Showing posts with label Hubert Sumlin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hubert Sumlin. Show all posts

Friday, September 15, 2023

Rogers, Hickey, Sumlin & Friends - Bill's Blues

Size: 98.3 MB
Time: 42:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1995
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. Slick Chick (3:08)
02. When It Comes To Love (5:01)
03. Feed Me (5:08)
04. I Am The Blues (6:29)
05. Talk To Me, Baby (4:20)
06. Easy (Instrumental) (3:33)
07. Crazy Woman (5:21)
08. Shake, Rattle & Roll (5:38)
09. Put The Kettle On (3:30)

An expression of contemporary, yet classic Chicago blues, Bill's Blues is largely the collaboration of protoge Bill Hickey and mentor Hubert Sumlin, with guest-star support from Jimmy Rogers and producer Willie Murphy.

Jimmy Rogers is well known to blues fans everywhere as Muddy Waters' guitarist in the late 1940's and early 50's and for his own recordings since that time. After leaving Muddy's band, Jimmy continued as a solo artist for Chess Records until 1959, backed first by Little Walter and Muddy himself, and later by Big Walter Horton and Willie Dixon. Jimmy continues to perform to this day.

Hubert Sumlin is an international blues celbrity in his own right, performing around the world and even sitting in with the house band for Saturday Night Live; but he'll probably always be best remembered as the guitarist who helped create the Howlin' Wolf sound during Worf's Chicago heyday in the 1950-'s and early 60's.

As Wolf was Hubert's musical father, so today does Bill Hickey think of Hubert as a musical father. Bill was born and raised in Chicago, where he played with the likes of Eddie Taylor, Jimmy Rogers, and harmonica virtuoso Big Walter Horton. From its earliest days the blues has been handed down from mentor to disciple; Big Bill Hickey's relationship with Hubert Sumlin assures us that Sumlin's legacy is in good hands.

Bill's Blues MP3
Bill's Blues FLAC

Friday, August 11, 2023

David Maxwell & Friends - Max Attack

Size: 142.4 MB
Time: 60:53
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2003
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. Backseat Of A Greyhound (Feat. Ronnie Earl) (6:40)
02. Thanks For All The Women (Feat. Hubert Sumlin, James Cotton, Ronnie Earl) (6:13)
03. Twisted Tendons (3:44)
04. Long Distance Driver (Feat. Liane Carroll, Ronnie Earl) (4:57)
05. What's The Use (Of A Broken Heart) (Feat. Liane Carroll) (3:53)
06. Sticky Buns (Feat. Kim Wilson) (4:17)
07. Moving Out Of This World (Feat. Duke Robillard, Ronnie Earl) (5:40)
08. Coming Home, Baby (Feat. Hubert Sumlin) (5:24)
09. Hip-House Rock (Feat. Duke Robillard) (4:27)
10. Handyman (Feat. Hubert Sumlin, Ronnie Earl) (6:08)
11. Thank You Pinetop Perkins (Feat. Pinetop Perkins) (5:04)
12. Max Attack (4:21)

David Maxwell has amassed an enormous resume throughout the years playing piano with some of the greatest and well- known musicians in the blues. David plays many styles of blues, jazz and improvised music, but he is best known for his soulful virtuosity and unmatched ability to reach the heart of post-war Chicago Blues. Through his work, he has gained the respect of artists, critics and fans and has established a reputation as one of the finest blues pianists alive. In the last decade , David has received over a half dozen WC Handy and Grammy nominations and a Grammy Award for recorded work, as well as Handy nominations for instrumental performance He has played with many of the greats including tours with Freddie King, Bonnie Raitt, James Cotton, Otis Rush, Buddy Guy, Hubert Sumlin, Jimmy Rodgers, Charley Musselwhite, Johnny Adams and Ronnie Earl; and gigs with Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Levon Helm, Jimmy Witherspoon, Lowell Fulsom, Junior Wells and many others. He has been involved in well over fifty recording sessions and can be found playing keys on many blues albums that have been released over the last 25 years. (Recently, he backed up Keith Richards and Eric Clapton for a Hubert Sumlin project that will be out laterin 2005). David's music was used in the movie 'Fried Green Tomatoes' and in the TV series 'Touched By An Angel'. He has performed on 'Late Night With Conan O' Brien' and is on several videos playing with Freddie King in the early 70's. (Rounder). David's first CD as a leader 'Maximum Blues Piano'(1997, Tonecool) received high critical acclaim. His new album, 'Max Attack' (2005 95North Records), features guests James Cotton, Kim Wilson, Ronnie Earl, Duke Robillard, Hubert Sumlin and Pinetop Perkins . David has performed in major festivals, theaters and clubs in North America, Europe, Scandinavia, Morocco, Israel, and Japan, and keeps busy today playing, recording, and teaching (and nurturing his interests in jazz, ethnic and improvised music). 'I don't think anybody could be tighter playing the blues on the piano than David Maxwell. He plays the blues like it should be played. He plays the low-down, dirty, funky blues.He's got it all together' ---John Lee Hooker 'Dave has always been one of the most amazing piano players I've ever heard. His command of a wide range of blues and jazz styles is remarkable. ~Bonnie Raitt.

Max Attack MP3
Max Attack FLAC

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

Saturday, February 12, 2022

Hubert Sumlin & Billy Branch - Chicago Blues Session Vol. 22

Album: Chicago Blues Session Vol. 22
Size: 128,5 MB
Time: 55:44
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1998
Styles: Chicago blues, harmonica blues
Art: Full

1. Hubert Sumlin - You Can't Change Me (6:50)
2. Hubert Sumlin - I Did What I Could (5:09)
3. Billy Branch - Baby, What You Want Me To Do (5:09)
4. Billy Branch - That's All Right (5:58)
5. Billy Branch - Just Your Fool (4:35)
6. Billy Branch - Everything Gonna Be All Right (5:56)
7. Billy Branch - Take You Down Town (4:42)
8. Hubert Sumlin & John Primer - First Song I Ever Did (4:22)
9. Hubert Sumlin & John Primer - Real Far Away (4:15)
10. Hubert Sumlin & John Primer - No Place To Go (4:20)
11. Hubert Sumlin & John Primer - I've Been Gone (4:24)

This disc is a fine portrait of Chicago blues - past and present. Award-winning harpist Billy Branch and legendary giant of the famed Howlin' Wolf Band, Hubert Sumlin, here join hands with some of the finest contemporary musicians in the Windy City - among them: Willie Kent, John Primer, Johnny B. Moore, and Carl Weathersby. Sumlin offers two superb band tracks as well as four acoustic duets with guitarist John Primer. In addition, there are four Billy Branch numbers that recast the work of Jimmy Rogers, Jimmy Reed, and Little Walter without ever becoming slavish. The dual-guitar work of Johnny B. Moore and John Primer is exceptional. /Larry Hoffman, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Chicago Blues Session Vol. 22 mc
Chicago Blues Session Vol. 22 zippy

Friday, February 19, 2021

Hubert Sumlin - New York 95

Size: 144.4 MB
Time: 61:55
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2021
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Front

01. Can't Say No (Feat. S.P. Leary, Calvin 'Fuzz' Jones, Eric Mingus & Elliott Sharp) (3:46)
02. Forty-Four (Feat. Dave Maxwell) (4:02)
03. East Broadway Blues (Feat. S.P. Leary, Calvin 'Fuzz' Jones & Elliott Sharp) (3:48)
04. Rollin' & Tumblin' (4:22)
05. The Soul Of A Man (3:15)
06. Baby I'm Gone (Feat. Dave Maxwell) (5:34)
07. Crawling King Snake (4:24)
08. One For Carl (Feat. S.P. Leary, Calvin 'Fuzz' Jones & Elliott Sharp) (3:48)
09. Did What I Could (Live) (5:11)
10. Everywhere I Go (Live) (5:11)
11. Have You Ever Been Down This Road (Live) (4:00)
12. My Sweet Honey (Live) (2:53)
13. Rock Me (Live) (3:29)
14. Why I'm Here (Live) (5:15)
15. You Can Do It (Live) (2:52)

A true original, the legendary Hubert Sumlin played guitar for 30 years with Howlin' Wolf - Chess Records, Muddy Waters, and others and defined a new strain of electric blues guitar as well as creating iconic hooks for many blues classics. His influence extended to such guitarists as Jimi hendrix, Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page Robbie Robertson, and many others. Hubert Sumlin: New York 95 was originally produced for Blues Planet records who released Hubert’s album Wake Up Call. Recorded in 1995 at Seltzer Sound-NYC including duo with Dave Maxwell (piano) on 2 songs; and with S.P. Leary-drums, Fuzz Jones - bass on 3 songs with the rest, Hubert Sumlin'solo' recorded in concert at Terra Blues, NYC. Long thought lost, after restoring some DAT archives, producer Sharp found the sessions and enlisted Eric Mingus to add vocals to an unfinished rhythm track yielding the opening "Can’t Say No" (with added guitar by E# on Can’t Say No, East Broadway Blues, and One For Carl.

New York 95 MP3
New York 95 FLAC

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

Saturday, December 23, 2017

Hubert Sumlin - Wake Up Call

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:00
Size: 144.2 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1998/2006
Art: Front

[7:12] 1. I'm Coming Home
[6:32] 2. Makes Me Think About The One I Had
[6:40] 3. When You're In Love
[7:24] 4. HI'm Your Baby
[9:04] 5. Wake Up Call
[4:32] 6. Gonna Move
[4:43] 7. Let You Fingers Do The Talking'
[3:49] 8. I Just Need Your Love
[4:35] 9. Hubert Runs The Hoodoo Down
[8:25] 10. Get This Love Straight

Hubert Sumlin is an electric guitar pioneer, largely responsible for the sound of many modern guitar players. Eric Clapton, Keith Richards, Jimmy Page, Bob Dylan, Frank Zappa, Bob Weir, Jeff Beck, Carlos Santana and many other critically acclaimed musicians consider Sumlin a major influence on their playing. Clapton proved his respect by refusing to do the Chess Records London Howlin' Wolf Sessions unless Hubert was present. "The Red Rooster", "Backdoor Man", "Shake For Me", "Killing Floor", "Smokestack Lightnin" and "Sittin' On Top of the World" are songs you may recognize from cover versions by Cream, The Doors, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jimi Hendrix, The Grateful Dead, or The Rolling Stones. Hubert Sumlin formulated the original music to these classics. Sumlin is a historically significant originator of blues composition and one of the last living connections to an era that produced so much monumental music. His sizzling CD Wake Up Call is a vibrant celebration of the past and present, showcasing Hubert's spontaneous, sensitive playing style. The CD features Sumlin with Jimmy Vivino (rhythm guitar), Mike Merritt (acoustic bass), Jerry Vivino (saxophone), and Scott Healy (keyboards) who perform on TV's "Late Night with Conan O'Brien." Wake Up Call is an extraordinary release from Hubert Sumlin which music lovers everywhere will treasure.

Wake Up Call mc
Wake Up Call zippy

Friday, November 17, 2017

Hubert Sumlin - I Know You

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:36
Size: 129.6 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[4:01] 1. I'm Coming Home
[3:46] 2. Howlin' For My Darling
[8:31] 3. That's Why I'm Gonna Leave You
[4:01] 4. How Many More Years
[3:29] 5. Don't Judge A Book By The Cover
[5:51] 6. I Got It Where I Want It
[4:05] 7. I'm Not Your Clown
[4:37] 8. Smokestack
[7:19] 9. I've Been Hurt
[3:21] 10. Mind Is Rambling
[3:05] 11. You My Best
[4:25] 12. Good Bye

This is arguably the first musically indispensable album that Hubert Sumlin has done since Howlin' Wolf died some 23 years ago. That isn't to say that he hasn't done some good albums before this, just that I Know You has a degree of urgency, coupled with remarkable ease, that makes it a real delight. The result is a record that compares very favorably with Wolf's London Sessions record as a mix of old and new. Sumlin will never sound like Wolf as a singer, but he can't help sounding like him in every other way, since it was Wolf's guitar on practically every cut after 1954; but he does his best with a limited voice and a hot guitar to deliver some superb electric blues. Whether he's acknowledging Elmore James, Jimmy Reed, or John Lee Hooker, or paying tribute to Wolf himself ("How Many More Years," in a killer interpretation), Sumlin sounds like he's having great fun grinding and crunching away on his instrument. He even turns in a surprisingly strong vocal and guitar performance on a familiar piece of subdued blues, "That's Why I'm Gonna Leave You." There is a little dross here -- Sumlin doesn't do all that well stepping into John Lee Hooker territory; but generally, I Know You is a record that should please any fan of the Wolf or Sumlin (or, for that matter, James or Reed), with two tracks, "I'm Not Your Clown" and "Smokestack" (based on guess which song), indispensable to fans of hot blues guitar. Playing with him are Sam Lay (drums) and Carrie Bell (harp), with Jimmy D. Lane on second guitar and David Krull at the piano and organ. ~Bruce Eder

I Know You

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Hubert Sumlin - Hubert's American Blues

Year: 1969
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s (vinyl)
Time: 34:50
Size: 80,8 MB
Styles: Blues
Scans: LP front & back

1. My Babe (3:05)
2. Hubert's Blues (3:46)
3. We Gonna Jump (3:29)
4. Too Late For Me To Pray (3:45)
5. I Love (3:06)
6. It's You My Baby (2:29)
7. Love You, Woman (3:08)
8. Everytime I Get To Drinking (3:02)
9. When I Feel Better (3:41)
10. Blues Anytime (5:15)

Quiet and extremely unassuming off the bandstand, Hubert Sumlin played a style of guitar incendiary enough to stand tall beside the immortal Howlin' Wolf. The Wolf was Sumlin's imposing mentor for more than two decades, and it proved a mutually beneficial relationship; Sumlin's twisting, darting, unpredictable lead guitar constantly energized the Wolf's 1960s Chess sides, even when the songs themselves (check out "Do the Do" or "Mama's Baby" for conclusive proof) were less than stellar.

Sumlin started out twanging the proverbial broom wire nailed to the wall before he got his mitts on a real guitar. He grew up near West Memphis, AR, briefly hooking up with another young lion with a rosy future, harpist James Cotton, before receiving a summons from the mighty Wolf to join him in Chicago in 1954. Sumlin learned his craft nightly on the bandstand behind Wolf, his confidence growing as he graduated from rhythm guitar duties to lead. By the dawn of the '60s, Sumlin's slashing axe was a prominent component on the great majority of Wolf's waxings, including "Wang Dang Doodle," "Shake for Me," "Hidden Charms" (boasting perhaps Sumlin's greatest recorded solo), "Three Hundred Pounds of Joy," and "Killing Floor."

Although they had a somewhat tempestuous relationship, Sumlin remained loyal to Wolf until the big man's 1976 death. But there were a handful of solo sessions for Sumlin before that, beginning with a most unusual 1964 date in East Berlin that was produced by Horst Lippmann during a European tour under the auspices of the American Folk Blues Festival (the behind-the-Iron Curtain session also featured pianist Sunnyland Slim and bassist Willie Dixon). Only in the last few years has Sumlin allowed his vocal talents to shine. He's recorded solo sets for Black Top and Blind Pig that show him to be an understated but effective singer - and his guitar continues to communicate most forcefully.

The esteem with which he was held by musicians of a later generation was ably demonstrated by the guest list on Sumlin's 2004 album About Them Shoes, including Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, Levon Helm, and David Johansen, not to mention a noted bluesman from Sumlin's own past, harmonica player James Cotton, the old friend and bandmate who first played with Sumlin in West Memphis back in their teenage years of the early '50s, before Cotton joined up with Muddy Waters and moved to Chicago, paralleling Sumlin's own journey to the Windy City around the same time. He followed up About Them Shoes with Treblemaker in 2007. Hubert Sumlin died of heart failure in Wayne, New Jersey on December 4, 2011 - he was 80 years old. Mick Jagger and Keith Richards paid for the bluesman's funeral expenses. /Biography by Bill Dahl, AllMusic

This is the first solo LP from Hubert Sumlin, recorded in 1964 and released on the Scout label in Germany in 1969. Backing him are Willie Dixon, Clifton James and Sunnyland Slim.

Hubert's American Blues mc
Hubert's American Blues zippy

Friday, September 15, 2017

Hubert Sumlin - Made In Argentina 1993

Year: 1994
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:22
Size: 146,5 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. Hubert's Shuffle (2:50)
2. Blues For Argentina (9:26)
3. Killing Floor (3:51)
4. Sitting On Top Of The World (5:34)
5. Howlin' For My Baby (3:04)
6. Blues In My Time (7:09)
7. Don't Worry (3:20)
8. Road Of No Return (4:52)
9. Mannish Boy (3:24)
10. Rockin' With My Baby (3:26)
11. I'll Help You (4:31)
12. Last Night (4:40)
13. I Did What I Could (3:31)
14. Chicken Shack (3:36)

On December 13th, 1993, a blues legend was arriving for the second time to Argentina - the one and only Hubert Sumlin, Howlin' Wolf's partner for almost 30 years. From the moment he arrived, he didn't loose a minute. Even though he was tired, even the first day he attended the club where rehearsals were going on, and there he met the local band who was to play with him on the four nights of shows: the band lead by Emilio Villanueva ("The Paternal's Saxophone") and his guys "The Kansas City Boys".

The guys didn't know what how it was going to be like until the first rehearsal. They had the privilge of being in front of a man who was a very strong influence on many great blues guitar players, including Stevie Ray Vaughan, Ronnie Earl, Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, etc. During the rehearsals, the Kansas City Boys couldn't stop learning from Hubert even for a minute. He'd play almost 50 songs in only one session, each song starting and ending in the most unusual and unexpected way; it was driving the band crazy, but after a few hours playing the blues, and with no need of any comments, the feeling chased every soul, and finally everybody was in the same frequency.

The live versions of "Blues For Argentina", "Last Night", and his lifetime classics like "Killing Floor" and "Sitting On Top Of The World", are good examples of why this album deserves being in the hands of everyone who is in the blues: modern, traditional or classic, all the styles have it's place in this CD. Every member grew up in a musical aspect, but also as human beings, due to the time spent with this great, a man who is not only a big musician but also an exceptional human being. (Excerpts from the liner notes.)

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Monday, April 17, 2017

Sunnyland Slim - Be Careful How You Vote

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:17
Size: 94.5 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1989
Art: Front

[4:40] 1. You Can't Have It All
[3:08] 2. Workin' Two Jobs
[3:47] 3. Have A Good Day Now
[4:13] 4. Chicago Jump
[4:48] 5. Past Life
[3:36] 6. Be Careful How You Vote
[3:47] 7. Johnson Machine Gun
[5:01] 8. Speak Once And Think Twice
[4:06] 9. Midnight Jump
[4:08] 10. Patience Like Job

Lurrie Bell/Guitar; Beau Biley/Trombone; Sam Burckhardt/Sax (Tenor); Chico Chism/Drums; Fred Grady/Drums; Nick Holt/Bass; Eddie Lusk/Organ; Magic Slim/Guitar; Mickey Martin/Drums; Hasson Miah/Drums; John Riley/Bass; Bob Stroger/Bass; Hubert Sumlin/Guitar; Sunnyland Slim/Composer, Piano, Primary Artist, Producer, Vocals; Eddie Taylor/Guitar.

This CD reissues a variety of recordings cut by the veteran blues pianist/vocalist Sunnyland Slim during 1981-83 for his private label Airway Records. In his mid-70s at the time, Slim's energetic vocals and powerful piano playing belie his age. As is typical of the pioneer Chicago bluesman, he allocated plenty of solo space to his sidemen (which include Hubert Sumlin, Eddie Taylor, Lurrie Bell or Magic Slim on guitar) although there was never any doubt about who was in control. The intelligent lyrics, high musicianship, mood variation (including two excellent instrumentals) and spirited playing make this a highly enjoyable and recommeded date despite the LP-length playing time. ~Scott Yanow

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Friday, March 3, 2017

Muddy Waters & Howlin' Wolf - Muddy & The Wolf

Year: 1974/1983
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:00
Size: 99,3 MB
Styles: Blues, Chicago blues
Scans: Full

1. All Aboard (2:50)
2. Blow Wind Blow (3:36)
3. Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had (3:04)
4. Walkin' Thru The Park (3:18)
5. I'm Ready (3:35)
6. Long Distance Call (6:22)
7. Rockin' Daddy (3:40)
8. What A Woman! (3:01)
9. Who's Been Talking? (3:05)
10. Red Rooster (Rehearsal) (1:28)
11. Red Rooster (3:51)
12. Highway 49 (2:47)
13. Do The Do (2:17)

Waters and Wolf do not perform together on this disc. The first half, recorded in Chicago, features Muddy backed by some of his regular '60s band members plus '60s U.S. blues-rockers Mike Bloomfield and Paul Butterfield. Wolf occupies the second half, taken from the "London Howlin' Wolf Sessions" album. He's backed by British blues-influenced rockers including Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, and the Stones' rhythm section. Despite the booklet's photo of Muddy and Wolf together, the notoriously paranoid Wolf had always regarded Muddy as a rival.

Despite their personal differences, Waters and Wolf were linked by their undeniable status as the prime architects of Chicago blues. The thematic tie here is their interaction with the generation of players who they inspired. As Muddy retains most of his usual band, his cuts differ little from his other late-'60s recordings (which is to say that they are eminently soulful and cathartic). Wolf's cuts are marked by the rock supersession vibe, but the assembled rock royalty manage to keep their egos in check, ably providing their hero with the angular, biting attack that is his trademark sound. This isn't the place to start with either Muddy or Wolf, but it's a more-than-interesting sideline to their careers.

Personnel Muddy Waters tracks (1-6): (Muddy Waters): Muddy Waters (vocals, slide guitar); Michael Bloomfield (guitar); Paul Butterfield, Jeff Carp (harmonica); Otis Spann (piano); Donald "Duck" Dunn, Phil Upchurch (bass); Sam Lay (drums).

Personnel Howlin' Wolf tracks (7-13): Howlin' Wolf (vocals, acoustic guitar, harmonica); Eric Clapton, Hubert Sumlin (guitar); Jeffrey M. Carp (harmonica); Steve Winwood, Ian Stewart, Lafayette Leake, John Simon (piano, organ); Bill Wyman, Phil Upchurch (bass, shakers, cow bell); Charlie Watts (drums, conga, percussion).

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Sunday, January 29, 2017

Kenny Wayne Shepherd - 10 Days Out: Blues From The Backroads

Year: 2007
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:50
Size: 181,8 MB
Styles: Blues
Scans: Full

1. Prison Blues (w. Cootie Stark & Neal 'Big Daddy' Pattman) (4:38)
2. Potato Patch (w. Jerry 'Boogie' McCain) (5:46)
3. Honky Tonk (w. Buddy Flett) (3:13)
4. The Thrill Is Gone (w. B.B. King) (8:30)
5. Tina Marie (w. Bryan Lee) (4:22)
6. Born In Louisiana (w. Clarence 'Gatemouth' Brown) (6:26)
7. Chapel Hill Boogie (w. John Dee Holeman) (5:49)
8. Tears Came Rollin' Down (w. Henry Townsend) (3:15)
9. Knoxville Rag (w. Etta Baker) (1:48)
10. Big Daddy Boogie (w. Neal 'Big Daddy' Pattman) (5:15)
11. U-Haul (w. Cootie Stark) (5:00)
12. Red Rooster (w. Henry Gray & Howlin' Wolf Band) (6:20)
13. Sittin' On Top Of The World (w. Hubert Sumlin & Howlin' Wolf Band) (3:58)
14. Spoonful (w. George 'Wild Child' Butler & Howlin' Wolf Band) (5:18)
15. Grindin' Man (w. Pinetop Perkins & Muddy Waters Band) (8:05)

10 Days Out may well be Kenny Wayne Shepherd's most important and intriguing album, even though the guitarist is hardly the featured artist on any of these tracks, working instead more as a sideman and facilitator for the impressive cast of venerable blues players who get a chance to shine here. Make no mistake about it, this recording belongs to such senior citizens as Henry Townsend, Etta Baker, Pinetop Perkins, and Henry Gray, and Shepherd's presence (and the presence of Stevie Ray Vaughan's Double Trouble rhythm section of bassist Tommy Shannon and drummer Chris Layton) simply helps to focus the attention on these veteran blues players.

Shepherd embarked on a ten-day journey into the American South in 2004 with a documentary film crew, a portable recording studio, and Double Trouble as a house band in an effort to catch the blues in its natural habitat of living rooms, kitchens, porches, back yards, and local watering holes, and the performances that resulted are priceless.

Here is one-armed harp player Neal Pattman and blind guitarist Cootie Stark turning in a joyous, ramshackle version of "Prison Blues." A little later, Stark delivers further on a delightful song called "U-Haul," complete with a marvelous improvised rap over the tune's run-out coda. Here, too, is the then-96-year-old Henry Townsend turning in a poignant "Tears Came Rollin' Down." Etta Baker, then 93, shows that age hadn't slowed her as a guitarist at all as she delivers an elegant "Knoxville Rag." Shepherd wisely stays in the background on cut after cut, allowing these amazing musical treasures to unfold naturally and without intrusive elements.

There are absolutely no hotshot guitar histrionics anywhere on this disc, which speaks to Shepherd's sincere vision for this project. He's after the preservation of blues history with 10 Days Out, and as if to underscore that aim, five of the album's participants (Neal Pattman, Cootie Stark, Gatemouth Brown, George "Wild Child" Butler, and Etta Baker) passed away before the album and concurrent documentary film were finally completed and released in 2007. Shepherd's name may be above the title, but he knows full well to whom this album belongs, and to his immense credit, those are the voices he lets speak the loudest. /Steve Leggett, AllMusic

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Friday, December 16, 2016

Memphis Slim, Matt 'Guitar' Murphy, Eddie Taylor - Together Again One More Time/Still Not Ready For Eddie

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:51
Size: 148.5 MB
Styles: Chicago blues, Memphis blues
Year: 1990/2012
Art: Front

[4:05] 1. Wish Me Well
[4:07] 2. Steppin' Out
[4:22] 3. Havin' Fun
[3:55] 4. Movin' On
[3:12] 5. Black Cat Blues
[4:44] 6. Boogie, Juggie
[5:22] 7. My Baby
[4:12] 8. Bad
[3:20] 9. If You Don't Want Me Baby
[4:44] 10. Clouds In My heart
[4:18] 11. Knockin' At Your Door
[5:41] 12. Sittin' Here Thinkin'
[4:16] 13. Big Town Playboy
[5:38] 14. Anna Lee
[2:48] 15. Boogaloo Farm

2 LPs on 1 CD. The 2 titles are "Together Again One More Time" and "Still Not Ready For Eddie". Matt "Guitar" Murphy (guitar); Memphis Slim (vocals, piano); Eddie Taylor (vocals, guitar); Hubert Sumlin, Jimmy Rogers, Luther Tucker (guitar); Snooky Pryor (harmonica); Joe Sublett, Mark "Kaz" Kazanoff (saxophone); Sunnyland Slim (piano); George Rains, Timothy Taylor, Ted Harvey (drums). Recording information: Antone's (12/04/1985).

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Saturday, October 15, 2016

Kenny Wayne Shepherd - The Legends EP Vols. I, II, III & IV

Kenny Wayne Shepherd and his group exploded on the scene in the mid-'90s and garnered huge amounts of radio airplay on commercial radio, which historically has not been a solid home for blues and blues-rock music, with the exception of Stevie Ray Vaughan in the mid-'80s. Shepherd was born June 12, 1977, in Shreveport, Louisiana. The Shreveport native began playing at age seven, figuring out Muddy Waters licks from his father's record collection (he has never taken a formal lesson). At age 13, he was invited on-stage by New Orleans bluesman Brian Lee and held his own for several hours; thus proving himself, he decided on music as a career. He formed his own band, which featured lead vocalist Corey Sterling, gaining early exposure through club dates and, later, radio conventions. Shepherd's father/manager used his own contacts and pizzazz in the record business to help land his son a major-label record deal with Irving Azoff's Giant Records. Ledbetter Heights, his first album, was released two years later in 1995 and was an immediate hit, selling over 500,000 copies by early 1996. Most blues records never achieve that level of commercial success, much less ones released by artists who are still in their teens. Although Shepherd -- who has been influenced by (and has sometimes played with) guitarists Stevie Ray Vaughan, Albert King, Slash, Robert Cray, and Duane Allman -- is definitely a performer who thrives in front of an audience, Ledbetter Heights was impressive for its range of styles: acoustic blues, rockin' blues, Texas blues, Louisiana blues. The only style that he doesn't tackle is Chicago blues, owing to Shepherd's home base being smack dab in the middle of the Texas triangle. Released in 1998, Trouble Is... earned a Grammy nomination and Live On followed a year later. In 2004 The Place You're In was released on Reprise Records, and was the first album to feature Shepherd doing the majority of the lead vocals (singer Noah Hunt handled the lead vocals on the previous two albums). Shepherd's next project saw him traveling in the American South with a documentary film crew and a portable recording studio as he backed up several veteran blues players on their home turf. The resulting album and film, 10 Days Out: Blues from the Backroads, appeared in 2007 before Live! In Chicago followed in 2010. That November, Shepherd joined Jimmy Fallon's house band on TV for an evening, and performed with the same Fender Stratocaster that Jimi Hendrix had played at Woodstock. Although Shepherd had kept busy in the intervening years, 2011's How I Go was his first studio album proper in a seven-year period. In an attempt to revive the success enjoyed with 1998's Trouble Is..., he once again recruited Noah Hunt on vocals, as well as former Talking Heads keyboard player and guitarist Jerry Harrison, who had produced the sessions for that platinum-selling album. Shepherd followed How I Go with 2014's Goin' Home, a tribute to his musical heroes that featured contributions from artists such as Ringo Starr and Keb' Mo'. ~ Steve Huey & Richard Skelly

Album: The Legends EP Vol. I
Size: 142 MB
Time: 20:44
File: FLAC
Released: 2007
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Honky Tonk (Live With Buddy Flett) (3:13)
02. Tina Marie (Live With Bryan Lee) (4:21)
03. Prison Blues (Live With Cootie Stark & Neal 'Big Daddy' Pattman) (4:36)
04. I'm Leavin' You (Live) (8:33)

The Legends EP Vol. I

Album: The Legends EP Vol. II
Size: 146 MB
Time: 22:22
File: FLAC
Released: 2007
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Potato Patch (Live With Jerry 'Boogie' McCain) (5:45)
02. Born In Louisiana (Live With Clarence 'Gatemouth' Brown) (6:25)
03. Chapel Hill Boogie (Live With John Dee Holeman) (5:49)
04. Cleveland Mississippi (Live With Buddy Flett) (4:20)

The Legends EP Vol. II

Album: The Legends EP Vol. III
Size: 142 MB
Time: 21:25
File: FLAC
Released: 2008
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Tears Came Rollin' Down (Live With Henry Townsend) (3:14)
02. Knoxville Rag (Live With Etta Baker) (1:47)
03. Big Daddy Boogie (Live With Neal 'Big Daddy' Pattman) (5:15)
04. U-Haul (Live With Cottie Stark) (4:59)
05. Dollar Got The Blues (Live With Bryan Lee) (6:08)

The Legends EP Vol. III

Album: The Legends EP Vol. IV
Size: 184 MB
Time: 28:06
File: FLAC
Released: 2008
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Red Rooster (Live With Howlin' Wolf Band) (6:20)
02. Sittin' On The Top Of The World (Live With Hubert Slim & Howlin' Wolf Band) (3:56)
03. Spoonful (Live With Howlin' Wolf Band) (5:18)
04. Grindin' Man (Live With Muddy Waters Band) (8:02)
05. Shotgun Blues (Live) (4:28)

The Legends EP Vol. IV

Sunday, August 7, 2016

The Compulsions - Beat The Devil

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:31
Size: 81.3 MB
Styles: Rockin blues, Jam band
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:08] 1. Hired Gun
[2:15] 2. I Just Wanna Play Guitar
[3:21] 3. Dirty Woman Blues
[6:21] 4. Yer Too Good Fa Me
[0:44] 5. Eat My Dust
[4:32] 6. Ea$y Money
[3:01] 7. Ya Never Got Me Down
[2:46] 8. She's So F N' Sexy
[3:00] 9. I Was Right, You Were Wrong
[6:17] 10. Shut Yer Hole (Feat. Hubert Sumlin)

The group's recording lineup consists of Rob Carlyle on lead vocal and guitar, Richard Fortus (GUNS N' ROSES, THIN LIZZY) on guitar, Sami Yaffa (NEW YORK DOLLS, HANOI ROCKS, MICHAEL MONROE) on bass and Frank Ferrer (GUNS N' ROSES) on drums along with many of Carlyle's favorite local musicians; including long-revered blues guitarist Hubert Sumlin (HOWLIN' WOLF, MUDDY WATERS).

Because the ten songs on Beat The Devil go off in all directions it’s very difficult to feel any sort of flow to the whole thing. It’s like listening to a soundtrack album when you haven’t seen the film — all the songs are good, but you need some sort of context to put them into. Beat The Devil is a good record, but I can’t honestly say that it’s going to appeal to many people on account of how all over the place it is — I like that, but I fear it’ll keep a lot of folk away. ~Hetfield’s Mullet

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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

Friday, March 4, 2016

Various Artists - Lightning In A Bottle (Soundtrack) (2 CD)

This soundtrack to the movie features an astonishing array of blues artists from three generations. Recorded during one long night at NYC's Radio City Music Hall on Feb. 7, 2003, the electricity is in the air and on stage. While it may not have been the finest blues show in history, the collection of founding fathers such as David "Honeyboy" Edwards, Buddy Guy, Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, Larry Johnson, Hubert Sumlin, Solomon Burke, and the ubiquitous B.B. King along with their spiritual offspring (Gregg Allman, John Fogerty, and Steven Tyler) and some usual suspects like Bonnie Raitt, Robert Cray, and Keb' Mo', makes it arguably the most significant blues session ever captured on film.

Beginning acoustic, the double disc builds momentum and volume as we hear the blues mutate to electric and finally hip-hop with Chuck D. exploding on a rap version of John Lee Hooker's "Boom Boom." The crackling house band led by drummer Steve Jordan provides foundation for gritty, roof-raising pieces like the unusual collaboration between former New York Doll David Johansen and guitarist Sumlin on Howlin' Wolf's "Killing Floor." Not all of the film's music is included but there are enough magnificent performances for established blues fans and to entice those first experiencing the genre's abundant riches. /Amazon

Album: Lightning In A Bottle - CD 1
Year: 2004
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:31
Size: 111,5 MB
Styles: Blues, roots, R&B
Scans: Full

1. Angelique Kidjo - Senie Zelie (3:47)
2. Mavis Staples - See That My Grave Is Kept Clean (4:04)
3. David 'Honeyboy' Edwards - Gamblin' Man (4:08)
4. Keb' Mo' - Love In Vain (3:20)
5. James 'Blood' Ulmer & Alison Krauss - Sitting On Top Of The World (5:14)
6. Odetta - Jim Crow Blues (5:04)
7. Natalie Cole - St. Louis Blues (3:52)
8. Natalie Cole, Mavis Staples & Ruth Brown - Men Are Just Like Street Cars (4:25)
9. Buddy Guy - I Can't Be Satisfied (2:58)
10. India Arie - Strange Fruit (2:41)
11. Macy Gray - Hound Dog (3:28)
12. John Fogerty - The Midnight Special (4:31)
13. Larry Johnson - Where'd You Get That Sound (0:54)

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Album: Lightning In A Bottle - CD 2
Year: 2004
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:24
Size: 145,6 MB
Styles: Blues, roots, R&B
Scans: Full

1. Clarence 'Gatemouth' Brown - Okie Dokie Stomp (2:48)
2. Bonnie Raitt - Coming Home (3:26)
3. Gregg Allman & Warren Haynes - The Sky Is Crying (7:32)
4. Steven Tyler & Joe Perry - I'm A King Bee (4:20)
5. Buddy Guy - First Time I Met The Blues (4:12)
6. The Neville Brothers - Big Chief (3:27)
7. Shemekia Copeland & Robert Cray - I Pity The Fool (4:59)
8. David Johansen & Hubert Sumlin - Killing Floor (4:05)
9. Solomon Burke - Turn On Your Love Light (3:27)
10. Solomon Burke - Down In The Valley (3:21)
11. Angelique Kidjo, Buddy Guy & Vernon Reid - Voodoo Child (5:17)
12. Mos Def - Minnesota Blues (Aka 'Black Jack Blues') (5:44)
13. Chuck D. & The Fine Arts Militia - (No) Boom Boom (4:11)
14. B.B. King - Sweet Sixteen (6:31)

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Friday, February 26, 2016

Hubert Sumlin & His Friends - Kings Of Chicago Blues Vol. 2

Year: 1971/2011
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:24
Size: 95,0 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Scans: Full (front, back, cd)

1. Blues For Elmore James (2:41)
2. Funky Roots (3:48)
3. I Can't Lose (3:42)
4. One Down (3:41)
5. Willie's Back In Town (2:48)
6. Minor Feelings (3:14)
7. Everyday I Have The Blues (3:32)
8. Straight Talk (3:45)
9. Little By Little (3:34)
10. When Evelyn's Not Around (4:04)
11. It Hurts Me Too (5:30)

Quiet and extremely unassuming off the bandstand, Hubert Sumlin played a style of guitar incendiary enough to stand tall beside the immortal Howlin' Wolf. The Wolf was Sumlin's imposing mentor for more than two decades, and it proved a mutually beneficial relationship; Sumlin's twisting, darting, unpredictable lead guitar constantly energized the Wolf's 1960s Chess sides, even when the songs themselves (check out "Do the Do" or "Mama's Baby" for conclusive proof) were less than stellar. Sumlin started out twanging the proverbial broom wire nailed to the wall before he got his mitts on a real guitar. He grew up near West Memphis, AR, briefly hooking up with another young lion with a rosy future, harpist James Cotton, before receiving a summons from the mighty Wolf to join him in Chicago in 1954.

Sumlin learned his craft nightly on the bandstand behind Wolf, his confidence growing as he graduated from rhythm guitar duties to lead. By the dawn of the '60s, Sumlin's slashing axe was a prominent component on the great majority of Wolf's waxings, including "Wang Dang Doodle," "Shake for Me," "Hidden Charms" (boasting perhaps Sumlin's greatest recorded solo), "Three Hundred Pounds of Joy", and "Killing Floor". Although they had a somewhat tempestuous relationship, Sumlin remained loyal to Wolf until the big man's 1976 death. But there were a handful of solo sessions for Sumlin before that, beginning with a most unusual 1964 date in East Berlin that was produced by Horst Lippmann during a European tour under the auspices of the American Folk Blues Festival (the behind-the-Iron Curtain session also featured pianist Sunnyland Slim and bassist Willie Dixon).

Personnel:
Hubert Sumlin - lead guitar
Jimmy Dawkins - second guitar
James Green - bass
Freddie Below - drums

Special guests:
Billy Boy Arnold - harmonica, vocals on tracks 3 & 7
Eddie Shaw - saxophone, vocals on track 9
Joe Carter - guitar, vocals on track 11

Recorded on January 20, 1971 at the P.S. Recording Studios Chicago, Illinois

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Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Howlin' Wolf - The London Howlin' Wolf Sessions

Year: 1971/1989
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:31
Size: 97,9 MB
Styles: Electric blues, Chicago blues
Scans: Full

1. Rockin' Daddy (3:47)
2. I Ain't Superstitious (3:31)
3. Sittin' On Top Of The World (3:55)
4. Worried About My Baby (2:59)
5. What A Woman! (3:03)
6. Poor Boy (3:07)
7. Built For Comfort (2:12)
8. Who's Been Talking? (3:07)
9. The Red Rooster (False Start And Dialogue) (2:03)
10. The Red Rooster (3:59)
11. Do The Do (2:23)
12. Highway 49 (2:50)
13. Wang Dang Doodle (4:30)

For the casual blues fan with a scant knowledge of the Wolf, this 1971 pairing, with Eric Clapton, Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts from the Rolling Stones, Ringo Starr, and other British superstars, appears on the surface to be one hell of a super session. Although that's not really the case, it's nowhere near as awful as some blues purists make it out to be.

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