, Soul blues
Year: 1994
Art: Front

[3:30] 1. Buster Benton - Spider In My Stew
[2:37] 2. Buddy Guy - You Sure Can't Do
[3:29] 3. Otis Rush - Double Trouble
[4:53] 4. Lightnin' Hopkins - Mr. Charlie
[2:23] 5. Ike Turner - Matchbox
[4:28] 6. Willie Dixon - New Way Of Lovin'
[3:46] 7. Little Joe Blue - Gonna Walk On
[3:02] 8. Lightnin' Hopkins - Breakfast Time
[3:48] 9. Buster Benton - Money Is The Name Of The Game
[3:01] 10. Lowell Fulson - My Baby
[4:08] 11. John Lee Hooker - I Feel Good
[2:39] 12. Earl Hooker - Blue Guitar
[2:41] 13. Magic Sam - Everything Gonna Be Alright

The second volume in Jewel Records' blues retrospective features Buster Benton, Buddy Guy, Otis Rush, Lightnin' Hopkins, Willie Dixon, Magic Sam, John Lee Hooker, Lowell Fulson, Earl Hooker, Ike Turner, and Little Joe Blue. Dixon was also the producer on Benton's sessions and wrote "Spider in My Stew" for the latter. The best thing on here, worth the price of the disc, is Lightnin' Hopkins' "Mr. Charlie," with its extraordinary spoken-word introduction, and Ike Turner's "Matchbox" isn't far behind. Willie Dixon's "New Way of Lovin'" is a great showcase for the composer's vocal prowess, and an even better one for the guitar skills of then 16-year-old Kenny Wayne Shepherd, whose playing is dubbed onto the original recording, though one wishes that Dixon's voice were a little bit more upfront in the mix. Otherwise, the sound is state-of-the-art, and the only thing one could wish for that isn't here would be actual recording or release dates. ~Bruce Eder

Jewel Spotlights The Blues Vol 2 mc
Jewel Spotlights The Blues Vol 2 zippy

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Earl Hooker, Jody Williams - The Leading Brand

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 39:32
Size: 90.5 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1977/2013
Art: Front

[2:12] 1. How Long Can This Go On
[2:40] 2. Cotton Pickin' Blues
[2:08] 3. Bright Sounds
[2:44] 4. Oh Mama
[1:39] 5. Off The Hook
[2:17] 6. You Better Be Sure
[2:37] 7. Nothing But Poison
[2:18] 8. This Little Voice
[2:30] 9. The Leading Brand
[2:26] 10. Nothing But Good
[2:38] 11. Looking For My Baby
[2:19] 12. Lonely Without You
[2:23] 13. Moaning For Molasses
[2:31] 14. Hide Out
[3:07] 15. You May
[2:56] 16. Lucky You

Jody Williams on tracks 11-16. This English Import came out in 1977 and contains 16 cuts from Hooker and Williams that were recorded in the late 50s and early 60s. Even though he had to share it with the more-famous Hooker, and he only got 6 tracks, it was Jody Williams's first album. In 1954 Williams was the band leader for Howlin' Wolf and a session man at Chess. Williams played on a number of Chess sessions with Muddy Waters, Sonny Boy Williamson, Bo Diddley and Billy Boy Arnold. After getting a couple of bad deals, Williams stopped recording, and some thought he might never record again. He was coaxed out of retirement in the 90s.

The Leading Brand

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Various - Sun Record Company: Essential Blues Anthems

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 45:40
Size: 104.6 MB
Styles: Memphis blues, Chicago blues
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[3:22] 1. Howlin' Wolf - I Got A Woman
[3:10] 2. Pat Hare - I'm Gonna Murder My Baby
[2:57] 3. Honeyboy Edwards - Sweet Home Chicago
[2:30] 4. Little Milton - Next Time I See You
[2:57] 5. Walter Horton - Grandma Told Grandpa
[2:24] 6. Little Junior Parker - Mystery Train
[2:30] 7. Albert Williams - Rhumba Chillen
[2:58] 8. Big Memphis Ma Rainey - Call Me Anything But Call Me
[2:57] 9. James Cotton - Cotton Crop Blues
[1:56] 10. Frank Frost - Crawl Back
[2:34] 11. Coy Love - Harmonica Jam
[2:41] 12. Joe Hill Louis - Gotta Go Baby (Gotta Let You Go)
[2:29] 13. Roscoe Gordon - T-Model Boogie
[2:44] 14. Earl Hooker - Blue Guitar
[2:10] 15. Billy The Kid Emerson - If Lovin Is Believin
[2:44] 16. Willie Nix - Seems Like A Million Years
[2:31] 17. Houston Boines - Carry My Business On

A nice blues compilation by Sun Records.

The Sun Sound began when Sam Phillips launched his record company in February of 1952. He named it Sun Records as a sign of his perpetual optimism: a new day and a new beginning. Sam rented a small space at 706 Union Avenue for his own all-purpose studio. The label was launched amid a growing number of independent labels. In a short while Sun gained the reputation throughout Memphis as a label that treated local artists with respect and honesty. Sam provided a non-critical, spontaneous environment that invited creativity and vision.

As a businessman, Phillips was patient and willing to listen to almost anyone who came in off the street to record. Memphis was a happy home to a diverse musical scene: gospel, blues, hillbilly, country, boogie, and western swing. Taking advantage of this range of talent, there were no style limitations at the label. In one form or another Sun recorded them all.

Sun Record Company: Essential Blues Anthems mc
Sun Record Company: Essential Blues Anthems zippy