Showing posts with label Fred Below. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fred Below. Show all posts

Friday, May 11, 2018

The Aces - Chicago Beat

Size: 142,0 MB
Time: 61:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1976/1999
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. Tell Me Mama (2:50)
02. Hoo Doo Man (3:59)
03. Take A Little Walk With Me (3:17)
04. Whole Lot Of Lovin' (3:30)
05. Got My Mojo Workin' (3:40)
06. Ace's Shuffle (2:55)
07. Blues For Marcelle (5:17)
08. Kansas City (6:05)
09. Early In The Morning (4:10)
10. Money, Marbles And Chalk (4:15)
11. Route 66 (4:56)
12. Blue Shadows (3:38)
13. Wee Wee Baby (3:23)
14. Fannie Mae (2:44)
15. Ace's Shuffle (3:56)
16. Stop, Stop, Stop (3:02)

Personnel: Louis Myers (vocals, guitar, harmonica); Fred Below (vocals, drums); Eddie Taylor, Jimmy Rogers , Mickey Baker (guitar); Willie Mabon (piano).

Common wisdom says that Muddy Waters was the man responsible for turbo charging the Delta blues and creating what we now call Chicago blues. Waters' importance is inestimable, but to lay all the credit at his feet is to ignore the contributions of those who quite literally used Waters' music as a jumping-off point, and blazed historical trails of their own. Of all the great musicians who passed through Waters' bands, perhaps the most important of all was harmonica player and singer Little Walter Jacobs. Jacobs left Waters' band at the age of 22 already a seasoned veteran of the road and the recording studio. He quickly recruited his own superb band, and came very close to eclipsing his former boss' success during the heyday of Chicago blues in the '50s, with two number one hits among his ten appearances on the nationwide Billboard R&B charts; Waters himself had 12 songs reach the Billboard charts, but he never scored a number one hit. Much of Little Walter's success can be attributed to the fact that he was doing something new, different, and thoroughly urban; where Waters' appeal lay heavily with Southern emigres longing for familiar sounds, Walter's swinging, modern, jazz-inflected style found favor with a younger generation of city blues fans not so closely tied to the "down-home" sounds of the South.

But Little Walter couldn't have done it alone -- he needed accompanists who shared his desire to push the edge of the blues envelope, so he recruited his band from among the most accomplished and forward-thinking blues musicians available in Chicago. His first recording and touring band in 1952 was one that he'd sometimes sat in with while still with Waters -- The Aces, featuring brothers David and Louis Myers on guitars. The Myers brothers were born in Byhalia, MS, and had learned the rudiments of guitar from their father before the family relocated to Chicago in the early '40s while both brothers were still in their early teens. There their musical tastes were formed by equal doses of the big-band swing that was popular at the time, pop ballads they heard on the radio, and the blues that was being played all around their southside neighborhood. By the late '40s they had assumed the roles they'd play for much of their musical careers: older brother Dave providing basslines and chords into which Louis wove his tastefully jazzy blues riffing. Their rock-solid musical foundation provided the perfect base for the veteran bluesman they soon found themselves backing, but their musical precociousness drove them to eventually form the Aces, which incorporated some of the more modern and sophisticated influences that had raised eyebrows with the older blues crowd. The Aces were rounded out by schooled jazz drummer Fred Below, a Chicago native for whom the rough Southern blues rhythms were almost completely foreign; after his first gig with the group he was so musically disoriented that he decided to quit the band, but was persuaded to stick it out and adapt his jazz techniques to the blues, ultimately becoming the most in-demand blues drummer in Chicago (in addition to putting the beat to many of rock & roll pioneer Chuck Berry's early hits). Little Walter approached his harmonica like a jazz saxophone player, and the Aces provided the propulsive backing of a swinging big band. It would have been near impossible at the time to find three musicians who were better suited to providing the solid foundation for Walter's musical innovations than the Aces, who had the musical and dynamic range, swing sensibilities, and melding of individual strengths that made them the standard by which all of Little Walter's later ensembles -- and most harp-led blues bands since -- have been measured.

Unfortunately this band was not to last; the Aces had been establishing their own name around town, but when their first records with Little Walter were released by the Chess Records subsidiary Checker as by "Little Walter and His Night Caps" or "...and His Jukes" (to capitalize on the popularity of his first hit "Juke," recorded during a session while he was still with Waters), there was dissension in the ranks. The first to leave was Louis, who was replaced by Robert Jr. Lockwood in 1954. Almost 40 years old at the time, Lockwood's roots were in the Delta; as Robert Johnson's stepson, he had a firm handle on the deepest of blues, but had been studying jazz guitarists since at least the '30s, and had been recording since before WWII. He proved to be an adept foil for Walter's harp excursions, and many of Walter's jazziest adventures were supported and driven by Lockwood's sophisticated guitar riffing.

Dave Myers was the next to leave, joining his brother Louis in 1955 in a re-formed Aces that featured Junior Wells (who had played with them pre-Walter) and later Otis Rush. Dave was replaced by 19-year-old guitar prodigy Luther Tucker, who had been hanging around the band and occasionally sitting in with them, as well as with other local blues acts. Although Tucker's role was initially the same as Dave's -- thumping out basslines on his guitar and providing chordal fills behind Lockwood -- he soon distinguished himself as one of the flashiest of the new breed of guitarists in Chicago. When given the chance to take the lead, Tucker's fleet-fingered bursts of nervous energy helped push Little Walter's music in new and exciting directions. The first wave of rock & roll was cresting, aggressively played electric guitar was moving to the forefront of popular music, and Luther Tucker was among the blues guitarists at the leading edge.

It was around this time that Fred Below vacated the drum seat, although as was the custom at Chess/Checker Records, he continued to be brought in for recording sessions for the next several years. Replacing him on the road for a time was his old drum school classmate Odie Payne, Jr., who had been playing and recording in Chicago since the late '40s with the likes of Tampa Red, Memphis Minnie, Memphis Slim and Elmore James, and later worked as the house drummer at Cobra Records, playing behind Buddy Guy, Magic Sam, Otis Rush and others. Payne's slightly more orthodox but still distinctly jazzy style was by all accounts ideally suited to Walter's music, although there's no documentation of him ever appearing on any of Walter's records.

After a short time with a still young and rambunctious Little Walter and the even younger Luther Tucker, Lockwood was began to tire of the grind, and he left Walter's band, although he continued to appear on records with him (and also notably with Sonny Boy Williamson) until the late '50s. In 1956 Jimmie Lee Robinson joined Little Walter's band, pushing Luther Tucker into the lead role that Lockwood had vacated. Robinson was another Chicago native, who had grown up around the blues-rich Maxwell Street Market area, and knew Walter from his escapades there during his earliest years in Chicago. Robinson's formative years included musical apprenticeship on Maxwell Street, followed by formal music lessons for a time, and then time spent with guitarists Freddie King, Elmore James, Eddie Taylor, and others in the early '50s. His guitar style had similarities to Tucker's, and eventually their roles carrying the top and bottom of the music melded to the point where they would trade back and forth even during songs. Unfortunately there are only a few examples of Jimmie Lee's years with Walter on record, due to the record label's insistence on not tampering with the successful studio formula that had been established by the Tucker/Lockwood/Below ensemble (usually augmented by Willie Dixon on string bass).

By the end of the '50s, Little Walter's hit-making days were behind him, and his bands soon became a revolving door through which a number of local musicians passed. In 1959 guitarist Freddie Robinson joined the band for a time (replacing Jimmie Lee Robinson, a move that has caused much confusion among discographers over the years), during which he sometimes played electric bass. Odie Payne left the band after a short time to be replaced by the solid if less musically adventurous George Hunter. During sessions over the next few years the drum throne (on sessions, at least) was also occupied by Billy Stepney, session ace Al Duncan, and even the return of Fred Below for a 1960 session. But blues tastes were changing, and his great ensembles of the past had all scattered and moved on to other pursuits with varying degrees of success. ~by Scott Dirks

Chicago Beat

Friday, April 7, 2017

J.B. Lenoir - Down In Mississippi

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:54
Size: 73.0 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1980/2014
Art: Front

[3:14] 1. Down In Mississippi
[1:32] 2. Slow Down
[2:58] 3. If I Get Lucky
[2:44] 4. Shot On Meredith
[2:50] 5. Round And Round
[2:22] 6. Voodoo Music
[3:45] 7. Born Dead
[1:35] 8. Leavin' Here
[3:02] 9. Vietnam Blues
[2:30] 10. How Much More
[2:18] 11. Tax Payin' Blues
[2:58] 12. Feelin' Good

Drums – Fred Below; Guitar, Vocals, Written-By, Composed By – J.B. Lenoir; Vocals – Willie Dixon (tracks: A1, B6). Recorded September 2nd, 1966.

Monticello area native J. B. Lenoir (1929-1967) was best known during his lifetime for his 1955 hit “Mama, Talk to Your Daughter,” but he also played an important role in blues history because of his political engagement. In the 1960s Lenoir recorded a body of topical songs in Chicago that addressed discrimination, the civil rights movement, and the Vietnam War. Lenoir’s cousin Byther Smith from Monticello also became a Chicago blues recording artist, noted for his cutting-edge lyrics.

J. B. Lenoir (pronounced and sometimes misspelled "Lenore") was a distinctive blues artist, in both his high-pitched singing style and the candid political critiques in many of his song lyrics. Born on his family's farm near Monticello on March 5, 1929, he learned to play guitar from his father, Devitt (or Dewitt) Lenoir, Sr.; as a youth he also played with his brother Dewitt, Jr. Lenoir decided to leave because of racial discrimination and later recalled, “After the way they treat my daddy I was never goin’ to stand that no kind of way.” Lenoir began traveling to play music in his teens. He lived in Gulfport and worked at the Splendid Cafe there at one point in the 1940s, and he said he later performed in New Orleans with Sonny Boy Williamson No. 2 (Rice Miller) and Elmore James. By 1949 Lenoir had settled in Chicago, where blues kingpin Big Bill Broonzy took him “as his son.” Lenoir also performed with Memphis Minnie, Muddy Waters, and Little Walter, and soon formed his own band, J. B. and his Bayou Boys, with Sunnyland Slim on piano.

Down In Mississippi mc
Down In Mississippi zippy

Monday, July 18, 2016

Floyd Jones, Eddie Taylor - Masters Of Modern Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:31
Size: 115.7 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1994/2014
Art: Front

[2:49] 1. Train Fare Home
[2:31] 2. Big Town Playboy
[2:39] 3. Peach Tree Blues
[2:58] 4. Bad Boy
[3:34] 5. Feel So Bad
[2:37] 6. After Hours
[3:06] 7. Take Your Hand Down
[1:59] 8. Bad Boy
[3:20] 9. Rising Wind
[3:37] 10. Dark Road
[3:57] 11. Stockyard Blues
[3:29] 12. Sweet Talkin' Woman
[3:54] 13. Hard Times
[2:53] 14. M & O Blues
[3:33] 15. Playhouse Blues
[3:29] 16. Dark Road

Tracks 1-8 - Eddie Taylor; Tracks 9-16 - Floyd Jones.

Eight priceless 1966 tracks by tragically underrecorded guitarist Floyd Jones are paired for this CD with eight more by sessionmate Eddie Taylor. Produced in both cases by Testament boss Pete Welding with Big Walter Horton on harp, pianist Otis Spann, and drummer Fred Below lending their collective hands, Jones re-creates his dour, uncompromising "Dark Road," "Hard Times," and "Stockyard Blues" with an early-'50s sense of purpose. ~Bill Dahl

Masters Of Modern Blues

Friday, June 17, 2016

Little Mack Simmons - Blue Lights

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:09
Size: 130.8 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 2002/2008
Art: Front

[3:52] 1. Help Me
[2:43] 2. You Mistreated Me
[4:36] 3. Blue Lights
[4:07] 4. Killing Floor
[4:22] 5. Mystery Train
[5:17] 6. Last Night
[3:19] 7. So Unhappy
[3:03] 8. Mother-In-Law Blues
[3:08] 9. Poison Ivy
[4:16] 10. Sad Hours
[2:16] 11. Messin' With The Kid
[6:12] 12. Last Night
[2:41] 13. Talk To You Baby
[3:21] 14. Driving Wheel
[3:49] 15. Juke

Bass – Dave Myers; Drums – Fred Below; Guitar – Hubert Sumlin, Lonnie Brooks; Harmonica, Vocals – Mack Simmons (tracks: Little Mack Simmons); Piano – Willie Mabon. Recorded December 8 & 22, 1975 in Paris, France, except 12 to 15 recorded live November 18, 1975 in Reims, France.

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. In 1954 Little Mack moved on to Chicago, where he formed his own band and held down a five-year stand at Cadillac Baby's, as well as performing regularly at Pepper's Lounge and at Sylvio's. In 1959 he began his recording career, initially at Carl Jones's C.J. label, then he cut tracks for Cadillac Baby and Chess Records. Over the next three years, he laid down more sides for the Palos, Bea & Baby and New Breed labels.

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.

Blue Lights

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Little Walter - Chronological 1947-1953

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Blues
Time: 69:02
Size: 158,4 MB
Covers: Full

Personel:
Little Walter - harmonica & vocals
Othum Brown - guitar & vocals (1,2)
Muddy Waters - guitar (3,4)
Jimmy Rogers - guitar (1,2,3,4,16-24)
Louis Myers - guitar (5-15)
Dave Myers - guitar (5-15)
Willie Dixon - bass (11-24)
Ernst Big Crawford - bass (9,10)
Elga Edmonds - drums (3,4)
Fred Below - drums (5-25)

(2:40) 1. Little Walter and Othum Brown - Ora Nelle Blues
(2:30) 2. Little Walter and Othum Brown - I Just Keep Loving Her
(2:45) 3. Little Walter & His Nighcats - Juke
(3:01) 4. Little Walter & His Nighcats - Can't Hold On Much Longer
(2:25) 5. Little Walter & His Nighcats - Blue Midnight
(3:01) 6. Little Walter & His Nighcats - Boogie
(2:54) 7. Little Walter & His Nighcats - Mean Old World
(3:11) 8. Little Walter & His Nighcats - Sad Hours
(2:48) 9. Little Walter & His Nighcats - Fast Boogie
(3:19) 10. Little Walter & His Nighcats - Don't Need No Horse
(3:04) 11. Little Walter & His Jukes - Don't Have to Hunt No More
(2:25) 12. Little Walter & His Jukes - Crazy Legs
(2:55) 13. Little Walter & His Jukes - Tonight With a Fool
(2:50) 14. Little Walter & His Jukes - Off the Wall
(2:47) 15. Little Walter & His Jukes - Tell Me Mama
(3:10) 16. Little Walter & His Jukes - Blues With a Feeling
(3:16) 17. Little Walter & His Jukes - Quarter to Twelve
(2:32) 18. Little Walter & His Jukes - Last Boogie
(2:39) 19. Little Walter & His Jukes - Too Late
(2:52) 20. Little Walter & His Jukes - Fast Boogie
(2:45) 21. Little Walter & His Jukes - Lights Out
(2:51) 22. Little Walter & His Jukes - Fast Large One
(3:04) 23. Little Walter & His Jukes - You're So Fine
(3:06) 24. Little Walter & His Jukes - My Kind of Baby

Legendary and revolutionary harmonica virtuoso Marion Walter Jacobs (born May 1st, 1930 Louisiana), known professionally as Little Walter, left home at age 12, traveling to New Orleans. Jacobs gradually journeyed north from there, pausing in Helena and St. Louis before arriving in Chicago in 1946. He first gained attention on Chicago's famed Maxwell Street Market in 1947. His first record was a shared billing with guitarist Othum Brown for the tiny independent Ora Nelle Records (Ora-Nelle Blues b/w I Just Keep Loving Her). Walter joined forces with Muddy Waters in 1948 and along with Jimmy Rogers and Baby Face Leroy Foster, this super-confident young aggregation became informally known as the Headhunters. They would saunter into Southside clubs, mount the stage, and proceed to calmly "cut the heads" of whomever was booked there that evening. In january 1950 this little group recorded a session for Parkway (Muskadine Blues b/w Bad Acting Woman). None of these sides made any dents in the national charts, but his reputation in and around Chicago was such that the Chess brothers, Leonard and Phil, hired him as their label's resident harmonica master. By 1950, Walter was firmly entrenched as Waters' studio harpist at Chess. In 1952 he was assigned to the Checker subsidiary and in September burst into national prominence when the instrumental "Juke", billed as Little Walter & His Night Cats streaked to #1 R&B, remaining there for eight solid weeks. Suddenly, Walter was a star on his own, combining his stunning talents with those of guitarists Louis and David Myers and drummer Fred Below, and advancing the concept of blues harmonica another few light years with every session he made for Checker Records. The follow-up instrumental "Sad Hours" then settled for # 2 early in 1953 reaching #6. The guitar of Muddy Waters was featured on all sides. For the next Checker sides the billing had become Little Walter & His Jukes. Hits on the R&B charts continued until 1959. Tragically, the '60s saw the harp genius slide steadily into an alcohol-hastened state of unreliability, his once-handsome face becoming a road map of scars. In 1964, he toured Great Britain with the Rolling Stones, who clearly had their priorities in order, but his once-prodigious skills were faltering badly. That sad fact was never more obvious than on 1967's disastrous summit meeting of Waters, Bo Diddley, and Walter for Chess as the Super Blues Band; there was nothing super whatsoever about Walter's lame remakes of "My Babe" and "You Don't Love Me." Walter's eternally vicious temper led to his violent undoing in 1968. Little Walter died at age 37 on February 15, due to injuries suffered following a street fight. In 1982 he was among the first 20 honoured by The Blues Hall Of Fame in their first year of existence, and in 2008 the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame brought him in the "Sidemen" category. -- Allmusic.

1947-1953

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Eddie Boyd - Five Long Years

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 46:17
Size: 106.0 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1965/1980/1994
Art: Front

[2:41] 1. Five Long Years (Take 1)
[2:49] 2. Hello Stranger
[2:45] 3. Where You Belong
[2:46] 4. I'm Coming Home
[3:01] 5. My Idea
[3:07] 6. The Big Question (Take 1)
[2:49] 7. Come On Home
[3:31] 8. Blue Monday Blues
[2:29] 9. Eddie's Blues
[3:37] 10. All The Way
[2:20] 11. Twenty Four Hours Of Fear
[2:34] 12. Rock The Rock
[3:17] 13. Five Long Years (Take 2)
[2:51] 14. The Big Question (Take 2)
[2:14] 15. Rosalie
[3:18] 16. Hound Dog (Big Mama Thornton - vocals)

One of the first and best of Boyd's many overseas recordings, cut while he was in the midst of that auspicious 1965 American Folk Blues Festival tour of Europe. While the caravan was ensconced in London, young producer Mike Vernon spirited Boyd and a rhythm section (guitarist Buddy Guy, bassist Jimmie Lee Robinson, and drummer Fred Below) off to the studio, where Boyd ran through some of his classics ("I'm Comin' Home," "24 Hours," the title track) and a few less familiar items while alternating between piano and organ. ~Bill Dahl

Five Long Years

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Little Willie Anderson - Swinging The Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 38:50
Size: 88.9 MB
Styles: Chicago blues, Harmonica blues
Year: 1979/2002
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. Come Here Mama
[3:43] 2. Willie's Women Blues
[3:30] 3. Lester Leaps In
[2:59] 4. Everything Gonna Be Alright
[4:07] 5. Late Night
[3:27] 6. 69th Street Bounce
[4:17] 7. Looking For You Baby
[3:33] 8. Been Around
[4:08] 9. Wes Side Baby
[6:27] 10. Big Fat Mama

Blues on Blues has been defunct for quite some time, but Earwig recently restored Anderson's only album to digital print. It's a loose, informal affair, Anderson's raw vocals and swinging harp backed by an all-star crew: guitarists Robert Jr. Lockwood, Sammy Lawhorn, and Jimmie Lee Robinson; bassist Willie Black, and drummer Fred Below. Anderson only revived one Walter standard, having brought a sheaf of his own intermittently derivative material to the session (although he does take a stab at bluesifying Lester Young's jazz classic "Lester Leaps In").

Swinging The Blues (see comments)

Mo' Albums...
Joe Turner - Big Joe Is Here
Dan Pickett - His Chicago Blues