Showing posts with label Howlin' Wolf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Howlin' Wolf. Show all posts

Thursday, September 15, 2022

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Friday, May 13, 2022

Howlin' Wolf - A Proper Introduction To Howlin' Wolf: Memphis Days

Album: A Proper Introduction To Howlin' Wolf: Memphis Days
Size: 169,1 MB
Time: 72:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Blues
Art: Full

1. Moanin' At Midnight (2:59)
2. How Many More Years (2:45)
3. The Wolf Is At Your Door (3:02)
4. California Blues (3:00)
5. California Boogie (3:02)
6. Look-A-Here Baby (2:13)
7. Howlin' Wolf Boogie (2:41)
8. Smile At Me (2:09)
9. Getting Old And Gray (2:40)
10. Mr. Highway Man (2:51)
11. My Baby Walked Off (3:03)
12. Drinkin' C.V. Wine (3:10)
13. My Troubles And Me (3:20)
14. Chocolate Drop (2:42)
15. Everybody's In The Mood (3:02)
16. Color And Kind (3:14)
17. Bluebird (2:52)
18. Saddle My Pony (2:36)
19. Dorothy Mae (2:47)
20. Worried All The Time (3:10)
21. Sweet Woman (3:31)
22. Well That's Alright (3:05)
23. Decoration Day (3:19)
24. Oh! Red (2:48)
25. Stay Here Till My Baby Comes Back (2:38)

The single disc, 25-track Proper Introduction to Howlin' Wolf anthology traces, in condensed form, Howlin' Wolf's seminal recordings at Sun Studios in Memphis. While other compilations have focused on exhaustively presenting all of the recordings Wolf did for Sun and Chess, and other single discs have picked one label or the other, Proper has decided to combine them in an idiosyncratic and wonderfully listenable way. These cuts are not sequenced chronologically, and the material here is mixed between labels, offering a brilliant cross-section of the material he cut during his seminal early years in the 1950s. "Moanin' at Midnight" is here, as is "How Many More Years", but so are "Baby Ride With Me", "Oh Red", and "Saddle My Pony". In all, sound-wise and price-wise, this is a tough one to beat. /Thom Jurek, AllMusic

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

A Proper Introduction To Howlin' Wolf: Memphis Days mc
A Proper Introduction To Howlin' Wolf: Memphis Days zippy

Wednesday, May 11, 2022

Howlin' Wolf - Memphis Days: Definitive Edition Vol. 1

Album: Memphis Days: The Definitive Edition Vol. 1
Size: 141,0 MB
Time: 60:38
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1989
Styles: Blues
Art: Full

1. Oh, Red (Take 1) (2:46)
2. My Last Affair (Take 1) (3:04)
3. Come Back Home (Take 1) (2:36)
4. California Boogie (2:59)
5. California Blues (2:58)
6. Look-A-Here Baby (2:11)
7. Smile At Me (2:06)
8. My Baby Walked Off (3:01)
9. Drinkin' CV Wine (CV Wine Blues) (3:07)
10. My Troubles And Me (3:18)
11. Chocolate Drop (2:42)
12. Mr. Highway Man (Cadillac Daddy) (2:28)
13. Bluebird Blues (2:50)
14. Color And Kind (3:12)
15. (Everybody's) In the Mood (2:59)
16. Dorothy Mae (2:38)
17. I Got A Woman/Sweet Woman (3:28)
18. Decoration Day Blues (3:17)
19. (Well) That's All Right (3:02)
20. How Many More Years (2:51)
21. Baby Ride With Me (Ridin' In The Moonlight) (2:56)

These are Howlin' Wolf's earliest and rarest sides recorded at the Sun studios, as raw and explosive as blues records come. Much of this was issued on various European albums during the '70s, always transferred off of muffled-sounding copy tapes. These 21 tracks (all but two of them off the master tapes) feature the amp-on-11 guitar work of Willie Johnson and the cave-man drumming of Willie Steele; they're loose and somewhat chaotic, with Wolf sounding utterly demonic. The real bonus on this volume is the first-time inclusion of both sides of the only known acetate of Wolf's first session at Sam Phillips' 706 Union Avenue studio from 1951. With only Johnson and Steele in support (no bass, no piano), these early versions of "How Many More Years" and "Baby Ride with Me (Riding in the Moonlight)" are Wolf at his most primitive. /Cub Koda, AllMusic

Memphis Days: The Definitive Edition Vol. 1 mc
Memphis Days: The Definitive Edition Vol. 1 zippy

Howlin' Wolf - Memphis Days: Definitive Edition Vol. 2

Album: Memphis Days: The Definitive Edition Vol. 2
Size: 119,8 MB
Time: 51:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1990
Styles: Blues
Art: Full

1. Baby Ride With Me (Ridin' In The Moonlight) (2:44)
2. How Many More Years (2:43)
3. Moanin' At Midnight (2:56)
4. Howlin' Wolf Boogie (2:38)
5. The Wolf Is At Your Door (3:00)
6. Mr. Highway Man (2:48)
7. Getting Old And Grey (2:39)
8. Worried All The Time (3:09)
9. Saddle My Pony (Gonna Find My Baby Out In The World Somewhere) (2:34)
10. Oh, Red! (2:38)
11. My Last Affair (2:59)
12. Come Back Home (Take 2) (2:34)
13. Dorothy Mae (2:45)
14. Oh, Red! (Take 2) (2:41)
15. Come Back Home (Take 3) (2:11)
16. How Many More Years (2:31)
17. How Many More Years (2:30)
18. Baby Ride With Me (Ridin' In The Moonlight) (2:38)
19. Baby Ride With Me (Ridin' In The Moonlight) (2:34)

The second volume in this series collects up all the known Memphis recordings that were either issued or originally offered to Chess. As such, it stands as a marvelous collection of Wolf's early 78s for that label. But what truly puts it over is the added bonus of a newly discovered acetate featuring several unissued versions of "How Many More Years" and "Baby Ride With Me (Riding in the Moonlight)." Much of this volume is pulled from discs, but the overall sound is good and the performances make it yet another must-have. /Cub Koda, AllMusic

Memphis Days: The Definitive Edition Vol. 2 mc
Memphis Days: The Definitive Edition Vol. 2 zippy

Sunday, September 20, 2020

Big City Blues & Howlin' Wolf - Big City Blues & Howlin' Wolf In Warsaw

Size: 138,5 MB
Time: 59:06
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. Intro (Willie Dixon) (1:38)
02. Weak Brain And A Narrow Mind (Willie Dixon) (4:58)
03. God's Gift To Man (Willie Dixon) (3:55)
04. Be My Baby (Sunnyland Slim) (2:53)
05. Devil Is A Busy Man (Sunnyland Slim) (4:22)
06. Everytime I Get To Drinking (Sunnyland Slim) (3:24)
07. Dust My Broom (I Believe I'll Dust My Broom) (Howlin' Wolf) (6:22)
08. Spoonful (Howlin' Wolf) (4:12)
09. Goin Down Slow (Howlin' Wolf) (5:56)
10. Howlin' For My Darling (Howlin' Wolf) (3:37)
11. Smokestack Lightning (Howlin' Wolf) (5:05)
12. Killing Floor (Howlin' Wolf) (5:29)
13. Bye, Bye Baby (Baby Goodbye) (Sunnyland Slim & Howlin' Wolf) (2:47)
14. Dust My Broom (I'll Believe I'll) (Howlin' Wolf) (4:20)

Personnel: Howlin 'Wolf, singing, harmonica; Sunnyland Slim, piano; Hubert Sumlin, guitar; Willie Dixon, double bass, guitar, singing; James Clifton, drums.
This album surprised me extremely. Recordings saw the light of day, the existence of which I admit, I had no idea! The concert of the Big City Blues band and the legend of Chicago blues, Howlin 'Wolf, took place in the Warsaw Philharmonic Hall as part of the Jazz Jamboree '64 festival. It's hard to believe that this Blues Festival took place in Poland, exactly 50 years ago!

It was the first concert of a blues band from the USA in Poland. And what kind! The brightest stars themselves are included in the team. A separate article could be written about each of the musicians performing then. The great blues pianist Sunnyland Slim played the piano and also sang some songs. Right hand on guitar, the main pillar of Howlin 'Wolf's band, Hubert Sumlin. The legendary composer of many blues themes played to this day, court musician and arranger of the Chicago Chess Studio, Willie Dixon, played and sang on the double bass, as well as in two songs on the acoustic guitar. On drums a musician who plays with the leading American bluesmen, James Clifton. As if that was not enough, Howlin 'Wolf himself was at the head of this splendid ensemble.

Immediately, at the beginning of the concert, it was noticeable how powerful the blues message is. I was amazed to see that the reception (and the performance) was absolutely unaffected by the fact that Willie Dixon started the evening singing to himself on a completely out of tune guitar! The blues flowed, and it was only at the end of the song that Willie slowly tuned the instrument.

After two lesser-known numbers of Dixon, Sunnyland Slim took over the baton and with the accompaniment of the entire band, he performed three of his compositions, including Everytime I Get to Drinking . The time has finally come for the star of the evening. The front of the stage was taken over by the legendary, charismatic singer and great harmonica player, Chester Burnett, better known as Howlin 'Wolf. One by one, well-known themes, blues standards such as Spoonful, Goin 'Down Slow, Dust My Broom . Then those associated with Wolf, Killing Floor, Howlin 'for My Darling, Smokestack Lightning . The artists finished the concert with the appropriate Bye, Bye, Baby (Baby Goodbye)Bob Crewe. The theme of Robert Johnson once again appeared for the encore, but played in the Elmore James convention, Dust My Broom . The album was released as the 19th volume of the Polish Radio Jazz Archives series signed by Polish Radio. The fact of its release cannot be overestimated. Actually, next to the recordings of the concert by Muddy Waters at Jazz Jamboree '76, it is the only record of the performance of such eminent blues artists in our country. Their artistic and historical value cannot be overestimated. The album should be a must-have item in the collection of every bluesfan and not only. ~Zbyszek Jedrzejczyk

Big City Blues & Howlin' Wolf In Warsaw MP3
Big City Blues & Howlin' Wolf In Warsaw FLAC

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Howlin' Wolf - Blues & Rhythm Series 5098: The Chronological Howlin' Wolf 1952-1953

Size: 303 MB
Time: 68:37
File: FLAC
Released: 2004
Styles: Blues
Art: Full

01. Worried About My Baby (3:00)
02. Brown Skin Woman (2:42)
03. Driving This Highway (2:54)
04. The Sun Is Rising (2:42)
05. My Friends (Stealing My Clothes) (3:02)
06. I'm The Wolf (3:07)
07. Everybody's In The Mood (3:00)
08. Bluebird (2:48)
09. Saddle My Pony (2:34)
10. Dorothy Mae (2:41)
11. Worried All The Time (3:10)
12. Sweet Woman (3:23)
13. Well That's All Right (2:56)
14. Decoration Day (3:11)
15. Oh, Red!! (2:39)
16. My Last Affair (2:58)
17. Come Back Home (2:14)
18. I've Got A Woman (2:54)
19. Just My Kind (2:51)
20. Work For Your Money (2:11)
21. I'm Not Joking (2:59)
22. Mamma Died And Left Me (3:17)
23. All Night Boogie (All Night Long) (2:17)
24. I Love My Baby (2:56)

With the two Bear Family volumes of Howlin' Wolf's Memphis-era recordings out of print, this disc and its companion volumes from Classics becomes the best way to hear the blues legend at his raw, original best, mostly accompanied by Willie Johnson's almost minimalist electric guitar. The sound is excellent and the annotation is okay, and the music is almost beyond words to convey its merits and uniqueness, even in the larger context of Wolf's entire career. ~Bruce Eder

The Chronological Howlin' Wolf 1952-1953

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Howlin' Wolf - Blues & Rhythm Series 5056: The Chronological Howlin' Wolf 1951-1952

Size: 226 MB
Time: 71:39
File: FLAC
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues
Art: Full

01. Moanin' At Midnight (2:56)
02. How Many More Years (2:44)
03. Riding In The Moonlight (3:04)
04. Dog Me Around (2:44)
05. Morning At Midnight (2:35)
06. Keep What You Got (2:22)
07. Riding In The Moonlight (2:41)
08. House Rockin' Boogie (4:11)
09. Crying At Daybreak (3:55)
10. Passing By Blues (2:43)
11. My Baby Stole Off (2:59)
12. I Want Your Picture (2:51)
13. The Wolf Is At Your Door (Howlin' For My Baby) (2:59)
14. California Blues (2:57)
15. California Boogie (2:59)
16. Look-A-Here Baby (2:08)
17. Howlin' Wolf Boogie (2:40)
18. Smile At Me (2:07)
19. Gettin' Old And Gray (2:39)
20. Mr. Highway Man (2:48)
21. My Baby Walked Off (3:00)
22. C. V. Wine Blues (3:05)
23. My Troubles And Me (3:14)
24. Chocolate Drop (2:42)
25. Highway Man (2:26)

While there are numerous Howlin' Wolf compilations and anthologies available that trace his extraordinary career, the 25-track 1951-1952 compilation from the French Classics label focuses on Wolf's crucial early Memphis sessions. Recorded for Sam Phillips in 1951 and 1952 prior to Wolf's move to Chicago, each track is raw, passionate, and essential. If you're looking for a comprehensive overview of this period with excellent sound, this disc provides it. ~Al Campbell

The Chronological Howlin' Wolf 1951-1952

Friday, April 10, 2020

Otis Spann - In Session: Diary Of A Chicago Bluesman 1953-1960

Size: 179,1+164,6 MB
Time: 76:08+70:32
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Chicago Blues, Rockin' Blues
Art: Front

CD 1:
01. Blow Wind, Blow (Feat. Muddy Waters) (3:12)
02. Mad Love (Feat. Muddy Waters) (3:05)
03. I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man (Feat. Muddy Waters) (2:52)
04. She's So Pretty (Feat. Muddy Waters) (2:18)
05. Rockin' Daddy (3:04)
06. 'Bout The Break Of Day (Feat. Junior Wells) (3:16)
07. Lawdy! Lawdy! (Feat. Junior Wells) (2:41)
08. So, All Alone (Feat. Junior Wells) (3:21)
09. I Got To Find My Baby (Feat. Little Walter) (2:50)
10. Baby How Long? (Feat. Howlin' Wolf) (2:55)
11. Evil Is Goin' On (Feat. Howlin' Wolf) (2:56)
12. You'd Better Watch Yourself (Feat. Little Walter) (3:05)
13. I'll Be Around (Feat. Howlin' Wolf) (3:15)
14. It Must Have Been The Devil (2:43)
15. Five Spot (2:44)
16. I'm A Man (Feat. Bo Diddley) (3:02)
17. Bo Diddley (Feat. Bo Diddley) (2:46)
18. Don't Start Me Talkin' (Feat. Sonny Boy Williamson II) (2:36)
19. All My Love In Vain (Feat. Sonny Boy Williamson II) (2:51)
20. You Can't Catch Me (Feat. Chuck Berry) (2:45)
21. No Money Down (Feat. Chuck Berry) (2:59)
22. Let Me Explain (Feat. Sonny Boy Williamson II) (2:55)
23. Your Imagination (Feat. Sonny Boy Williamson II) (3:01)
24. I'm Leaving You (2:41)
25. I'm In Love With You Baby (2:38)
26. Cops And Robbers (Feat. Bo Diddley) (3:24)

CD 2:
01. Boogie Woogie (2:36)
02. Slow Blues (2:41)
03. Jump Blues (2:54)
04. It's My Own Fault (Feat. John Lee Hooker) (3:53)
05. Maudie (Feat. John Lee Hooker) (3:35)
06. I Wanna Walk (Feat. John Lee Hooker) (4:27)
07. I Wish You Were Here (Feat. John Lee Hooker) (5:37)
08. Great Northern Stomp (4:18)
09. Otis In The Dark (4:38)
10. Worried Life Blues (4:22)
11. Country Boy (4:28)
12. The Hard Way (5:06)
13. Beat-Up Team (6:04)
14. Take A Little Walk With Me (3:29)
15. I Got Rambling On My Mind (4:07)
16. Little Boy Blue (3:44)
17. My Daily Wish (4:26)

Joining Eddie Taylor and Jody Williams in Jasmine's popular 'In Session' series comes this excellent 43 track 2CD set of Otis Spann's sessions that he cut in Chicago between 1953 and 1956 along with live performances at Newport and his legendary first LP release. 'Otis Spann is the Blues'.

This wonderful set kicks off with Muddy Waters and of course includes two of his greatest hits 'Mad Love' and 'Hoochie Coochie Man' and then Otis' takes us through a plethora of fine bluesmen: Howlin' Wolf, Junior Wells, Little Walter, Bo Diddley, Sonny Boy Williamson, Chuck Berry and John Lee Hooker.

In the pantheon of great Chicago blues pianists, Otis Spann stands head and shoulders above most of the competition and this CD is another must have in Jasmine's ever growing blues series.

In Session

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Howlin' Wolf - Killing Floor: Live '64 & '73

Size: 251,8 MB
Time: 107:50
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

CD 1:
01. Shake For Me (4:12)
02. Love Me (6:29)
03. Dust My Broom (5:01)
04. I Didn't Mean To Hurt Your Feelings (5:36)
05. Rockin' The Blues (5:18)
06. All My Life (4:10)
07. Going Down Slow (6:20)
08. Howlin' For My Baby (4:24)
09. Forty Four Blues (7:33)

CD 2:
01. Instrumental (5:05)
02. I Can't Stop Loving You (4:41)
03. Little By Little (5:27)
04. Baby Work Out (3:22)
05. How Blue Can You Get (6:49)
06. What'd I Say (5:33)
07. Little Red Rooster (4:50)
08. Going Down Slow (9:31)
09. Killing Floor (4:28)
10. Shake For Me (5:13)
11. Back At The Chicken Shack/Goodbyes (3:39)

Personnel CD 1: American Folk Festival, Wiesbaden, Germany, 16/11/1964
Howlin' Wolf: Guitar, Vocals
Sunnyland Slim: Piano
Willie Dixon: Bass
Hubert Sumlin: Guitar
Clifton James: Drums

Personnel CD 2: Ebbet's Field, Denver, CO, 23/08/1973
Howlin' Wolf: Guitar, Vocals
Detroit Jr.: Piano, Vocals
Hubert Sumlin: Guitar
S.P. Leary: Drums
Andrew McMahon - Bass
Eddie Shaw: Tenor sax, Vocals

Killing Floor MP3
Killing Floor FLAC

Thursday, January 2, 2020

VA - Club Beat: Stirring Up Some Blues (The Original Sound Of UK Club Land)

Size: 147,3 MB
Time: 62:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Blues, R&B, Rock
Art: Front

01 Al Simmons, Slim Green & The Cats From Fresno - Old Folks Boogie (3:00)
02 Smokey Smothers - I Ain't Gonna Be No Monkey Man No More (2:25)
03 Skip Robinson & His Imperials - I Just Can't Wait (2:09)
04 Schoolboy Cleve - She's Gone (2:14)
05 Snooky Pryor - Someone To Love (2:40)
06 The Nightriders - Lookin' For My Baby (2:03)
07 Howlin' Wolf - Poor Boy (2:34)
08 Harmonica Slim - Mary Helen (2:00)
09 Jimmy Nolen - You've Been Goofing (2:41)
10 Dossie Terry - I Got A Watch Dog (2:33)
11 Jimmy Rogers - I Can't Believe (2:46)
12 Little Mac - Times Are Getting Tougher (2:24)
13 Danny Boy - Kokomo Me Baby (2:39)
14 Little Jimmy Ray - You Need To Fall In Love (2:33)
15 Sonny Boy Williams - Alice Mae Blues (2:28)
16 Muddy Waters - Trouble No More (2:41)
17 Magic Sam - Look Whatcha Done (2:08)
18 Little Esther - If It's News To You (2:39)
19 Willie Mae Thornton - Just Like A Dog (Barking Up The Wrong Tree) (2:47)
20 Elmore James - Knocking At Your Door (2:37)
21 Little Walter - Oh Baby (2:46)
22 Mercy Baby - Pleadin' (2:15)
23 Dennis Roberts - Come On (2:19)
24 Bob Reed & His Band - I'm Leaving You (2:36)
25 Little Joe Hinton - My Love Is Real (2:26)

WELCOME to the latest instalment of our "Adventures in UK Club Land" exploring the "Club Beat" - the roots of R&B, Ska, Gospel, Jazz, Soul, Mod and, in this chapter, BLUES. THE BLUES evolved in the late eighteen hundreds from a melting pot of homespun black music performed to small audiences across the American South. It wasn't until the 1920s, after the migration to cities such as Chicago that the genre was christened the Blues, a term initiated by the record industry, designed to appeal to a black audience. The blues continues to evolve today and, like it's original counterparts, gospel, jazz and R&B, it plays a leading role in popular music, the roots of which can be heard in our unique 25-track compilation.

Club Beat: Stirring Up Some Blues

Monday, October 28, 2019

VA - Mighty Instrumentals R&B Style 1959

Size: 172,9+178,5 MB
Time: 72:59+75:21
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Blues, R&B
Art: Front

CD 1:
01 Floyd Dixon - Let's Go Smitty (2:23)
02 Bo Diddley - Mumblin' Guitar (2:47)
03 Tommy Ridgley - Real Gone Jam (2:18)
04 The Gondoliers - Knocked Out (2:39)
05 The Carter Bros - Pacoima Stomp (2:16)
06 Gus Jenkins - Cutting Out (2:48)
07 Paul Gayten - Hot Cross Buns (2:30)
08 Mary Lou Williams Trio - Chunk-A-Lunk Jug, Pt. 1 (2:13)
09 Mary Lou Williams Trio - Chunk-A-Lunk Jug, Pt. 2 (2:15)
10 James Brown - Mashed Potatoes (3:15)
11 Nat Kendrick & The Swans - Mashed Potatoes, Pt. 2 (1:49)
12 The Swinging Earls - Yum Yum (2:45)
13 Garland Davis - Sweet Meats (2:49)
14 Herb Hardesty & The Rhythm Rollers - Perdido Street (2:33)
15 Mac Rebennack - Storm Warning (3:19)
16 Royal Earl & The Swingin' Kools - Royal Earl Shuffle (2:21)
17 Spot Barnett - Boney Shuffle (2:21)
18 King Curtis - Soul Groove, Pt. 1 (2:18)
19 King Curtis - Soul Groove, Pt. 2 (2:39)
20 Lefty Bates - Rock Alley (2:35)
21 The Bim Bam Boos - Can't Sit Down (2:37)
22 Sam Price & His All Stars - Boogie Cha Cha (2:37)
23 Cozy Cole - Cozy's Mambo (2:30)
24 Ernie Freeman - Live It Up (1:54)
25 Doc Starkes & His Nite Riders - Talk To Me Baby (2:20)
26 Buddy Johnson - Down Yonder (3:10)
27 Jimmy Nolen - Swingin' Peter Gunn, Pt. 1 (1:42)
28 Jimmy Nolen - Swingin' Peter Gunn, Pt. 2 (2:05)
29 Gene Redd & The Globe Trotters - Zeen Beat (2:59)

CD 2:
01 Memphis Slim - Steppin' Out (2:00)
02 Buster Brown - The Madison Shuffle (2:33)
03 The Carter Bros - Voodoo Cha Cha (1:51)
04 Doc Starkes & His Nite Riders - Night Ridin' (2:25)
05 Willie Dixon & Memphis Slim - Slim's Thing (3:26)
06 Ike Turner - Ho Ho (2:29)
07 Howlin' Wolf - Wolf In The Mood (2:18)
08 Clarence 'Gatemouth' Brown - Swingin' The Gate (2:47)
09 Chuck Berry - Blue On Blue (3:02)
10 Elmore James - Bobby's Rock (2:11)
11 Little Boyd - Harmonica Rock (1:51)
12 Bo Diddley - Diddling (2:13)
13 Gus Jenkins - Spanky (2:41)
14 Royal Earl & The Swinging Kools - Talkin' Guitar, Pt. 2 (Edit) (2:06)
15 Cliff Davis & The Turbo-Jets - Let It Roll, Pt. 1 (2:13)
16 Cliff Davis & The Turbo-Jets - Let It Roll, Pt. 2 (2:32)
17 Jimmy Nolen - Blues After Hours (2:36)
18 Lefty Bates - E N A (2:30)
19 (Eddie) Clear Waters - A-Minor Cha-Cha (3:05)
20 Jerry McCain - Steady (2:03)
21 Nick & The Jaguars - Cool And Crazy (2:14)
22 Ernie Freeman - Night Sounds (2:19)
23 Herb Hardesty - Beatin' And Blowin' (2:14)
24 Sammy Price & Rock Band - Honky Tonk Caboose (2:47)
25 Louis Brooks & His Hi-Toppers - Rollin' Home (2:21)
26 Bill Doggett - Backwards, Pt. 1 (3:17)
27 Bill Doggett - Backwards, Pt. 2 (3:28)
28 Harmonica George - Sputnik Music (2:15)
29 Walter J. Westbrook & His Phantom 5 - Midnight Jump (2:29)
30 Paul Gayten - The Hunch (2:49)

1960 may have been the big year for Instrumentals, but back in 1959, several white instrumentals acts were already making a dent in the pop charts, among them the Virtues, the Rebels, the Rock-A-Teens and the Fireballs. Duane Eddy had broken through in 58 but in 1959 he had no less than seven singles on the Hot 100. Johnny & the Hurricanes had their first success this year with three big hits. Black artists, however, had less mainstream success. Jimmy Beck sneaked in at #82 for two weeks with Pipe Dreams, Larry Kerrin s The Hunch was a hit for both Paul Gayten and the Bobby Peterson Quintet; Bill Doggett had three discs in the R&B charts but apart from a couple of organ hits for Preston Epps and Dave Baby Cortez, that was it for R&B instrumentals chart-wise. If you re knocked out by what you hear from 1959, just wait till you find out what was on offer in 1960 and 1961.

Mighty Instrumentals R&B Style 1959

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

VA - Confessin' The Blues

Size: 151,5+168,8 MB
Time: 63:52+71:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

CD 1:
01 Muddy Waters - Rollin' Stone (3:10)
02 Howlin' Wolf - Little Red Rooster (5:05)
03 John Lee Hooker - Boogie Chillen (3:07)
04 Little Walter - I Hate To See You Go (2:15)
05 Chuck Berry - Little Queenie (2:43)
06 Bo Diddley - You Can't Judge A Book By It's Cover (3:08)
07 Eddie Taylor - Ride 'Em On Down (2:55)
08 Slim Harpo - I'm A King Bee (3:03)
09 Magic Sam - All Your Love (3:52)
10 Sonny Boy Williamson - Dust My Broom (2:44)
11 Little Walter - Just Your Fool (2:22)
12 Muddy Waters - I Want To Be Loved (2:21)
13 Big Bill Broonzy - Key To The Highway (3:03)
14 Robert Johnson - Love In Vain Blues (2:31)
15 Mississippi Fred McDowell - You Gotta Move (3:21)
16 Jimmy Reed - Bright Lights, Big City (2:41)
17 Big Maceo Merriweather - Worried Life Blues (2:53)
18 Little Johnny Taylor - Everybody Knows About My Good Thing (Pt. 1) (3:17)
19 Howlin' Wolf - Commit A Crime (1991 Chess Box Version) (3:04)
20 Otis Rush - I Can't Quit You Baby (3:07)
21 Jay McShann - Confessin' The Blues (With Walter Brown) (2:58)

CD 2:
01 Howlin' Wolf - Just Like I Treat You ( 2:57)
02 Little Walter - I Got To Go ( 2:42)
03 Chuck Berry - Carol ( 2:51)
04 Bo Diddley - Mona ( 2:23)
05 Muddy Waters - I Just Want To Make Love To You ( 2:51)
06 Elmore James & The Broom Dusters - Blues Before Sunrise ( 2:45)
07 Eddie Taylor - Bad Boy ( 3:00)
08 Boy Blue - Boogie Children ( 2:56)
09 Jimmy Reed - Little Rain ( 3:09)
10 Robert Johnson - Stop Breakin' Down Blues ( 2:17)
11 Reverend Robert Wilkins - The Prodigal Son (10:01)
12 Lightnin' Slim - Hoodoo Blues ( 4:05)
13 Billy Boy Arnold - Don't Stay Out All Night ( 3:08)
14 Bo Diddley - Crawdad ( 2:24)
15 Dale Hawkins - Suzie Q ( 2:13)
16 Amos Milburn - Down The Road Apiece ( 2:58)
17 Howlin' Wolf - Little Baby ( 2:46)
18 Little Walter - Blue And Lonesome ( 2:54)
19 B.B. King - Rock Me Baby ( 3:02)
20 Buddy Guy - Damn Right I Got The Blues ( 4:31)
21 Muddy Waters - Mannish Boy ( 5:21)

The Rolling Stones have curated a new compilation, Confessin’ the Blues, that will feature songs from blues legends like Howlin’ Wolf, Chuck Berry and Muddy Waters.

Confessin’ the Blues fittingly opens with Waters’ “Rollin’ Stone” and features other classics like Berry’s “Little Queenie,” Howlin’ Wolf’s “Litle Red Rooster” and Bo Diddley’s “You Can’t Judge a Book By It’s Cover.” The collection will also boast tracks from Elmore James, Little Walter, John Lee Hooker, Mississippi Fred McDowell, Jimmy Reed, Robert Johnson, B.B. King and Buddy Guy.

Confessin' The Blues

Saturday, February 24, 2018

Various Artists - The Original Blue & Lonesome

Year: 2017
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:32
Size: 165,8 MB
Styles: Blues/R&B
Scans: Full

1. Little Walter - Just Your Fool (2:23)
2. Otis Rush - I Can't Quit You Baby (3:07)
3. Little Walter - Blue And Lonesome (2:55)
4. Magic Sam - All Of Your Love (2:54)
5. Little Walter - I Gotta Go (2:41)
6. Jimmy Reed - Little Rain (3:08)
7. Eddie Taylor - Ride 'Em On Down (2:57)
8. Little Walter - Hate To See You Go (3:05)
9. Lightnin' Slim - Hoo Doo Blues (2:20)
10. Howlin' Wolf - Just Like I Treat You (2:58)
11. Dale Hawkins - Susie Q (Bonus) (2:14)
12. Chuck Berry - Around And Around (Bonus) (2:39)
13. Arthur Alexander - You Better Move On (Bonus) (2:44)
14. Muddy Waters - Look What You've Done (Bonus) (2:23)
15. Howlin' Wolf - The Red Rooster (Bonus) (2:26)
16. Benny Spellman - Fortune Teller (Bonus) (2:14)
17. Slim Harpo - I'm A King Bee (Bonus) (3:01)
18. Gene Allison - You Can Make It If You Try (Bonus) (2:08)
19. Chuck Berry - Carol (Bonus) (2:48)
20. Bob & Earl - Harlem Shuffle (Bonus) (2:48)
21. Larry Williams - She Said Yeah (Bonus) (1:50)
22. Solomon Burke - Everybody Needs Somebody To Love (Bonus) (2:50)
23. Buddy Holly & The Crickets - Not Fade Away (Bonus) (2:20)
24. Muddy Waters - Mannish Boy (Bonus) (2:56)
25. Jimmy Reed - Honest I Do (Bonus) (2:45)
26. Bo Diddley - Mona (Bonus) (2:22)
27. Robert Johnson - Love In Vain Blues (Bonus) (2:22)

When the Rolling Stones' first new release in 11 years turned out to be an all vintage blues album some fans were a bit dismayed, but it was a natural, almost inevitable, move.

After all, the Stones began life as a blues band and they have supported its originators - sharing stages with Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, B.B. King, Etta James - and up held the blues as a key inspiration throughout their career.

With Blue & Lonesome, they celebrated the genre by taking on some key post-war blues classics and here we have compiled the original recordings by the artists who introduced the songs. /Excerpt from the liner notes by Jonny Whiteside

The Original Blue & Lonesome mc
The Original Blue & Lonesome zippy

Monday, January 1, 2018

Howlin' Wolf - The Memphis Sessions

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:41
Size: 113.8 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[2:58] 1. All In The Mood (Everybody's In The Mood)
[2:48] 2. Bluebird
[2:54] 3. California Blues
[2:56] 4. California Boogie
[2:38] 5. Chocolate Drop
[3:10] 6. Color And Kind
[2:09] 7. Come Back Home
[3:09] 8. Decoration Day
[2:34] 9. Dorothy Mae
[2:40] 10. Dorothy Mae (Alt )
[3:03] 11. Drinkin' C V Wine
[3:23] 12. I Got A Woman
[2:06] 13. Look A Here
[2:25] 14. Mr. Highway Man
[2:56] 15. My Baby Walked Off
[2:04] 16. Smile At Me
[2:56] 17. Well That's Alright
[2:44] 18. Oh Red

In the history of the blues, there has never been anyone quite like the Howlin' Wolf. Six foot three and close to 300 pounds in his salad days, the Wolf was the primal force of the music spun out to its ultimate conclusion. A Robert Johnson may have possessed more lyrical insight, a Muddy Waters more dignity, and a B.B. King certainly more technical expertise, but no one could match him for the singular ability to rock the house down to the foundation while simultaneously scaring its patrons out of its wits.

Wolf finally started recording in 1951, when he caught the ear of Sam Phillips, who first heard him on his morning radio show. The music Wolf made in the Memphis Recording Service studio was full of passion and zest and Phillips simultaneously leased the results to the Bihari Brothers in Los Angeles and Leonard Chess in Chicago. Suddenly, Howlin' Wolf had two hits at the same time on the R&B charts with two record companies claiming to have him exclusively under contract. Chess finally won him over and as Wolf would proudly relate years later, "I had a 4,000 dollar car and 3,900 dollars in my pocket. I'm the onliest one drove out of the South like a gentleman." It was the winter of 1953 and Chicago would be his new home.

The Memphis Sessions mc
The Memphis Sessions zippy

Friday, December 22, 2017

Howlin' Wolf - Live & Cookin' At Alice's Revisited

Year: 1972/1998
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:04
Size: 149,7 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. When I Laid Down I Was Troubled (7:46)
2. I Didn't Know (5:58)
3. Mean Mistreater (6:53)
4. I Had A Dream (4:56)
5. Call Me The Wolf (5:46)
6. Don't Laugh At Me (5:06)
7. Just Passing By (5:20)
8. Sitting On Top Of The World (8:03)
9. The Big House (Bonus) (7:39)
10. Mr. Airplane Man (Bonus) (7:32)

The 1972 live album Live and Cookin' at Alice's Revisited is a great document of Wolf toward the end, still capable of bringing the heat and rocking the house down to the last brick. Of special note are the wild and wooly takes on "I Had a Dream," "I Didn't Know," and Muddy Waters' "Mean Mistreater." There are mistakes galore out of the band and some P.A. system feedback here and there, both of which only add to the charm of it all.

A compact-disc reissue added two stellar bonus cuts. The first one, "Big House," first showed up on a hodge-podge Wolf bootleg album from the '70s. Its non-appearance on the original album is somewhat of a mystery since it's arguably one of the best performances here. Set at a medium tempo, Wolf stretches out comfortably for over seven minutes, singing certain verses he likes two or three times as the band locks in with deadly authority. Certainly any list of great Howlin' Wolf vocal performances would have to include this one.

The second bonus track, "Mr. Airplane Man," is Wolf working his one-riff-fits-all voodoo for all it's worth. You can tell from note one of his vocal entrance that the pilot light of inspiration is fully lit and the ensuing performance is the Wolf at his howlin' best. /Cub Koda, AllMusic

Live & Cookin' At Alice's Revisited mc
Live & Cookin' At Alice's Revisited zippy

Monday, December 18, 2017

Ike Turner - That Kat Sure Could Play!: The Singles 1951-1957 (4 CD)

Ike Turner's life may have been a controversial one, but their can be little doubt of his significant contribution to the blues, rhythm & blues and rock musical worlds. A four CD box, "The Legendary Ike Turner: The Kat Sure Could Play! presents 118 songs (and over 5 hours of music) from singles Turner played on between 1951 to 1957. Some of these recordings include famous recording like "Rocket 88" by Turner and his own band The Kings of Rhythm, and others are backings to recordings by the likes of Howlin' Wolf, B.B. King, Johnny Ace, Bobby Bland and Elmore James.

There are so many historic recordings here starting with Rocket 88, but also including King's 3 O'Clock Blues, Wolf's How Many More Years, Boyd Gilmore's raucous Rambling On My Mind, and Rosco Gordon's No More Doggin'. There is a terrific delta juke joint band session that produced Drifting Slim's Muddy Waters pastiche Good Morning Baby, and Sunny Blair's house rocket, Step Back Baby. Junior Brooks terrific Gonna Let You Go is a reworking of a Muddy Waters recording with Ike on piano as he is on Elmore's frantic broom dusting on Please Find My Baby. Ike is present on Little Milton's early If You Love Me Baby as well.

Ike also had his own coterie of musicians including Eugene Fox whose Sinner's Dream and the two-part The Dream, are interesting bits of story-telling with Ike's evocative use of tremolo in his guitar noticeable. As The Sly Fox, Eugene Fox had a couple of other gems with his extroverted vocals; Hoo-doo Say (with a solo from Ike) and I'm Tired of Beggin'. Lonnie the Cat's I Ain't Drunk is a choice cover of a Jimmy Liggins tune that Albert Collins made famous. Johnny Wright's The World Is Yours is one of several times Ike adapted lyrics to Guitar Slim's The Things I Used To Do with Wright shouting with considerable vigor as Ike makes effective use of his Fender's whammy bar during his solo.

Some of the latter recordings come from when Turner recorded for Federal and include such gems as Billy Gayles I'm Tore Up, Just One More Time, and Let's Call It A Day; Jackie Brenston's Gonna Wait For My Chance and Clayton Love's She Made My Blood Run Cold and Do You Mean It. Also heard are instrumentals including Cubano Bop and Trail Blazer.

Album: That Kat Sure Could Play!: The Singles 1951-1957
Year: 2011
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:32 + 78:34 + 78:33 + 79:23
Size: 182,6 + 182,6 + 182,7 + 184,9 MB
Styles: R&B, blues
Scans: Full (including two booklets)

CD 1:
1. Jackie Brenston & His Delta Cats - Rocket 88 (2:49)
2. Jackie Brenston & His Delta Cats - Come Back Where You Belong (2:44)
3. Ike Turner & His Kings Of Rhythm - I'm Lonesome Baby (3:02)
4. Ike Turner & His Kings Of Rhythm - Heartbroken & Worried (3:03)
5. Jackie Brenston & His Delta Cats - My Real Gone Rocket (2:30)
6. Jackie Brenston & His Delta Cats - Independent Woman (2:52)
7. Howlin' Wolf - How Many More Years (2:42)
8. Howlin' Wolf - Riding In The Moonlight (3:04)
9. Bobby 'Blue' Bland - Dry Up Baby (2:01)
10. Bobby 'Blue' Bland - Crying All Night Long (3:03)
11. B.B. King - Three O'clock Blues (3:01)
12. B.B. King - Boogie Woogie Woman (2:47)
13. Boyd Gilmore - Ramblin' On My Mind (2:48)
14. Houston Boines - Going Home (2:19)
15. Houston Boines - Relation Blues (2:38)
16. Brother Bell - Whole Heap Of Mama (2:35)
17. Brother Bell - If You Feel Froggish (3:04)
18. Charley Booker - Rabbit Blues (2:21)
19. Charley Booker - No Ridin' Blues (2:53)
20. Roscoe Gordon - No More Doggin' (2:39)
21. Roscoe Gordon - Maria (2:31)
22. Driftin' Slim - Good Morning Baby (2:52)
23. Driftin' Slim - My Sweet Baby (2:55)
24. Sunny Blair - Step Back Baby (2:18)
25. Little Junior Parker - Bad Woman, Bad Whiskey (3:01)
26. Little Junior Parker - You're My Angel (1:58)
27. Bobby 'Blue' Bland w. Ike Turner Orchestra - Good Lovin (2:25)
28. Bobby 'Blue' Bland w. Ike Turner Orchestra - Drifting From Town To Town (3:04)
29. Ike Turner w. Ben Burton & His Orchestra - You're Driving Me Insane (2:22)

CD 2:
1. Ike Turner w. Ben Burton & His Orchestra - Trouble And Heartaches (2:36)
2. Boyd Gilmore - All In My Dreams (3:11)
3. Boyd Gilmore - Take A Little Walk With Me (2:32)
4. Charley Booker - Charley's Boogie Woogie (2:30)
5. Bonnie & Ike Turner - My Heart Belongs To You (2:51)
6. Bonnie & Ike Turner - Looking For My Baby (2:30)
7. B.B. King & His Orchestra - You Didn't Want Me (2:32)
8. B.B. King & His Orchestra - You Know I Love You (3:05)
9. Johnny Ace & Earl Forrest - Midnight Hour Journey (3:31)
10. Johnny Ace & Earl Forrest - Trouble And Me (2:58)
11. Mary Sue - Everybody's Talking (2:43)
12. Mary Sue - Love Is A Gamble (3:06)
13. Baby Face Turner - Blue Serenade (2:40)
14. Baby Face Turner - Gonna Let You Go (2:04)
15. Elmore James - Please Find My Baby (3:08)
16. The Prisonaires - Softly & Tenderly (2:33)
17. The Prisonaires - A Prisoner's Prayer (2:42)
18. Little Milton - Beggin' My Baby (2:29)
19. Little Milton - Somebody Told Me (2:59)
20. Billy 'The Kid' Emerson - No Teasing Around (3:02)
21. Billy 'The Kid' Emerson - If Lovin' Is Believing (2:13)
22. Little Milton - If You Love Me Baby (2:32)
23. Little Milton - Alone And Blue (3:08)
24. Billy 'The Kid' Emerson - I'm Not Going Home (3:12)
25. Billy 'The Kid' Emerson - The Woodchuck (3:08)
26. Raymond Hill - Bourbon St. Jump (2:38)
27. Raymond Hill - The Snuggle (2:59)
28. Elmore James - Hand In Hand (2:48)

CD 3:
1. Eugene Fox - Stay At Home (2:43)
2. Eugene Fox - Sinners Dream (3:26)
3. Jesse Knight & His Combo - Nothing But Money (3:08)
4. The Fox - The Dream (Pt. 1 & 2) (4:12)
5. Lover Boy (Ike Turner) - Love Is Scarce (2:18)
6. Lover Boy (Ike Turner) - The Way You Used To Treat Me (2:37)
7. Lonnie 'The Cat' w. Bobby Hines Band - I Ain't Drunk (2:23)
8. Lonnie 'The Cat' - The Road I Travel (2:05)
9. Johnny Wright - Suffocate (2:44)
10. Clayton Love - Why Don't You Believe In Me (2:53)
11. Clayton Love - Wicked Little Baby (2:33)
12. Dennis Binder & His Orchestra - I Miss You So (3:02)
13. Dennis Binder & His Orchestra - Early Times (2:28)
14. Clayton Love Orchestra - Bye Bye Baby (2:28)
15. Clayton Love Orchestra - Mary Lou (2:02)
16. Matt Cockrell - Baby Please (1:59)
17. Matt Cockrell - Gypsy Blues (3:13)
18. Billy Gayles & His Orchestra - Night Howler (2:12)
19. Billy Gayles & His Orchestra - My Heart Is In Your Hands (2:30)
20. Elmore James & His Broomdusters - Sho Nuff I Do (2:52)
21. Elmore James & His Broomdusters - 1839 Blues (3:15)
22. Ike Turner & His Orchestra - Loosely (The Wild One) (2:31)
23. Ike Turner & His Orchestra - Cubano Jump (2:17)
24. Ike Turner & His Orchestra - Cuban Get Away (Bayou Rock) (3:11)
25. The Flairs - Baby Wants (2:29)
26. The Flairs - You Were Untrue (2:44)
27. Elmore James & His Broomdusters - Rock My Baby Right (2:35)
28. The Sly Fox - Hoo-Doo Say (3:01)
29. The Sly Fox - I'm Tired Of Beggin' (2:29)

CD 4:
1. The Sly Fox - My Four Women (3:07)
2. Little Milton - Looking For My Baby (2:54)
3. Little Milton - Homesick For My Baby (2:20)
4. Ike Turner & His Orchestra - Go To It (2:22)
5. Johnny Wright w. Ike Turner's Orchestra - The World Is Yours (2:51)
6. The Trojans - As Long As I Have You (3:00)
7. The Trojans - I Wanna Make Love To You (1:58)
8. Willie King w. Ike Turner Feat. Billy Gayles - Peg Leg Woman (2:33)
9. Willie King w. Ike Turner Feat. Billy Gayles - Mistreating Me (3:08)
10. Billy Gayles w. Ike Turner's Rhythm Rockers - I'm Tore Up (2:22)
11. Billy Gayles w. Ike Turner's Rhythm Rockers - If I Had Never Known You (2:31)
12. The Rockers - What Am I To Do (2:15)
13. Billy Gayles w. Ike Turner's Kings Of Rhythm - Let's Call It A Day (2:28)
14. Billy Gayles w. Ike Turner's Kings Of Rhythm - Take Your Fine Frame Home (2:25)
15. The Rockers - Why Don't You Believe (2:22)
16. The Rockers - Down In The Bottom (2:24)
17. Billy Gayles w. Ike Turner's Kings Of Rhythm - No Coming Back (2:42)
18. Billy Gayles w. Ike Turner's Kings Of Rhythm - Do Right Baby (2:09)
19. Jackie Brenston w. Ike Turner's Kings Of Rhythm - What Can It Be (2:24)
20. Jackie Brenston w. Ike Turner's Kings Of Rhythm - Gonna Wait For My Chance (2:04)
21. The Gardenias - Flaming Love (2:25)
22. The Gardenias - My Baby's Tops (2:26)
23. The Starrs - Ain't Got No Home (2:36)
24. The Starrs - Crying Over You (2:33)
25. Billy Gayles w. Ike Turner's Kings Of Rhythm - Sad As A Man Can Be (2:08)
26. Billy Gayles w. Ike Turner's Kings Of Rhythm - Just One More Time (2:41)
27. Jackie Brenston w. Ike Turner's Kings Of Rhythm - Much Later (2:15)
28. Jackie Brenston w. Ike Turner's Kings Of Rhythm - The Mistreater (2:14)
29. Ike Turner & His Orchestra - Do You Mean It (2:19)
30. Ike Turner & His Orchestra - She Made My Blood Run Cold (2:20)
31. Ike Turner & His Orchestra - The Big Question (2:20)
32. Ike Turner & His Orchestra - Trail Blazer (2:32)

That Kat Sure Could Play!: The Singles 1951-1957 (4 CD) Part 1 mc
That Kat Sure Could Play!: The Singles 1951-1957 (4 CD) Part 1 zippy

That Kat Sure Could Play!: The Singles 1951-1957 (4 CD) Part 2 mc
That Kat Sure Could Play!: The Singles 1951-1957 (4 CD) Part 2 zippy

Sunday, December 17, 2017

Howlin' Wolf - Backdoor Blues

Year: 2012
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:06
Size: 170,6 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. Shake For Me (4:12)
2. Love Me Darlin' (6:27)
3. (I Believe) I'll Dust My Broom (4:59)
4. I Didn't Mean To Hurt Your Feelings (5:33)
5. Rockin' The Blues (5:15)
6. All My Life (4:07)
7. Going Down Slow (6:16)
8. Howlin' For My Baby (4:22)
9. Forty-Four (7:32)
10. Highway 49 (2:55)
11. Little Red Rooster (5:34)
12. Wang Dang Doodle (4:53)
13. Built For Comfort (2:19)
14. Killing Floor (3:27)
15. Poor Boy (4:03)
16. Smile At Me (2:03)

Of the myriad circulating live Wolf albums of dubious fidelity and legality, this is the best of the bunch, both from an audio standpoint and the pronouncement in the booklet that royalties were indeed being paid to Wolf's widow. This is Wolf's portion of the show as part of the traveling American Folk Blues entourage, the first festival type presentation of the whole blues spectrum to invade Europe.

This 1964 tour is the one that brought the real thing to locales where he had previously been only a name on a phonograph record, and the romantic notions projected into the sound that record gave off. With somewhat subdued but nonetheless solid support from right hand man Hubert Sumlin on lead guitar, Sunnyland Slim on piano, Willie Dixon on upright bass, and Clifton James on drums, Wolf runs through a 45-minute set loaded with classics and presented with a positively genial charm.

The lack of Wolf's regular rhythm section (although Dixon played bass on many of the records from this period) lends a different flavor to these versions. Many of the selections seem mistitled here ("Tell Me What I've Done" is "I Didn't Mean To Hurt Your Feelings," "Shake For Me" is "Shake It For Me," "May I Have A Talk With You" is "Love Me," etc.), but as this November 6th performance in Bremen, Germany unfolds, it becomes apparent that the odd titles come from Wolf's introductions.

Everything is stretched to a nice, comfortable length here, as Wolf sets both mood and pace, with no tune clocking in at anything less than four minutes and "Goin' Down Slow" and "Forty-Four" reaching the six- and seven-minute mark. Even though the drums and Sumlin's guitar are perhaps muted in the mix more than they should be, the overall sound shows just how well these blues veterans worked together.

Just how essential this performance is to a Wolf collection would be in debate, but once you're under the spell, you want to hear it all, and this is a fine addition for someone who's in it for the long haul. /Cub Koda, AllMusic

(Tracks 1-9 also released as "Live In Europe 1964" and "Rockin' The Blues: Live in Germany 1964".)

Backdoor Blues mc
Backdoor Blues zippy

Friday, December 8, 2017

Howlin' Wolf - Bluesmaster

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:58
Size: 66.3 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1996
Art: Front

[2:47] 1. I Asked For Water (She Gave Me Gasoline)
[2:40] 2. How Many More Years
[2:34] 3. Who Will Be Next
[3:30] 4. Change My Way
[2:53] 5. Moanin' At Midnight
[2:52] 6. Evil (Is Going On)
[2:51] 7. My Mind Is Ramblin
[2:48] 8. Highway 49
[3:03] 9. Poor Boy
[2:55] 10. Worried About My Baby

Howlin' Wolf was certainly a master of the blues, and MCA Special Products' Bluesmaster, thankfully, does offer some evidence proving why that's an acknowledged fact, not simply a matter of opinion. Granted, a ten-track budget-line collection could hardly be called definitive, but this collection is nevertheless a good sampler, largely because it relies on classic Chess material. Many great songs are missing, but a handful are here ("I Asked for Water," "How Many More Years," "Change My Way," "Moanin' at Midnight," "Evil"), along with several lesser-known but very good songs ("Who Will Be Next?," "My Mind is Ramblin'," "Highway 49," "Poor Boy," "Worried About My Baby"). It's certainly not a definitive collection, but it's a strong, varied sampling of Howlin' Wolf in his prime, which may make it of interest to curious listeners on a budget. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Bluesmaster

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Howlin' Wolf - Sings The Blues

Year: 1962/2017
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:57
Size: 71,7 MB
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Scans: Full

1. Riding In The Moonlight (3:10)
2. Worried About My Baby (3:00)
3. Crying At Daylight (3:55)
4. Brown Skin Woman (2:41)
5. Twisting And Turning (3:08)
6. House Rockin Boogie (4:10)
7. Keep What You Got (2:22)
8. Dog Me Around (2:43)
9. Morning At Midnight (2:42)
10. Backslide Boogie (3:01)

In its original form, Crown's Howlin' Wolf Sings the Blues LP was a patchwork compilation of sides cut for the Modern label in 1951-1952, including three songs that had previously showed up on RPM singles, a bunch of outtakes not released on 45, and a couple instrumentals that weren't even the work of Howlin' Wolf himself. The material hails from that confusing junction in his discography where his first Memphis recordings were being leased to both Modern and Chess, which is why material from that era has tended to get released on different labels.

Certainly the Wolf's Modern sessions could have been better represented than they were by this 1962 album, but it's still groundbreaking early electric blues, though not quite up to the peaks he'd scale with his best Chess sessions of the mid-'50s to the mid-'60s. The electric guitar had rarely been recorded with as much fuzzy power as it was here, for one thing, and Howlin' Wolf's vocals were already possessed of magnificent, sometimes scary intensity.

The same could be said of his lyrical imagery on songs like "Riding in the Moonlight," "Morning at Midnight" (aka "Moanin' at Midnight"), "Dog Me Around" (aka "How Many More Years"), and "Crying at Daybreak," which is actually an early version of his classic "Smokestack Lightning." "House Rockin' Boogie" and "Keep What You Got," meanwhile, are more good-time, fast-paced numbers that point toward not only the future of electric blues, but to some of the future traits of rock & roll.

The continuity of the anthology, however, is disrupted by the inclusion of two Joe Hill Louis instrumentals at the end of each LP side, though those are respectable enough early electric blues harmonica workouts, somewhat in the mold of a raw Little Walter. This has almost everything Howlin' Wolf cut for Modern in the early '50s, and is thus an essential supplement to his more celebrated Chess catalog for the serious fan. /Richie Unterberger, AllMusic

Sings The Blues mc
Sings The Blues zippy

Sunday, July 23, 2017

Various - Music Of The World: Blow That Harmonica

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:16
Size: 170.0 MB
Styles: Harmonica blues
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:11] 1. Sleepy John Estes - Policy Man
[4:40] 2. Saffire - I'll Be Your Sweet Black Angel
[2:31] 3. Dr. Ross - Juke Box Boogie
[3:02] 4. Harmonica Frank - Rockin Chair
[2:58] 5. Howlin' Wolf - All In The Mood
[2:25] 6. Junior Wells - Messin' With The Kid
[3:40] 7. Billy Boy Arnold - I Wish You Would
[3:12] 8. Big Walter Horton - Little Boy
[3:32] 9. James Cotton - West Helena Blues
[3:57] 10. Charlie Musselwhite - Just You
[4:08] 11. Lazy Lester - Raining In My Heart
[4:48] 12. Carey Bell - Bad Habits
[6:53] 13. Big Mama Thornton - Rock Me Baby
[4:46] 14. Sonny Terry - Sonny's Whoopin' The Doop
[2:34] 15. Coy Love - Harmonica Jam
[2:49] 16. Joe Hill Louis - Boogie In The Park
[3:15] 17. Raful Neal - You Don't Love Me (Anymore)
[1:56] 18. Frank Frost - Crawl Back
[7:30] 19. The Siegel-Schwall Band - Hush, Hush
[2:19] 20. Onie Wheeler - Jump Right Out Of This Jukebox

Beginning sometime in the late 1940s, harmonica players started using amplification in a new way. With a small, portable amplifier and a cheap microphone, they would cup the mic in their hands, together with the harmonica, to create a highly concentrated sound that was loud enough to project over the din on street corners and in small nightclubs. By the start of the 1950s, electric guitars and amplified harmonicas were the rule in Chicago blues bands, backed by drums, bass, and piano.

Early postwar attempts at recording transplanted rural artists reveal an uncomfortable grafting of country blues onto an urbane, jazz-influenced backing that doesn’t serve the direct, earthy character of the featured artists. Small, independent record companies have long been important vehicles for blues artists to get their music to consumers. Some of the better-known regional companies highlighted blues harmonica and promoted early rock-and-roll. This combination later influenced the adoption of the harmonica by rock artists in the 1960s, who heard blues harmonica alongside the latest hits. By the late 1950s, white teenagers were obsessed with rock-and-roll, while black audiences had largely moved on from the blues. The folk music movement of the 1950s presented Americans with an alternative to current popular music. Folk fans began to see blues musicians as a part of the folk movement. European and British music fans, who had been fascinated for several years with American music, especially jazz and blues, began promoting blues concerts in the UK and on the European continent. Young British musicians started emulating the blues records they heard, resulting in British rock bands with notables on the mouth harp.

Musicians worldwide have been bitten by the blues harp bug, and the virus often mutates and starts to interact with its new host. Artists and the stylistic crossbreeding they’ve been working between blues and other styles include jump and swing’s Dennis Gruenling, beatboxing’s Son of Dave, and soul’s Bobby Rush.

Music Of The World: Blow That Harmonica