Showing posts with label John Hammond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Hammond. Show all posts

Sunday, December 15, 2024

John Hammond - You're Doin' Fine: Blues At The Boarding House June 2 & 3, 1973 (3 CD)

Album: You're Doin' Fine
Size: 144,7 + 161,5 + 48,6 MB
Time: 62:23 + 69:31 + 63:58
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Acoustic blues
Art: Front

CD 1:
1. Wang Dang Doodle (4:35)
2. Gambling Blues (4:44)
3. I Can't Be Satisfied (6:12)
4. Hitchhiking Woman (6:47)
5. Shake For Me (4:24)
6. Honeymoon Blues (2:09)
7. Rag Mama (2:59)
8. Sweet Home Chicago (5:49)
9. I Wish You Would (4:00)
10. King Bee (5:25)
11. Help Me (4:16)
12. Death Bells (7:17)
13. Honeymoon Blues (Version 2) (3:39)

CD 2:
1. You're So Fine (4:58)
2. Look On Yonder's Wall (4:53)
3. Traveling Riverside Blues (8:47)
4. Little Rain (3:34)
5. Truckin' Little Baby (3:27)
6. It's Too Late, She's Gone (2:50)
7. You Don't Love Me (3:43)
8. Ridin' In The Moonlight (3:06)
9. Malted Milk (3:01)
10. I Can't Be Satisfied (5:29)
11. It Hurts Me Too (3:15)
12. Boogie Chillen' (4:26)
13. She Moves Me (2:40)
14. Rag Mama (1:30)
15. Ask Me Nice (3:48)
16. Love Changing Blues (5:20)
17. Preachin' Blues (4:35)

CD 3:
1. Go On To School (3:26)
2. Ride 'Til I Die (4:54)
3. Drunken Hearted Man (3:53)
4. Look On Yonder's Wall (5:34)
5. Terraplane Blues (5:27)
6. No Money Down (3:42)
7. Truckin' Little Baby (2:59)
8. Ground Hog Blues (4:40)
9. Junco Partner (3:52)
10. I'm Leaving You (2:58)
11. From Four Until Late (3:30)
12. Traveling Riverside Blues (5:33)
13. Hitchhiking Woman (5:06)
14. Shake For Me (4:43)
15. It's Too Late, She's Gone (3:34)

In a career spanning more than 60 years, John Hammond played with just about everyone and seemed to influence everyone else. "You're Doin' Fine" showcases John Hammond in his prime playing solo country blues as captured by famed Grateful Dead soundman Owsley Stanley. This master class of the blues romps through Delta, Chicago, Texas, and Piedmont blues, including six Robert Johnson songs. /Amazon

CD 1: Recorded June 2, 1973.
CD 2: Tracks 1-7 recorded June 2, 1973. Tracks 8-17 recorded June 3, 1973.
CD 3: Recorded June 3, 1973.

You're Doin' Fine: Blues At The Boarding House June 2 & 3, 1973 (3 CD) mc
You're Doin' Fine: Blues At The Boarding House June 2 & 3, 1973 (3 CD) gofile

Saturday, June 17, 2023

Larry Johnson Accompanied By John Hammond - Midnight Hour Blues

Size: 104.3 MB
Time: 44:43
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1972/1995
Styles: Country Blues
Art: Full

01. Blood Red River (2:09)
02. One Room Country Shack (4:44)
03. Saturday Evening Blues (4:15)
04. Peace Breakin' People (3:26)
05. Walking Blues (4:25)
06. Mama-Less Rag (2:40)
07. Red River Dam Blues (5:58)
8. Nobody's Biz-Ness (4:35)
9. Midnight Hour Blues (5:15)
10. When Things Go Wrong (3:47)
11. Tell Me Mama (3:26)

Personnel:
Larry Johnson: vocals, acoustic guitar.
John Hammond: slide & steel guitars, harmonica.

Recorded in 1971.

This album presents Larry Johnson associated with John Hammond who accompanies him on slide guitar and on harmonica (though not very inspired on harmonica). Produced by Arnold Caplin, this is an excellent opus of acoustic Blues in which the two guitarists complement each other perfectly. Engraved in New York in a studio set up in the home of a jazz fan Sherman Fairchild. There are some great tracks : "Walking blues", "Midnight hour blues", "One room country shack", "Saturday evening blues". Unfortunately, critics and the public sulked this album.

Midnight Hour Blues MP3
Midnight Hour Blues FLAC

Sunday, August 16, 2020

John Hammond - Country Blues (Bonus Tracks)

Size: 135,3 MB
Time: 57:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1965/2001
Styles: Country Blues
Art: Full

01. Traveling Riverside Blues (3:25)
02. Hitchhiking Woman (4:44)
03. Statesborough Blues (3:41)
04. Milk Cow's Calf Blues (2:43)
05. Crawling Kingsnake (2:40)
06. Bull Frog Blues (2:27)
07. Drop Down Mama (2:45)
08. Little Rain Falling (3:52)
09. Seventh Son (2:30)
10. Who Do You Love (2:32)
11. 32-20 Blues (3:07)
12. Goin' Down Slow (4:05)
13. Stones in My Passway (3:10)
14. Walking Blues (2:56)
15. Death Don't Have No Mercy (3:16)
16. Motherless Willie Johnson (2:20)
17. When You Are Gone (2:32)
18. Rock Me Mama (2:26)
19. Get Right Church (1:53)

Although John Hammond, Jr. had already recorded electric material, he went back to a solo acoustic format for his fourth album, Country Blues, accompanying himself on guitar and harmonica on faithful interpretations of standards by Robert Johnson, Blind Willie McTell, John Lee Hooker, Sleepy John Estes, Jimmy Reed, Willie Dixon, and Bo Diddley. If it sounds a bit unimaginative and routine today, one has to remember that the general listening audience was much less aware of these artists and songs in the mid-'60s. Hammond did a commendable job of rendering them here, with fine guitar work and vocals that were a considerable improvement over his earliest efforts. [This version of the album includes bonus material.] ~Richie Unterberger

Country Blues MP3
Country Blues FLAC

Thursday, August 13, 2020

John Hammond - Bluesman

Size: 181,9 MB
Time: 77:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2002
Styles: Acoustic/Electric Blues
Art: Full

01. Bull Frog Blues (2:27)
02. Backdoor Man (4:18)
03. Tell Me More (2:54)
04. Mama Keep Your Big Mouth Shut (3:18)
05. Honest I Do (3:01)
06. My Starter Wont Start (2:50)
07. The Hoochie Coochie Man (3:04)
08. Help Me (2:20)
09. Got My Mojo Working (2:54)
10. Barbeque Blues (3:20)
11. Get Right Church (1:53)
12. Baby Please Dont Go (2:20)
13. Who Do You Love (2:32)
14. Sweet Home Chicago (4:26)
15. Five Long Years (2:43)
16. Southbound Blues (3:23)
17. Maybelline (2:35)
18. My Babe (2:07)
19. Look On Yonder Wall (3:41)
20. Howling For My Baby (3:26)
21. Aint That Loving You Baby (3:18)
22. They Call It Stormy Monday (4:09)
23. I Cant Be Satisfied (3:15)
24. Long Distance Call (3:19)
25. I'm Leaving You (3:19)

Blues man John Hammond Jr. has produced a steady flow of bona fide, top-quality blues since the mid-1960s, & has played an essential role in keeping alive blues classics by Robert Johnson, Sonny Boy Williamson, Willie Harris, Lightin' Hopkins, Eddie Boyd, Chester Burnett, Jimmy Reed, etc., along with many other all but forgotten great American blues songs from the 1930s-1950s. This CD collection includes 25 of Hammond's finest moments, featuring many of the musicians who have accompanied him over the years including Roger Hawkins, Robbie Robertson, Levon Helm, Jimmy Lewis, Garth Hudson (The Band), Jimmy Thackery, Mark Wenner, Jan Zukowsky, Pete Ragusa (The Nighthawks), Michael Bloomfield, Charlie Musselwhite, Roosevelt Skyes, Eddie Hinton, & Duane Allman. Hammond uses gravelly soul-drenched vocals, hypnotic guitar & incessant wild harmonica to sign his name in the book of blues.

Bluesman MP3
Bluesman FLAC

Friday, August 7, 2020

John Hammond - Big City Blues (Bonus Tracks)

Size: 153,5 MB
Time: 64:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1964/2001
Styles: Electric Blues, Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. I'm Ready (2:53)
02. My Starter Won't Start (2:52)
03. Barbecue Blues (3:22)
04. I'm A Man (3:19)
05. Barrelhouse Woman Blues (2:27)
06. Midnight Hour Blues (4:04)
07. Backdoor Man (4:21)
08. I Live The Life I Love (2:26)
09. No Money Down (3:53)
10. My Babe (2:09)
11. When You Got A Good Friend (4:44)
12. Baby, Won't You Tell Me (2:41)
13. They Call It Stormy Monday (But Tuesday Is Just As Bad) (4:08)
14. Statesboro Blues (3:26)
15. Keys To The Highway (3:13)
16. I Just Got Here (4:36)
17. I'm A Man (3:18)
18. Backdoor Man (4:18)
19. Baby, Won't You Tell Me (2:40)

John Hammond, Jr.'s second effort was one of the first electric white blues recordings, and one of the very first that could be said to be blues-rock. Covering a variety of Chess Records classics and electrifying some older tunes, the playing, featuring Hammond, Billy Butler, and Jimmy Spruill on electric guitar, is first-rate. But Hammond's vocals are overly mannered and overwrought on Big City Blues, and although he would improve, these flaws would keep him from rising to the top rank of white bluesmen. (The 2002 Universal reissue contains seven alternate bonus tracks.) ~Richie Unterberger

Big City Blues MP3
Big City Blues FLAC

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Dion - Blues With Friends

Size: 396 MB
Time: 60:53
File: FLAC
Released: 2020
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front & Back

01. Blues Comin’ On (Feat. Joe Bonamassa) (4:48)
02. Kickin’ Child (Feat. Joe Menza) (4:00)
03. Uptown Number 7 (Feat. Brian Setzer) (3:56)
04. Can’t Start Over Again (Feat. Jeff Beck) (4:26)
05. My Baby Loves To Boogie (Feat. John Hammond) (5:19)
06. I Got Nothin’ (Feat. Van Morrison & Joe Louis Walker) (5:05)
07. Stumbling Blues (Feat. Jimmy Vivino & Jerry Vivino) (3:00)
08. Bam Bang Boom (Feat. Billy Gibbons) (3:57)
09. I Got The Cure (Feat. Sonny Landreth) (4:07)
10. Song For Sam Cooke (Here In America) (Feat. Paul Simon) (4:24)
11. What If I Told You (Feat. Samantha Fish) (4:44)
12. Told You Once In August (Feat. Rory Block) (5:34)
13. Way Down (I Won’t Cry No More) (Feat. Stevie Van Zandt) (2:58)
14. Hymn To Him (Feat. Patti Scialfa & Bruce Springsteen) (4:30)

As one of the very few first-generation rock ‘n’ rollers still seriously pursing new avenues of expression, Dion’s Bronx soul is very much in evidence on this new album, a full-tilt blues offering. The blues songs therein are not “covers” nor Dion’s versions of blues standards. These compositions are in fact original blues masterpieces which are destined to become classics. He came up with the music and words for twelve of them and finished those with co-writer Mike Aquilina. The two exceptions are “Hymn To Him” which Dion wrote with Bill Tuohy and “Kickin’ Child,” written with Buddy Lucas.

To tell those stories, Dion recruited help from a few notable friends and admirers. He thought, “I needed to round up the best guitarists and musicians alive and pick them from every generation, every variation of blues.” And that’s just what he did, surrounding himself with those who feel the blues spirit as he does.

The album’s guests include the cream of the contemporary scene’s blues-rooted slingers including Jeff Beck, Billy Gibbons, Joe Bonamassa, Brian Setzer, Sonny Landreth, Samantha Fish, John Hammond Jr., Joe Louis Walker, Rory Block , Jimmy and Jerry Vivino, vintage guitar guru Joe Menza as well as icons Stevie Van Zandt, Patti Scialfa, Bruce Springsteen, Van Morrison and Paul Simon. Yes, that’s a whole lot of star power but each participated not because of his or her marquee appeal but because of what each could add musically. The result is one reflective of nuanced devotion to the blues rather than a gratuitous display of individual virtuosity. It’s very much Dion’s album and those bold face names participating are most convincingly there for him.

Blues With Friends MP3
Blues With Friends FLAC

Friday, January 4, 2019

VA - 1970s Slow Blues Jams

Size: 245,4 MB
Time: 105:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. John Hammond - Guitar King (3:36)
02. Big Mama Thornton - Jail (Live) (5:56)
03. Hound Dog Taylor - Sadie (6:12)
04. Son Seals - Sitting At My Window (4:30)
05. Albert Collins - When The Welfare Turns Its Back On You (5:24)
06. Jimmy Johnson - Your Turn To Cry (5:51)
07. Big Walter Horton - Little Boy Blue (3:12)
08. Left Hand Frank - One Room Country Shack (4:28)
09. Koko Taylor - Walking The Back Streets (6:46)
10. Johnny 'Big Moose' Walker - Worry, Worry (4:14)
11. Lovie Lee - Nobody Knows My Troubles (5:15)
12. Pinetop Perkins - Blues After Hours (5:00)
13. Lacy Gibson - Drown In My Own Tears (4:40)
14. Fenton Robinson - Going To Chicago (3:50)
15. Lonnie Brooks - Cold, Lonely Nights (4:42)
16. Hound Dog Taylor - Held My Baby Last Night (4:17)
17. Son Seals - Going Back Home (7:03)
18. Koko Taylor - That's Why I'm Crying (4:25)
19. Albert Collins - Conversation With Collins (8:49)
20. Big Mama Thornton - Rock Me Baby (6:42)

1970s Slow Blues Jams

Monday, March 26, 2018

John Hammond - Found True Love

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:47
Size: 98.0 MB
Styles: Electric-Acoustic blues
Year: 1995
Art: Front

[3:14] 1. Found Love
[3:13] 2. I Hate To See You Go
[3:40] 3. Fore Day Rider Blues
[2:43] 4. Warm It Up To Me
[3:56] 5. Howlin' For My Darling
[4:12] 6. Hello Stranger
[3:49] 7. You Had Too Much
[4:16] 8. My Mind Is Ramblin'
[4:26] 9. The First Time I Met The Blues
[2:48] 10. I've Got To Find My Baby
[3:45] 11. Evolution Blues
[2:40] 12. Someday Baby Blues

Duke Robillard (guitar); Charlie Musselwhite (harp); Mr. B (piano); Jeff McAllister (drums, percussion); John Hammond (guitar, vocals); Neil Gouvin (drums); Marty Ballou (bass).

Found True Love offers the usual highly proficient replication of classic electric and acoustic blues one has come to expect from John Hammond. Although he can more than hold his own on both guitar and harp, he often prefers to collaborate with other bluesmen on recordings; here, he shares the spotlight even more than usual. Hammond blows harp on only five cuts and plays guitar on only four, leaving most of the fretwork to co-producer Duke Robillard (who brings along his regular rhythm section) and letting Charlie Musselwhite handle harp on a couple of tunes. Still, it is Hammond's alluring, leathery vocals that distinguish the recording. Hammond is an interpreter, not an originator, and on Found True Love he covers two each by Little Walter and Howlin' Wolf, and one each by Jimmy Reed, Leroy Carr, Willie McTell, Baby Boy Warren, Lonnie Johnson, Little Brother Montgomery, Cousin Joe, and Sleepy John Estes. ~Steve Hoffman

Found True Love mc
Found True Love zippy

Thursday, March 1, 2018

VA - Harmonica Blues

Size: 231,3 MB
Time: 98:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Harmonica Blues
Art: Front

01 Linkin' Louisiana Peps - I Got My Mojo Working (2:48)
02 John Hammond - Don't Start Me Talking (2:36)
03 The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - Off The Wall (2:07)
04 The J. Geils Band - Whammer Jammer (2:38)
05 Toots Thielemans - The Blacksmith Blues (2:16)
06 The Edgar Broughton Band - Bring It On Home (3:27)
07 Cactus - Big Mama Boogie, Pts. 1 & 2 (5:27)
08 Tom Rush - Milk Cow Blues (3:13)
09 Low Budget Blues Band - My Babe (2:30)
10 Dr Feelgood - Boom Boom (2:41)
11 Little Feat - Forty-Four Blues / How Many More Years (6:27)
12 Jerry Jeff Walker - Harmonica Talk (1:04)
13 The Youngbloods - Kind Hearted Woman (6:09)
14 Buddy Guy - Last Night (7:52)
15 The Incredible String Band - Blues For The Muse (2:45)
16 Maria Muldaur - I'm A Woman (4:05)
17 Brownsville Station - Crazy Legs (3:21)
18 John Sebastian - Blues For Dad And JB's Happy Harmonica (Live) (3:41)
19 The Blues Brothers - Flip, Flop & Fly (Live Version) (Joe Gastwirt Remix) (3:38)
20 The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - Mellow Down Easy (3:03)
21 Grateful Dead - Good Morning Little School Girl (5:50)
22 Jack Champion Dupree - Baby, Please Don't Go (2:26)
23 Jarkka Rissanen & Pepe Ahlqvist - Merzedes Benz (3:29)
24 Lightnin' Hopkins - Blues For Gamblers (6:59)
25 Scott Henderson - Smelly Ol' Dog Blues (7:56)

Harmonica Blues

Monday, February 19, 2018

VA - Slide Guitar Blues

Size: 249,0 MB
Time: 106:21
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01 Chuck E. Weiss - Devil With Blue Suede Shoes (5:00)
02 Kelly Joe Phelps - House Carpenter (6:43)
03 John Hammond - Shake Your Money Maker (1:58)
04 Delaney & Bonnie & Friends - Come On In My Kitchen - Mama, He Treats Your Daughter Mean Going Down The Road Feeling Bad (4:15)
05 Bjoern Berge - Look On Yonder Wall (3:16)
06 Faces - Around The Plynth (5:48)
07 Mississippi Fred McDowell - Keep Your Lamps Trimmed And Burning (2:44)
08 Blind Willie McTell - Motherless Children Have A Hard Time (2:54)
09 60,000,000 Buffalo - American Money Blues (5:36)
10 Little Feat - A Apolitical Blues (3:25)
11 Honey B. & T-Bones - Hawaiian Groupie (2:25)
12 Slaptones - Little Red Rooster (3:36)
13 John Fahey - Steamboat Gwine 'Round De Bend (4:14)
14 Danny O'Keefe - Steel Guitar (4:04)
15 Tom Rush - If Your Man Gets Busted (3:30)
16 Doug Sahm - Blues Stay Away From Me (4:47)
17 Foghat - Terraplane Blues (5:45)
18 Low Budget Blues Band - Tennessee Plates (3:10)
19 Robert Randolph & The Family Band - Run For Your Life (4:53)
20 Bjoern Berge - Who Do You Think You Are (4:51)
21 Delta Cross Band - Key To Highway (7:50)
22 Alvin Youngblood Hart - Mama Don't Allow (5:34)
23 Mississippi Fred McDowell - When You Get Home, Write Me A Few Little Lines (3:24)
24 Faces - Jerusalem (1:41)
25 Kelly Joe Phelps - Roll Away The Stone (4:49)

Slide Guitar Blues

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

John Hammond & His Screamin' Nighthawks - Gambler's Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:16
Size: 110.5 MB
Styles: Chicago blues, Delta blues
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[2:33] 1. I Wish You Would Come Back Baby
[5:01] 2. Hey Bo Diddly
[4:05] 3. You Don't Love Me No More
[4:32] 4. Goin' To New York
[4:00] 5. Don't You Hear Me Cry For You
[3:57] 6. I Believe
[3:29] 7. Brown Eyed Handsome Man
[3:26] 8. I'm In The Mood Baby
[3:58] 9. My Baby Don't Stand No Cheatin'
[4:11] 10. Gambler's Blues
[5:10] 11. 44 Talkin' Blues
[3:48] 12. Move On Down The Road

John Hammond, Jr. is one of a handful of white blues musicians who was on the scene at the beginning of the first blues renaissance of the mid-'60s. That revival, brought on by renewed interest in folk music around the U.S., brought about career boosts for many of the great classic blues players, including Mississippi John Hurt, Rev. Gary Davis, and Skip James. Some critics have described Hammond as a white Robert Johnson, and Hammond does justice to classic blues by combining powerful guitar and harmonica playing with expressive vocals and a dignified stage presence. Within the first decade of his career as a performer, Hammond began crafting a niche for himself that is completely his own: the solo guitar man, harmonica slung in a rack around his neck, reinterpreting classic blues songs from the 1930s, '40s, and '50s. Yet, as several of his mid-'90s recordings for the Point Blank label demonstrate, he's also a capable bandleader who plays wonderful electric guitar. ~John Skelly

Gambler's Blues

Friday, September 29, 2017

Mitch Woods - Friends Along The Way (Bonus Track Edition)

Size: 173,0 MB
Time: 73:41
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

01. Take This Hammer (Feat. Van Morrison & Taj Mahal) (6:04)
02. CC Rider (Feat. Van Morrison & Taj Mahal) (5:38)
03. Keep A Dollar In Your Pocket (Feat. Elvin Bishop) (4:06)
04. Singin' The Blues (Feat. Ruthie Foster) (4:02)
05. Mother In Law Blues (Feat. John Hammond) (3:19)
06. Cryin' For My Baby (Feat. Charlie Musselwhite) (6:42)
07. Nasty Boogie (Feat. Joe Louis Walker) (3:58)
08. Empty Bed Blues (Feat. Maria Muldaur) (4:53)
09. Bluesmobile (Feat. Kenny Neil) (3:27)
10. The Blues (Feat. Cyril Neville) (5:38)
11. Saturday Night Boogie Woogie Man (Feat. Elvin Bishop) (2:55)
12. Blues Gave Me A Ride (Feat. Charlie Musselwhite) (2:27)
13. Chicago Express (Feat. James Cotton) (2:29)
14. Never Get Out Of These Blues Alive (Feat. John Lee Hooker) (5:11)
15. Midnight Hour Blues (Feat. Van Morrison & Taj Mahal) (4:30)
16. In The Night (Feat. Marcia Ball) (2:58)
17. Take This Hammer (Feat. Van Morrison & Taj Mahal) (Radio Version) (5:18)

The theme of friendship has carried Mitch Woods along through his career and has led him to this, his current duets and trios project…. Friends Along The Way. Featuring Guests: Van Morrison, Taj Mahal, Elvin Bishop, Charlie Musselwhite, Ruthie Foster, Joe Louis Walker, Maria Muldaur, Cyril Neville, Marcia Ball, John Hammond, Kenny Neal, James Cotton, John Lee Hooker and more… Mitch Woods has delivered a career spanning tour de force. What you hear on these songs is a simple duo or trio of musicians each expressing their innermost feelings and emotions through their instrument….the voice, piano, guitar, harmonica, tambourine…anything that can communicate the feelings, the rhythms of life to the audience. Friends Along The Way finds Mitch reaching into his historical sense of music. He reaches backwards to the roots rather than forward for his inspiration. This shines through on the first single “Take This Hammer” featuring a stunning vocal performance from Van Morrison and backed on guitar by Taj Mahal and of course Mitch Woods on piano. With Friends Along The Way, Mitch wanted to get a chance to play with some of his contemporaries in an intimate and mostly unplugged environment. The piano as an instrument lends itself to this format so perfectly. Mitch can play rhythm, lead, bass, and sing while accompanying some of his friends, who happen to be today’s blues and musical greats. It is a great instrument for bringing out the best of these awesome artists who are keeping the blues flame burning for generations to come. Some say music is a gift. It is a gift, not only to the person who performs it but to the world. The musicians you hear in these songs have spent a lifetime doing what they love to do….play music. Enjoy…this album is Mitch Wood’s gift to you.

Friends Along The Way

Sunday, July 30, 2017

John Hammond - Walkin' Blues Live in Chicago and Toronto

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 2017
Styles: Blues
Time: 61:56
Size: 142,5 MB
Covers: Front, CD, Tray

Tracks 1-8: Chicago 1991 (FM) A Tribute to Robert Johnson
Tracks 9-16: Toronto 1992 (FM)

(5:13) 1. Milkcow's Calf Blues
(3:10) 2. Me And The Devil Blues
(3:25) 3. Traveling Riverside Blues
(5:37) 4. Hellhound Blues
(2:30) 5. They're Red Hot
(3:39) 6. Walkin' Blues
(3:59) 7. Drunken Hearted Man
(2:26) 8. 32-20 Blues
(1:21) 9. Introduction
(3:29) 10. I'm Leaving Early In The Morning
(5:28) 11. See That My Grave Is Kept Clean
(3:51) 12. I'm In The Mood For Love
(4:07) 13. Dreamy Eyed Girl
(3:40) 14. Ride Till I Die
(3:52) 15. Honest I Do
(6:01) 16. Preachin' Blues

John Hammond made his first album in 1962 aged 20. In the legendary New York Village music scene, Hammond concentrated on the music of Robert Johnson. A lifelong devotee off the legendary bluesman, Hammond tells a story with every story and confirms that he's one of the best storytellers out there. Hammond is not the only one, but he preserves the old blues music, becoming a walking, talking and singing enactment o blues history. He has built a strong a strong reputation interpreting Delta style blues and singing songs from the 1930s by artists such as Son House, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Muddy Waters and Johnson. Other influences are Big Bill Broonzy, Sonny Terry, Howlin' Wolf, John Lee Hooker and Jimmy Reed. For Hammond, diversity plays a big part in the life of a blues musician.
This album contains the entire FM broadcast of Hammond's Tribute performance ar the Chicago Blues Festival at Grant Park in 1991. Additional tracks are from the entire FM broadcast of his legendary performance, live from Alberts Hall, Toronto 1992.

Walkin' Blues Live in Chicago and Toronto

Saturday, December 10, 2016

John Hammond - Live In San Francisco 1966

Size: 118,5 MB
Time: 50:31
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. You Got Me Walkin' & Talkin' (Live) (2:29)
02. Gambler's Blues (Live) (4:15)
03. Dust My Broom (Live) (2:52)
04. Evil (Live) (3:52)
05. Who Do You Find Love (Live) (5:42)
06. Got To Find My Baby (Live) (4:08)
07. You Don't Love Me No More (Live) (5:12)
08. Bo Diddley (Live) (5:06)
09. 44 Talkin' Blues (Live) (5:15)
10. Come Back Baby (Live) (3:24)
11. Sunday Blues (Live) (3:45)
12. Sweet Little Angel (Live) (4:26)

A bit of a throwaway/curio I guess, but a nice find also – John Hammond recorded live in San Francisco in 1966 – and though a lot of the band stuff choogles along with a basic bar-room boogie that is neither intoxicating nor insulting it’s the wee moments that stick out and make it; showing, I guess, the making of the man still – early in his career, despite hitting the ground running in the early 1960s and with a famous helping hand behind him. Here he’s still in cutting teeth mode as he tears through a chugging Who Do You Love and basic blues shuffles and ballads (You Got Me Walkin & Talkin, Gambler’s Blues). There’s pure grit to the voice and when the acoustic and the harmonic come to the fore – highlights – as on Evil we get the first real glimpses of the John Hammond that’s been a hardworking fixture ever since.

The version of Bo Diddley really comes alive, as does the slow-crawl of 44 Talkin’ Blues.

And on the instrumental, Sunday Blues, there’s some mighty fine slide playing even if the drumming feels altogether sloppy and almost gets in the way.

The closing rendition of Sweet Little Angel will feel like the thrill is gone if you’re a B.B. purist but I’ve always loved Hammond’s way with a line – both a vocal line and a guitar trill. And there’s something young and hungry and urgent here. He’s been serving the blues ever since but it’s interesting to go back to hear him near the start. Maybe the famous dad gave him the leg up that anyone else could have also delivered on – but he’s been no slouch ever since.

And if you’ve either been a fan or never heard any of the music but heard the name this is a good enough place to kick (back) into things…

And on the instrumental, Sunday Blues, there’s some mighty fine slide playing even if the drumming feels altogether sloppy and almost gets in the way.

The closing rendition of Sweet Little Angel will feel like the thrill is gone if you’re a B.B. purist but I’ve always loved Hammond’s way with a line – both a vocal line and a guitar trill. And there’s something young and hungry and urgent here. He’s been serving the blues ever since but it’s interesting to go back to hear him near the start. Maybe the famous dad gave him the leg up that anyone else could have also delivered on – but he’s been no slouch ever since.

And if you’ve either been a fan or never heard any of the music but heard the name this is a good enough place to kick (back) into things… ~by Simon Sweetman

Live In San Francisco 1966

Thursday, July 28, 2016

VA - Live At The Rogue: Best Of The Blues

Size: 123,3 MB
Time: 52:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Norton Buffalo - Is It Love (Feat. Roy Rogers) (Live) (5:33)
02. Charlie Musselwhite - Been Gone To Long (Live) (5:30)
03. John Hammond - Tell Me Mama (Live) (3:33)
04. Lydia Pense & Cold Blood - You Got Me Hummin' (Live) (5:23)
05. Amazing Rhythm Aces - My Tears Still Flow (Live) (3:41)
06. Charlie Musselwhite - Charlie's Old Hwy 51 Blues (Live) (8:41)
07. John Hammond - Get Behind The Mule (Live) (4:37)
08. Lydia Pense & Cold Blood - It Takes A Lotta Good Lovin' (Live) (5:11)
09. Amazing Rhythm Aces - Out Of The Blue (Live) (4:39)
10. Norton Buffalo - Shake Your Money Maker (Feat. Roy Rogers) (Live) (6:05)

Live At The Rogue

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

John Hammond - Best Of The Vanguard Years

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:42
Size: 171.0 MB
Styles: Electric/acoustic blues
Year: 2000/2006
Art: Front

[3:04] 1. 32-20 Blues
[3:38] 2. Statesborough Blues
[2:28] 3. Seventh Son
[2:43] 4. Drop Down Mama
[2:51] 5. Going Back To Florida
[4:42] 6. Ask Me Nice
[3:35] 7. Hellhound Blues
[2:48] 8. I'm Ready
[3:15] 9. I'm A Man
[3:11] 10. Key To The Highway
[3:49] 11. No Money Down
[2:23] 12. I Live The Life I Love
[2:45] 13. Big Boss Man
[2:40] 14. So Many Roads, So Many Trains
[3:01] 15. Who Do You Love
[4:08] 16. I Want You To Love Me
[3:32] 17. You Can't Judge A Book By The Cover
[3:32] 18. O Yea!
[2:45] 19. Who's Been Talking
[3:01] 20. Pretty Thing
[3:06] 21. Last Night
[3:59] 22. I Wish You Would
[3:35] 23. Guitar King

In lieu of a boxed set, the Welk Music Group (which owns the Vanguard Records library) has produced this rock-solid 23-track overview of Hammond's early recordings for Vanguard, covering highlights of the years 1963 through 1967 and his return to the label from 1976 through 1979. The tracks aren't in strict chronological order but are juxtaposed on a more general basis, and you can hear him gain confidence and maturity as this compilation chronologically moves on, from the rough-edged enthusiasm of the opener "32-20 Blues," to the closing "Guitar King." Six of the tracks are from the So Many Roads album that featured Mike Bloomfield, Charlie Musselwhite, and members of the Band in the lineup. The producers did more than remaster all of this material in 20-bit sound (though they did do that, too) -- they also raided the vaults and found a pair of unissued songs, "Ask Me Nice" and "Hellhound Blues," that they've issued here. Cut with a small, uncredited backing band, "Ask Me Nice" could have fit in easily on either Big City Blues or So Many Roads, though it's more likely associated with the former, while "Hellhound Blues" is an ominous all-acoustic number, very different in character and texture. The resulting 75 minutes of music is the best (and best sounding) overview of his work for the label, and if you're going to add some John Hammond to the collection, this is a real good place to start. ~Cub Koda

Best Of The Vanguard Years

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Various - Automobile Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:44
Size: 155.1 MB
Styles: Assorted styles
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[5:50] 1. Guitar Shorty - Fine Cadillac
[3:28] 2. Coco Montoya - Back In A Cadillac
[4:23] 3. Magic Slim & The Teardrops - Stranded On The Highway
[3:16] 4. Phil Wiggins - Me And My Chauffeur Blues
[3:44] 5. C.J. Chenier & The Red Hot Louisiana Band - Road Dog
[4:35] 6. William Clarke - Going Down This Highway
[3:31] 7. William Clarke - Drivin' My Life Away
[4:35] 8. Kinsey Report - Midnight Drive
[3:37] 9. Long John Hunter - V-8 Ford
[4:58] 10. Long John Hunter - I'm Broke
[3:33] 11. Carey Bell - Little Car Blues
[3:09] 12. Lonnie Mack - Me And My Car
[3:24] 13. Long John Hunter - Bugs On My Window
[2:35] 14. Junior Wells - Stop Breaking Down
[2:04] 15. James Cotton Blues Band - Rocket 88
[3:56] 16. Jim Kweskin - Chevrolet
[1:05] 17. Ramblin' Jack Elliott - Car Song
[2:52] 18. John Hammond, Jr. - My Starter Won't Start
[3:00] 19. Hound Dog Taylor - Fender Bender

Cars had become one of the centers of American life by the 1920s and plenty of blues musicians we’re singing about them. It’s interesting that Blind Lemon Jefferson sang in several songs about driving cars, something he could never do as a blind man. In 1931, Memphis Minnie sang about her house burning down, but the only thing she’s worried about is losing her car. Robert Johnson sang some of the most poetic lyrics sexualizing the car as a woman. Modern day bluesmen have continued singing about cars as these titles show.

Automobile Blues

Friday, June 10, 2016

John Hammond - The First Album & Bonus Tracks

Size: 145,5 MB
Time: 63:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Acoustic Blues, Blues Folk
Art: Front

01. Two Trains Running (3:23)
02. Give Me A 32-20 (3:40)
03. Maybelline (2:37)
04. Louise (4:07)
05. This Train (2:28)
06. East St. Louis Blues (3:06)
07. Going Back To Florida (2:54)
08. Mean Old Frisco (3:13)
09. I Got A Letter This Morning (4:09)
10. Alabama Woman Blues (3:34)
11. The Hoochie Coochie Man (3:02)
12. Crossroads Blues (3:59)
13. See That My Grave Is Kept Clean (5:12)
14. Drop Down Menu (2:50)
15. Me And The Devil (2:32)
16. Ask Me Nice (4:42)
17. Hellhound Blues (3:35)
18. Midnight Hour Blues (4:00)

With a career that spans over three decades, John Hammond is one of handful of white blues musicians who was on the scene at the beginning of the first blues renaissance of the mid-'60s. That revival, brought on by renewed interest in folk music around the U.S., brought about career boosts for many of the great classic blues players, including Mississippi John Hurt, Rev. Gary Davis, and Skip James. Some critics have described Hammond as a white Robert Johnson, and Hammond does justice to classic blues by combining powerful guitar and harmonica playing with expressive vocals and a dignified stage presence. Within the first decade of his career as a performer, Hammond began crafting a niche for himself that is completely his own: the solo guitar man, harmonica slung in a rack around his neck, reinterpreting classic blues songs from the 1930s, '40s, and '50s. Yet, as several of his mid-'90s recordings for the Pointblank label demonstrate, he's also a capable bandleader who plays wonderful electric guitar. This guitar-playing and ensemble work can be heard on Found True Love and Got Love If You Want It, both for the Pointblank/Virgin label.

Born November 13, 1942, in New York City, the son of the famous Columbia Records talent scout John Hammond, Sr., what most people don't know is that Hammond didn't grow up with his father. His parents split when he was young, and he would see his father several times a year. He first began playing guitar while attending a private high school, and he was particularly fascinated with slide guitar technique. He saw his idol, Jimmy Reed, perform at New York's Apollo Theater, and he's never been the same since.

After attending Antioch College in Ohio on a scholarship for a year, he left to pursue a career as a blues musician. By 1962, with the folk revival starting to heat up, Hammond had attracted a following in the coffeehouse circuit, performing in the tradition of the classic country blues singers he loved so much. By the time he was just 20 years old, he had been interviewed for the New York Times before one of his East Coast festival performances, and he was a certified national act.

When Hammond was living in the Village in 1966, a young Jimi Hendrix came through town, looking for work. Hammond offered to put a band together for the guitarist, and got the group work at the Cafe Au Go Go. By that point, the coffeehouses were falling out of favor, and instead the bars and electric guitars were coming in with folk-rock. Hendrix was approached there by Chas Chandler, who took him to England to record. Hammond recalls telling the young Hendrix to take Chandler up on his offer. "The next time I saw him, about a year later, he was a big star in Europe," Hammond recalled in a 1990 interview. In the late '60s and early '70s, Hammond continued his work with electric blues ensembles, recording with people like Band guitarist Robbie Robertson (and other members of the Band when they were still known as Levon Helm & the Hawks), Duane Allman, Dr. John, harmonica wiz Charlie Musselwhite, Michael Bloomfield, and David Bromberg.

As with Dr. John and other blues musicians who've recorded more than two dozen albums, there are many great recordings that provide a good introduction to the man's body of work. His self-titled debut for the Vanguard label has now been reissued on compact disc by the company's new owners, The Welk Music Group, and other good recordings to check out (on vinyl and/or compact disc) include I Can Tell (recorded with Bill Wyman from the Rolling Stones), Southern Fried (1968), Source Point (1970, Columbia), and his most recent string of early- and mid-'90s albums for Pointblank/Virgin Records, Got Love If You Want It, Trouble No More (both produced by J.J. Cale), and Found True Love.

He didn't know it when he was 20, and he may not realize it now, but Hammond deserves special commendation for keeping many of the classic blues songs alive. When fans see Hammond perform them, as Dr. John has observed many times with his music and the music of others, the fans often want to go back further, and find out who did the original versions of the songs Hammond now plays.

Although he's a multi-dimensional artist, one thing Hammond has never professed to be is a songwriter. In the early years of his career, it was more important to him that he bring the art form to a wider audience by performing classic -- in some cases forgotten -- songs. Now, more than 30 years later, Hammond continues to do this, touring all over the U.S., Canada, and Europe from his base in northern New Jersey. He continued to release albums into the new millennium with three discs on the Back Porch label, including Ready for Love in 2002, produced David Hidalgo of Los Lobos, In Your Arms Again in 2005, and Push Comes to Shove in 2007. Whether it's with a band or by himself, Hammond can do it all. Seeing him perform live, one still gets the sense that some of the best is still to come from this energetic bluesman.

The First Album & Bonus Tracks

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

John Lee Hooker & Friends - Live From The House Of Blues (Remastered)

Size: 158,3 MB
Time: 68:02
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Elwood Blues Intro - Look Me Up (Zakiya Hooker & Duke Robillard Band) (4:00)
02. Too Hot To Handle (Duke Robillard) (6:29)
03. Dyin' Flu (Duke Robillard) (7:58)
04. Sugar Coated Love (Lazy Lester) (4:10)
05. Come On In My Kitchen (John Hammond) (3:55)
06. Found Love (John Hammond & The Duke Robillard Band) (3:09)
07. Blues Overtook Me (Charlie Musselwhite) (5:23)
08. Help Me (Charlie Musselwhite) (8:04)
09. Big Leg Mama (Taj Mahal & The Duke Robillard Band) (4:09)
10. Strut (Taj Mahal & The Duke Robillard Band) (5:57)
11. She Caught The Katy (Taj Mahal & The Duke Robillard Band) (3:13)
12. Crawling Kingsnake (John Lee Hooker With Ry Cooder & The Duke Robillard Band) (4:13)
13. One Bourbon One Scotch One Beer (John Lee Hooker With Ry Cooder & The Duke Robillard Band) (3:37)
14. Boom Boom (John Lee Hooker With Ry Cooder & The Duke Robillard Band) (3:31)

A rich combination of blues talent and spice assembled in West Hollywood in June 1995 for Live From The House Of Blues, a spectacular display of collaborations with equally impressive names from the blues scene. John Lee Hooker's own Daughter Zakiya opened the event backed by the Duke Robillard Band. Added to the day's event was a prized collection of genial giants in Charlie Musselwhite, Taj Mahal, Ry Cooder, John Hammond, Lazy Lester and of course, the boom, boom blues of the legendary John Lee Hooker. Duke Robillard s band offered a prominent backing for most of the guests and sealed the day with Ry Cooder's subliminal workout alongside Hooker for his signature R&B Boom, Boom. Klondike proudly presents the entire WLUP-FM broadcast of Live At The House Of Blues, a gathering of genial blues giants and friends of John Lee Hooker.

Live From The House Of Blues

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Various - Screamin' And Hollerin' The Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:12
Size: 92.0 MB
Styles: Acoustic blues
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[3:27] 1. Alvin Youngblood Hart - Screamin' And Hollerin' The Blues
[3:09] 2. John Hammond, Jr. - Malted Milk
[3:25] 3. Duke Robillard - I'd Rather Drink Muddy Water
[3:01] 4. Corey Harris - C.C. Pill Blues
[2:55] 5. Anders Osborne - From Four Till Late
[2:02] 6. Toni Price - Junk Man
[3:47] 7. Guy Davis - Motherless Children
[3:23] 8. Paul Geremia - Toootie Blues
[3:01] 9. Otis Taylor - Stone Pony
[3:49] 10. Rishell & Raines - Bye Bye Blues
[3:21] 11. Debbie Davies - That Lonesome Rave
[4:45] 12. Eric Bibb - Goin' Down Slow

Screamin' and Hollerin' the Blues is a modern acoustic tribute to classic pre-war blues initially recorded by the likes of Robert Johnson, Charley Patton, and Blind Blake. While it would be impossible to top the original versions, these musicians have their hearts in the right place and contribute to the overall timeless quality of this music, making it enjoyable for blues purists and newcomers to the style. A dozen tracks by devotees of the pioneering style include Anders Osborne, Eric Bibb, John Hammond, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Corey Harris, Guy Davis, Paul Geremia, and Debbie Davis. ~Al Campbell

Screamin' And Hollerin' The Blues mc
Screamin' And Hollerin' The Blues zippy