Showing posts with label Frankie Lee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frankie Lee. Show all posts

Saturday, December 7, 2024

Frankie Lee, Doug Newby & The Bluzblasters - Sooner or Later

Size: 259 MB
Time: 39:52
File: Flac
Released: 1992
Styles: Soul Blues, Electric Blues
Art: Front

1. Leave My Woman Alone (2:08)
2. Full Time Lover (4:04)
3. What You Gonna Do? (3:04)
4. Face It (5:19)
5. Don't Lie (2:33)
6. Taxi Blues (4:02)
7. Sooner or Later (2:48)
8. Before You Criticize me (4:00)
9. Can't Take No More (3:57)
10. Cold Out Here (4:23)
11. Doug's Stomp (3:29)

Frankie Lee (April 29, 1941 – April 24, 2015) was an American soul blues and electric blues singer and songwriter who released six albums. His style has been compared to that of Otis Redding. The New York Daily News wrote that Lee had "one of the most energetic blues voices of any time or place".
Life and career Frankie Lee Jones was born in Mart, Texas. As a child, he sang gospel music in church. In 1963, he signed a recording contract with Peacock Records. Billed as Little Frankie Lee, he released three singles, including "Taxi Blues", a regional hit and his best-known song. After living with his friend Sonny Rhodes in Austin, Texas, Lee was recruited by Ike Turner to join the touring ensemble backing Ike & Tina Turner. Lee later said of that time, "I'll never forget it. I dug the music and the way they performed. Tina in particular just knocked me out. It was amazing how she would go out and grab an audience—that's what I wanted to do. So I would just sit back and take notes. I learned a lot." Lee then settled in Houston and worked with other musicians, including Big Mama Thornton, Ted Taylor, Junior Parker and Joe Hinton.

Lee befriended Albert Collins during this period, and in 1965, they both relocated to California, with Lee singing in Collins's band from that time until 1968. In 1971, Lee was signed to Elka Records, and his cousin, Johnny "Guitar" Watson, produced Lee's tracks. Also in 1971, "Little" Frankie Lee, as he was known at the time, performed regular gigs at Joe's Nairobi Lounge in East Palo Alto, across from the now defunct Nairobi Village Shopping Center. His band was known as "Little Frankie Lee and the Lee-ettes", sporting guitarist Robert Valdez and several female backup singers. In the late 1970s, Lee's backing ensemble included the young Robert Cray.

His first album, The Ladies and the Babies, was released by HighTone Records in 1984. The Allmusic journalist Thom Owens noted that "as one of the first albums on HighTone Records, the album helped set the stage for the numerous records and artists that teetered between soul and blues." Lee appeared at the Chicago Blues Festival with Sonny Rhodes, before relocating to New Jersey in 1986. He continued to perform live, gaining a growing reputation for the quality and energy of his live performances. Flying Fish Records released Lee's second album, Sooner or Later (1992), on which he was backed by Doug Newby and the Bluz Blasters, with a guest appearance by Lucky Peterson. Going Back Home (1994) was released by Blind Pig Records. Lee toured widely, playing at American music festivals and in Europe and Japan.

In 2004, Lee performed with Dan Treanor on the album African Wind. Lee's final album, Standing at the Crossroads, was released in 2006 by Blues Express. The album was produced by Dennis Walker, who had produced The Ladies and the Babies more than twenty years earlier. Lee was nominated for the Bay Area Blues Vocalist of the Year award. Lee died on April 24, 2015, in Sacramento, California, aged 73

Sooner or Later FLAC

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Frankie Lee - American Dreamer

Size: 258 MB
Time: 40:04
File: Flac
Released: 2015
Styles: Blues Americana
Art: Front

1. High and Dry (4:50)
2. Where Do We Belong (3:33)
3. Queen of Carolina (4:07)
4. East Side Blues (5:30)
5. Black Dog (3:24)
6. Buffalo (3:33)
7. Honest Man (4:33)
8. Know By Now (3:19)
9. Horses (4:28)
10. American Dreamer (2:43)

With echoes of Springsteen, Dylan and Ryan Adams, Frankie Lee is no avant-garde trailblazer. The Mississippian eulogises being “born in a summer storm” and even “a little house we call home”. After picking up songwriting tips from Merle Haggard and Roky Erikson on his travels, the diagnosed narcoleptic’s wonderfully laconic delivery brims with simple wisdom: “All the time we take / We never take our time”; “I’ve got to learn to let this go / ’Cos it’s your time before you know”. But beneath the familiar glow of his beautifully burnished Americana lurks a restless, angry soul. High and Dry urges folk to start growing their own food for when capitalism fails them. The outstanding East Side Blues and Where Do We Belong lay into developers who have destroyed US towns and address the casualties of the so-called American dream. It’s a traditional-sounding debut, but wild and radical at heart, and should take him a long way.

American Dreamer FLAC

Friday, April 8, 2022

Frankie Lee - Going Back Home

Size: 113.8 MB
Time: 48:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1994
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Soul
Art: Full

01. Finders Keeperd (4:12)
02. Too Busy Thinking About My Baby (3:14)
03. One Stone At A Time (4:21)
04. What's The Matter, Baby? (4:01)
05. Don't Make Me Cry (5:02)
06. Got To Keep On Movin' (5:15)
07. Let The Good Times Roll (2:20)
08. The Love You Save Today (3:08)
09. Ain't That Peculiar? (3:22)
10. Rock My Soul (5:41)
11. Goin' Back Home (4:37)
12. Party Down (3:02)

Smooth uptown soul and tough back-alley blues from a singer who belongs with the ranks of Otis Redding and Bobby Bland. Few singers match his compelling urgency, power, and believability. With the support of splendid horns and background vocals, Frankie shines on this album like he never has before.

Going Back Home MP3
Going Back Home FLAC

Monday, May 4, 2020

Frankie Lee, Doug Newby & The Bluzblasters - Sooner Or Later

Year: 1992
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:52
Size: 92,9 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. Leave My Woman Alone (2:08)
2. Full Time Lover (4:04)
3. What You Gonna Do? (3:04)
4. Face It (5:19)
5. Don't Lie (2:33)
6. Taxi Blues (4:02)
7. Sooner Or Later (2:48)
8. Before You Criticize Me (4:00)
9. Can't Take No More (3:57)
10. Cold Out Here (4:23)
11. Doug's Stomp (3:29)

Frankie Lee Jones was born in Mart, Texas. As a child, he sang gospel music in church. In 1963, he signed a recording contact with Peacock Records. Billed as Little Frankie Lee, he released three singles, including "Taxi Blues", a regional hit and his best-known song. After living with his friend Sonny Rhodes in Austin, Texas, Lee was recruited by Ike Turner to join the touring ensemble backing Ike & Tina Turner. Lee later said of that time, "I'll never forget it. I dug the music and the way they performed. Tina in particular just knocked me out. It was amazing how she would go out and grab an audience — that's what I wanted to do. So I would just sit back and take notes. I learned a lot." Lee then settled in Houston and worked with other musicians, including Big Mama Thornton, Ted Taylor, Junior Parker and Joe Hinton.

Lee befriended Albert Collins during this period, and in 1965, they both relocated to California, with Lee singing in Collins's band from that time until 1968. In 1971, Lee was signed to Elka Records, and his cousin, Johnny "Guitar" Watson, produced Lee's tracks. In the late 1970s, Lee's backing ensemble included the young Robert Cray. His first album, The Ladies and the Babies, was released by HighTone Records in 1984. The Allmusic journalist Thom Owens noted that "as one of the first albums on HighTone Records, the album helped set the stage for the numerous records and artists that teetered between soul and blues." Lee appeared at the Chicago Blues Festival with Sonny Rhodes, before relocating to New Jersey in 1986.

He continued to perform live, gaining a growing reputation for the quality and energy of his live performances. Flying Fish Records released Lee's second album, Sooner or Later (1992), on which he was backed by Doug Newby and the BluzBlasters, with a guest appearance by Lucky Peterson. Going Back Home (1994) was released by Blind Pig Records. Lee toured widely, playing at American music festivals and in Europe and Japan. In 2004, Lee performed with Dan Treanor on the album African Wind.

Lee's final album, Standing at the Crossroads, was released in 2006 by Blues Express. The album was produced by Dennis Walker, who had produced The Ladies and the Babies more than twenty years earlier. Lee was nominated for the Bay Area Blues Vocalist of the Year award. Lee died on April 24, 2015, in Sacramento, California, aged 73. /Wikipedia

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Originally posted by Bluestender on October 26, 2015. Upgraded from 256 to 320 kbs.

Sooner Or Later mc
Sooner Or Later zippy

Monday, October 26, 2015

Frankie Lee - The Ladies And The Babies

Size: 67,7 MB
Time: 39:47
File: MP3 @ VBR ~235K/s
Released: 1984/1997
Styles: Modern Electric Blues, Blues Soul
Art: Front & Back

01. The Ladies And The Babies (3:45)
02. The Woman Don't Live Here No More (2:56)
03. Lu Ann (3:38)
04. Face It (4:43)
05. Stoned, Cold & Blue (2:52)
06. Nasty Stuff (4:46)
07. Don't Make Me Go Home (4:36)
08. My First Million Tears (4:08)
09. It's Cold Out Here (4:39)
10. Steppin' In The Shoes Of A Fool (3:38)

Frankie Lee's debut album, The Ladies and the Babies, was one of the first contemporary blues albums to successfully negotiate the territory between post-Bobby Bland blues and southern soul. As one of the first albums on HighTone Records, the album helped set the stage for the numerous records and artists that teetered between soul and blues. To Lee's immense credit, he achieved this balance quite skillfully, thanks to solid songs, tight arrangements and powerful vocalists. He followed the record with several others quite like it, but none matched the energy or quality of The Ladies and the Babies. ~by Thom Owens

The Ladies And The Babies

Dan Treanor & Frankie Lee - African Wind

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 2004
Styles: Blues
Time: 54:30
Size: 125,6 MB
Covers: Full

(4:12) 1. Missing
(3:50) 2. Mean Woman Blues
(5:22) 3. Love a Woman's Soul
(3:11) 4. Tell Me Mama
(2:57) 5. African Wind
(3:37) 6. The Groit Man
(4:04) 7. Got No Lifeline
(3:17) 8. Black Hanna
(3:43) 9. Cut With Dynamite
(3:22) 10. Kidnapped by the Blues
(3:47) 11. Texas Son
(3:04) 12. Who's Playing Who
(4:03) 13. Lonesome Road
(3:36) 14. True Love
(2:18) 15. Cane Flute Soul

This collaboration between soul singer Frankie Lee and multi-instrumentalist bluesman Dan Treanor definitely utilizes some African elements, but the title might be an exaggeration. At heart it's very much a straightforward (and excellent) blues record. Of course, the blues does have its roots in African music, but they're not as widely explored as they might be. "African Wind" comes closest, with kalimba (and Lee doing his best Taj Mahal imitation), and "Cane Flute Soul" brings in fife and drum — again, originally from West Africa, but really more familiar from Mississippi hill country. "The Griot" pays tribute to the African historian storyteller and historian, but with very American style. That said, Treanor does use ngoni and khalam (although it's hard to hear the former). But don't come looking for the kind of African-American connection you'll find in, say Ali Farka Toure; it's not there and doesn't pretend to be. In spite of Treanor's instrumental abilities, it's Lee who's the star of the show here, with a big, broad voice that's perfectly at home in the blues, whether on the acoustic "Tell Me Mama" or the fast shuffle of "Who's Playing Who." He's a talent who deserves much broader exposure, and if there's any justice, he'll get it from this.

African Wind
African Wind artwork

Frankie Lee - Standing At The Crossroads

Released: 2006
Size: 140.6 MB
Time: 61:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Styles: Blues
Art: Full

1. Wish I Had A Dime [4:03]
2. High Horse [5:15]
3. I Need Lots Of Love [4:20]
4. Prayer For Peace [3:10]
5. Where You Been All My Life [4:42]
6. Better Than That [5:17]
7. Let's Think Twice [6:50]
8. Mary Don't You Weep [3:28]
9. Standing At The Crossroads [4:41]
10. How Far Can You Fall [3:03]
11. Think What It's Doing To Me [4:46]
12. I Really Got The Blues [5:46]
13. I Ain't Ever Had The Blues (Like This Before) [5:57]

Lee appeared at the Chicago Blues Festival with Sonny Rhodes, before relocating to New Jersey in 1986. He continued to perform live, gaining a growing reputation for the quality and energy of his live performances. Flying Fish released Lee's second album, Sooner or Later (1992), on which he was backed by Doug Newby and the Bluz Blasters, with a guest appearance by Lucky Peterson. Going Back Home (1994) appeared on the Blind Pig label. Lee toured widely playing at American music festivals, in Europe and Japan.

In 2004, Lee performed with Dan Treanor on the album, African Wind.

Lee's final album, Standing at the Crossorads, was released in 2006 on Blues Express.The album was produced by Dennis Walker, who had produced The Ladies and the Babies more than twenty years earlier. Lee was nominated for the Bay Area Blues Vocalist of the Year award.

Frankie Lee died on April 24, 2015, in Sacramento, California, aged 73.

Standing At The Crossroads


Frankie Lee - Here I Go Again

Released: 1999
Size: 110.9 MB
Time: 47:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Styles: Blues, Soul
Art: Front

1. I Really Love You [4:25]
2. Don't Let My Baby Ride [4:15]
3. Here I Go Again [4:37]
4. Playin' With My Friends [4:12]
5. Open The Door [2:52]
6. Whole Lotta Nothin' [4:00]
7. Smokestack Lightnin' [2:41]
8. Can I Walk You To Your Car [3:55]
9. Crossroads [3:23]
10. Cry Me A River [5:02]
11. The Snake [3:18]
12. Rock My Soul [5:05]

Frankie's first new studio recording in over 7 years comes full circle to embody the totality of the Frankie Lee experience, bringing his impassioned, gospel-influenced & deep-voiced vocals to both originals & covers by the likes of O.V. Wright, Otis Redding, Robert Cray & Robert Johnson. Frankie's rich musical past includes being a former vocalist with the Ike & Tina Turner Revue, as well as the Albert Collins band before becoming a vital part of the West Coast soul/blues scene.

Here I Go Again