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

Sunday, April 13, 2025

John Primer - Grown In Mississippi

Album: Grown In Mississippi
Size: 131,2 MB
Time: 56:11
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2025
Styles: Blues
Art: Front, back

1. John's Blues Holler (1:30)
2. Born In Mississippi (3:32)
3. Blues Before Sunrise (5:36)
4. Down In The Bottom (4:06)
5. Walkin' Blues (4:55)
6. Nothin' But A Chicken Wing (5:43)
7. A Better Day (4:59)
8. When I Met The Blues (Grown In MS Version) (3:53)
9. Baby Please Don't Go (3:20)
10. Let Me Be Your Electrician (4:32)
11. Shame Shame Shame (4:28)
12. Lay My Burdens Down (2:50)
13. Ain't Kickin' Up No Dust (4:10)
14. John's Crawdad Song (2:33)

Three-time Grammy nominated, Blues Hall of Fame artist, John Primer takes a look back to where it all began and decides to pay tribute to his simple beginnings from a sharecropper farm in Camden, Mississippi with this beautiful new album.

He digs deep, sharing his earliest memories of hearing the blues and gospel growing up. The raw energy and passion are felt through-out this new release. John recorded this new album in Clarksdale, MS, to really amplify the authentic, traditional blues feel. Gary Vincent’s Soundstage was the perfect studio for him to feel right at home. John invited Mississippi musicians to play with him on this album to ensure it sounded and felt like his home.

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Grown In Mississippi mc
Grown In Mississippi gofile

Monday, December 9, 2024

Giles Robson & John Primer - Ten Chicago Blues Classics

Album: Ten Chicago Blues Classics
Size: 90,2 MB
Time: 38:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Chicago blues, harmonica blues
Art: Front

1. Blow Wind Blow (4:18)
2. My Babe (2:28)
3. Rollin' Stone (3:26)
4. Juke (Instrumental) (2:20)
5. Let Me Explain (2:44)
6. Long Distance Call (4:30)
7. Dealin' With The Devil (4:44)
8. Got My Mojo Workin' (Instrumental) (5:42)
9. Bad Boy (4:21)
10. Last Night (Instrumental) (4:15)

Giles Robson is one of the most respected harmonica players around at the moment, standing tall amongst the likes of Charlie Musselwhite and Jason Ricci. John Primer is an American Chicago blues and electric blues singer and guitarist who played behind Junior Wells in the house band at Theresa's Lounge and as a member of the bands of Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters and Magic Slim before launching an award-winning career as a solo artist. He is also a multiple Grammy nominee, Blues Music, Blues Blast and Living Blues Award winner, Blues Hall of Fame inductee.

If you want to get to the very heart of Chicago Blues, you won’t need to look much further than this pairing. Tracks from Muddy Waters, Little Walter, both Sonny Boy Williamsons and one by Eddie Taylor, all of them classics and, in this format, very much for those who enjoy Chicago Blues without any effects or embellishments. Primer’s guitar is clean and tuneful while Robson blows a harp with apparent simplicity – something that only the best can manage.

All of the tracks are true to the heart of the blues and true to the originals but the two put their own skills and style into every track. The version of Muddy Waters ‘Rollin’ Stone’ is spare and the music has a brilliant edge to it with a fine vocal from Robson, sung rather shouted as Muddy himself was prone to do. Little Walters ‘My Babe’ (written by Willie Dixon) has been covered hundreds of times but this version sounds fresh and eminently listenable.

‘Let Me Explain’ by Sonny Boy Williamson II (he was active at the same time as a Delta player by the same ‘name’ so was generally called II) is remarkably true to the original with Robson’s harmonica very close and a great choppy sound from Primer. There is also a version of Sonny Boy Williamson I’s ‘Dealing With The Devil’ that has a more Delta feel to it. All ten tracks are true Chicago Blues in style and the playing of both artists is superb. It is modern but classic – a worthy album that any real blues lover should want. /Andy Snipper, Music-News

Ten Chicago Blues Classics mc
Ten Chicago Blues Classics gofile

Thursday, April 4, 2024

John Primer & Bob Corritore - Crawlin' Kingsnake

Album: Crawlin' Kingsnake
Size: 120,8 MB
Time: 51:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Art: Full

1. Take A Message (4:24)
2. Crawlin' Kingsnake (3:27)
3. Down In The Bottom (4:28)
4. Hiding Place (4:16)
5. Chains And Things (5:17)
6. Stuff You Gotta Watch (3:31)
7. Rosalee Blues (4:49)
8. You're The One (4:36)
9. Bow Down On Your Knees (1:39)
10. This Little Voice (4:53)
11. Gravel Road (3:41)
12. Feel Like Going Home (6:48)

Crawlin’ Kingsnake is the fourth collaboration album for John Primer and Bob Corritore, two artists who have always had the Chicago spark. It was evident on their first release together of 2013 and on each release since. But with this particular album, a new height has been achieved: a simultaneous, rocking forcefulness, while also exhibiting an uninhibited, gliding easiness. Crawlin’ Kingsnake also features arguably the best possible A team for Chicago blues! With Bob Stroger on the bass, Jimi Primetime Smith on second guitar, Anthony Geraci on the piano, and Wes Starr on drums, this band sounds like the Muddy Waters band of decades ago.

Both Primer and Corritore appear at the top of their game, with Primer recently inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame, as well as numerous award wins, and a Grammy nomination. Likewise, Corritore has been actively hitting the European festival circuit, released five critically acclaimed albums in 2023, was the subject of numerous articles and received numerous nominations, and a number of wins. But all of that is secondary to what happens in the studio, and what you have in your hand is a powerful straight-ahead album of sacred Chicago blues done by two artists who have devoted their entire lives to the purity of the blues.

Bob Corritore is one of the most active and highly regarded blues harmonica players on the scene today. His style passionately carries forward the old school of playing that Corritore learned as a young man directly from many of original pioneers of Chicago Blues. His sympathetic, yet fiery harmonica playing is featured on over 100 releases to date, on labels such as VizzTone, Delta Groove, Delmark, HighTone, HMG, Blue Witch, Blind Pig, Earwig, Ruf, Putumayo and many others. Many of Bob’s acclaimed releases have been nominated or winners for various Handy, Grammy, Living Blues, Blues Music Awards and Blues Blast Music Awards. Bob is also widely recognized for his many roles in the blues, as band leader, club owner, record producer, radio show host, arts foundation founder, and occasional writer. His website and his weekly e-newsletter reflect a life thoroughly invested in the blues.

Living legend John Primer has undisputedly helped build the sound and style of Chicago blues as we know it today. The echoes of tradition bellowing from the birthplaces he played — such as Maxwell Street, Theresa’s, Checkerboard and Rosa’s Lounges — pulse from every chord in his fingers today. In case you missed it, the title track breathes new life into this blues classic, reaching deep into the tradition while at the same time infusing vibrant energy. No doubt a launching pad for great solos, but it’s Primer’s Mississippi-drenched vocals that simply steal the show. /American Blues Scene

Crawlin' Kingsnake mc
Crawlin' Kingsnake gofile

Friday, March 1, 2024

Magic Slim & John Primer - Slow Blues (2 CD)

Album: Slow Blues
Size: 119,3 + 119,5 MB
Time: 51:45 + 51:50
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Styles: Blues
Art: Front, back

CD 1:
1. You Put It On Me (5:45)
2. 1839 Blues (3:18)
3. So Easy To Love You (7:24)
4. I Wonder Who (Who's Gonna Be Your Sweet Man) (7:52)
5. Bad Avenue (6:15)
6. Country Boy (5:33)
7. Just To Be With You (8:35)
8. Blues Behind Closed Doors (7:00)

CD 2:
1. She’s Too Much (5:58)
2. When I Met My Baby (5:30)
3. Double Trouble (9:07)
4. You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had (4:58)
5. I'm A Bluesman (6:36)
6. Please Don’t Dog Me (7:08)
7. Take The Bitter With The Sweet (5:56)
8. Hard Luck Blues (6:31)

Embark on an emotional odyssey with “Slow Blues,” a compelling two-CD collection by the legendary Magic Slim and the illustrious John Primer. This album brings together sixteen soulful tracks, each brimming with the raw energy and deep storytelling that define the blues. Experience Magic Slim’s powerful electric guitar and Primer’s masterful slide guitar play, as they weave a tapestry of narratives and melodies.

This collection is not only a testament to their individual talents but also a tribute to the enduring spirit of Chicago blues. Indulge in the rich, slow rhythms and passionate storytelling that only true blues masters can deliver. “Slow Blues” is an essential addition for enthusiasts and newcomers alike, offering a timeless journey through the heart and soul of blues music.

Slow Blues (2 CD) mc
Slow Blues (2 CD) gofile

Friday, October 6, 2023

John Primer & Bob Corritore - Knockin' Around These Blues

Album: Knockin' Around These Blues
Size: 128,4 MB
Time: 55:35
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Art: Full

1. The Clock (5:12)
2. Blue And Lonesome (7:02)
3. When I Get Lonely (5:43)
4. Cairo Blues (5:32)
5. Leanin' Tree (6:19)
6. Harmonica Joyride (2:35)
7. Little Boy Blue (6:57)
8. Just Like I Treat You (4:45)
9. Man Or Mouse (3:32)
10. Going Back Home (7:54)

Chicago blues guitarist John Primer and Arizona (by way of Chicago) harp master Bob Corritore team up for the first time on this session of raw Chicago blues, Knockin' Around These Blues. It's odd these two have never collaborated on a project, as Primer began playing the blues in the early '70s at the famous Chicago club Theresa's, while, at the same time, Corritore started hanging around the Windy City learning the harp from such legends as Walter Horton, Carey Bell, and Junior Wells.

The ten-track program boasts gutsy, heartfelt cover versions of material by Little Walter ("Blue and Lonesome"), Robert Lockwood Jr. ("Little Boy Blue"), Willie Dixon ("Just Like I Treat You"), Jimmy Reed ("The Clock"), and Lightnin' Hopkins ("Going Back Home"). Rounding out the band are guitarists Billy Flynn and Chris James, pianist Barrelhouse Chuck, bassists Bob Stroger and Patrick Rynn, and Kenny "Beedy Eyes" Smith and Brian Fahey on drums. /Al Campbell, AllMusic

Knockin' Around These Blues mc
Knockin' Around These Blues gofile

Tuesday, October 3, 2023

John Primer - All Original

Album: All Original
Size: 140,2 MB
Time: 60:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2008
Styles: Blues
Art: Full

1. Add A Little Touch (5:02)
2. Going Back To Mississippi (4:36)
3. I Called My Baby (6:28)
4. Everyday Brings By A Change (5:05)
5. Blue Eyed Woman (5:34)
6. Other Man (3:59)
7. The Woman That I'm Loving (5:25)
8. Bad Child (4:17)
9. Keep On Loving The Blues (4:37)
10. At Home Alone (6:15)
11. Say Yes, Don't Say No (5:05)
12. Love In My Heart For You (4:10)

To the denizens of Chicago's storied blues clubs, John Primer is a familiar face, reliable and true. But to a worldwide audience, as an ambassador of the blues, he has defined and epitomized the idiom as a bandleader and the sideman of choice. He possesses a depth of understanding of the genre’s subtleties and nuance that only a handful of artists can lay claim to. Primer is truly world class, and All Original, his first CD release for Blues House Production, is evidence that he is an artist in his prime, who has recorded a powerful set of sides that play like a soundtrack of Chicago - gritty and heartfelt, with a beat that swings to the pulse of our great city. All Original is an apt name for this collection of self-penned titles from Primer, which showcases his dominion over a variety of blues styles.

All Original, in addition to its exceptional performances, is also a treat to listen to. The production quality is quite frankly remarkable for a blues release; the instruments are open and extended in the mix and individual definition and clarity are outstanding. When listening at volume through a “reference sound system”, the feeling of “being there” is very convincing. It’s as if you spent the night listening to the world’s best blues at Theresa’s, Rosa’s or the Mines, only in your living room. This is John Primer’s All Original gift to the blues community. One of the best blues releases of a generation.

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

All Original mc
All Original gofile

Friday, February 24, 2023

John Primer - Teardrops For Magic Slim: Live At Rosa's Lounge

Size: 164.5 MB
Time: 70:49
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2023
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Front

01. Mama Talk To Your Daughter (5:03)
02. Luv Sumbody (6:29)
03. Every Night, Every Day (6:35)
04. Ain't Doing Too Bad (5:58)
05. Buddy Buddy Friend (6:10)
06. Trouble Of My Own (6:17)
07. Let Me Love You Baby (5:51)
08. It Hurts Me Too (6:29)
09. Look Over Yonder Wall (4:59)
10. The Things I Used To Do (6:17)
11. Before You Accuse Me (5:02)
12. The Blues Is Alright (5:34)

Introducing “The John Primer & The Teardrops Tribute to Magic Slim” recording, a heartfelt homage to one of the most influential figures in the blues genre. This album aims to bring Magic Slim back into focus and recognize his significant contributions to the blues world.

With this tribute, John Primer and The Teardrops honor Magic Slim’s enduring legacy, introducing his music to a new generation and highlighting his influence on the genre. As a blues legend, Magic Slim’s music has inspired generations of musicians, and this album aims to pay tribute to his contribution.

John Primer, a revered blues musician, stood on the shoulders of the great Magic Slim, carrying the blues forward ever since. The tribute is a heartfelt gift to Magic Slim, acknowledging his impact on John and The Teardrops, and recognizing his vital role in shaping the blues genre.

This recording invites everyone to research Magic Slim & The Teardrops, paying them the respect they deserve. It’s an opportunity to enjoy the music they made together and celebrate the influence that Magic Slim had on the world of blues. Let’s come together to honor the enduring legacy of Magic Slim and The Teardrops with this heartfelt tribute album.

It’s worth noting that John Primer’s first album was recorded on Wolf Records International, a label that saw his potential early on. This is a testament to the label’s commitment to nurturing and supporting emerging artists in the blues genre.

The bond between Magic Slim and Wolf Records is a decades-long collaboration that has yielded some of the most iconic blues music in history. “The John Primer & The Teardrops Tribute to Magic Slim” recording pays tribute to Magic Slim’s impact on the blues genre and celebrates the enduring legacy of Wolf Records International as a vital force in shaping the genre.

*** Max frequency cutoff 16.4 kHz. Source don't have more. ***

Teardrops For Magic Slim: Live At Rosa's Lounge MP3
Teardrops For Magic Slim: Live At Rosa's Lounge FLAC

Friday, September 16, 2022

John Primer - Hard Times

Size: 156.6 MB
Time: 66:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2022
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Full

01. You Got What I Want (5:13)
02. Don't Wait Too Long (4:13)
03. Hard Times (5:20)
04. Blues-Blues-Blues (5:50)
05. I Won't Sweat It (4:29)
06. Chicago (4:06)
07. Tough Times (5:58)
08. All Alone (4:44)
09. My Sugar Mama (4:25)
10. You Mean So Much To Me (3:51)
11. Trying To Make You Mine (5:31)
12. Hot Meal (7:54)
13. Whiskey (4:43)

John Primer has had a long and storied career as a bluesman. He grew up in a sharecropping family in Mississippi. He lost his father when he was only four years old but his father’s guitar and singing along with an older cousin made Primer love the blues and gave him the desire to become a blues musician. His dream was to play with Muddy Waters.

The desire turned to reality when he left for Chicago in 1963 at age eighteen. He played for tips on Maxwell Street and then joined Pat Rushing and formed the Maintainers who played on Maxwell Street every Sunday. They expanded their gigs to more and more nights of playing on Chicago’s West Side. He moved on to front The Brotherhood Band and then in 1974 began a sewven night a week stint with the house band at Theresa’s Lounge on the South Side. He joined Willie Dixon’s Chocago Blues All Stars in 1979 and then in 1980 joined Muddy Water’s new Legendary Blues Band and was the band leader and opening act; he had achieved his dream! Muddy unfortunately passed away in 1983, but Primer stayed with the band until 2001 when the Checkerboard Lounge finally closed.

Primer also played with Magic Slim’s band after Muddy passed and was involved with Slim for thirteen years and won a WC Handy Award. He also fronted his own band, recording on Wolf Records label, the same label as Slim. In 1997, his third record The Real Deal was nominated for a Handy Award (now BMA) and he now has received many an accolade and award in the 25 years of his solo career.

This new CD features John and his Real Deal Blues Band. In addition to Primer on guitar and lead vocals, Steve Bells plays harp, Lenny Media plays drums and David forte handles the bass. Guests include rick Kreyer on 2nd guitar, Johnny Iguana on keys and his daughter Aliya Primer debuts on vocals on “Tough Times.” Primer wrote all thirteen songs on this album.

The album begins with “You Got What I Want,” a flowing and vibrant cut with Primer at his best. His distinctive vocals shine here as they do throughout and his guitar is exceptional. He gives us a tasty solo on guitar and Steve Bell then follows with a short harp solo. They reprise their instrumental skills later in the song to good effect. “Don’t Wait Too Long” follows, a nice shuffle with a great guitar introduction. Iguana shines on piano and then it’s Bell’s turn to shine. Primer finally gets to solo and it’s a great one. Next is the title track with a hill country vibe as the bass drum stomps and Primer hits the slide guitar hard. Piano and harp add to the mix, but Primer really is the star with his slide work. Slow blues are next in the moving “Blues Blues Blues,” a deep and cool blues. John‘s guitar stings and Bell’s harp punctuates nicely. The tempo picks up with “I Won’t Sweat It,” with another well-done intro by Primer. Bell and Primer once again display their prowess on this driving cut. “Chicago” comes next, a straight up blues shuffle paying tribute to his hometown. Bell solos first and then it’s Primers turn to display his chops and he does so well. “Tough Times” features John’s daughter Aliya who joins the band and is the vocal lead. She does and exemplary job on this fine, slow blues cut. Bell and Primer offer more solos and the younger Primer sings with emotion and feeling. The seventeen-year old really can sing!

The pace quickens on “All Alone,” a fine Chicago blues cut. Both he and Bell solo and then Primer takes us home with more slick guitar and his ebullient vocals. “My Sugar Mama” retains the fast pace as Primer lays down a nice groove on his guitar. Bell again solos first, which leads into a big Primer guitar solo. After another verse, Iguana gets his turn and then Primer delivers some more sweet guitar licks. Next up is “You Mean So Much to Me,” a bouncing cut with another fine introduction on guitar by Primer. Bell and Iguana give us some licks and later Primer also solos nicely. It’s back to slow and deep blues with “Try To Make You Mine,” another well done piece with an even longer and moving intro by John’s guitar. Steve gives us a signature solo on his harp and then it’s Primer’s turn to shine with his guitar. Another winner. “Hot Meal” is another slow blues with all the grease one needs to make this one another one for the listener to enjoy thoroughly. Primer sings with emotion as Bell answers his vocal call. Bell then joins the fray for a subdued solo. Primer then sings and follows that with a restrained but cool and long solo of his own. He then returns to close things out on vocals and guitar. The final track is “Whiskey,” and, of course, Bell and Primer get some more solo time in as they deliver an excellent finale to a really fine album!

Primer’s return to recording post pandemic shows he’s not lost any of the edge that his music has. He wrote a bunch of great songs that Rick Barnes produced for him at RaxTrax Studio in Chicago. The result is thirteen outstanding new tracks laid down by John and The Real Deal Blues Band. All the songs exemplify John’s long commitment to Chicago blues and keeping the flame burning. This is a really great album which I most highly recommend for adding to your blues collection. It is one you will listen to over and over again! ~Steve Jones

Hard Times MP3
Hard Times 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

Thursday, August 20, 2020

Johnny Iguana - Johnny Iguana's Chicago Spectacular!

Size: 90,7 MB
Time: 38:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Front

01. 44 Blues (3:31)
02. Hammer And Tickle (2:56)
03. Down In The Bottom (2:35)
04. You're An Old Lady (3:35)
05. Land Of Precisely Three Dances (2:48)
06. Lady Day And John Coltrane (3:58)
07. Big Easy Women (2:05)
08. Burning Fire (4:31)
09. Shake Your Moneymaker (2:38)
10. Motorhome (2:50)
11. Stop Breakin' Down (3:36)
12. Hot Dog Mama (3:18)

The adventurous, chameleon-like, affable Chicago pianist Johnny Iguana is finally making his blues debut as a leader. He’s been a sideman on countless Delmark albums and yes, he’s the same Johnny Iguana who leads the blues/jazz/rock band The Claudettes, who we reviewed on these pages in March. If you were unaware of his blues resume then, it’s time to shed light on what might be as strong a litany of names as any player has, and he’s adding to that esteemed list with the guests he’s invited to Delmark’s Johnny Iguana’s Chicago Spectacular!, a grand and upright celebration of Chicago blues piano. He began as a sideman for Junior Wells and has since recorded with Otis Rush, Buddy Guy, Taildragger, James Cotton, Carey Bell, Eddy Clearwater, Lurrie Bell, Billy Branch, and more, some of whom appear on this effort, notably John Primer, Lil’ Ed, and Billy Boy Arnold. Other luminaries appearing include Bob Margolin, Matthew Skoller, Billy Flynn, Kenny “Beedy Eyes” Smith, Bill Dickens, Philip-Michael Scales, and Michael Caskey.

Iguana (christened Brian Berkowitz) grew up in Philadelphia but became obsessed with Chicago blues and especially Junior Wells and Otis Spann at the age of 15. As stated, he passed an audition and was a key member of Wells’ band for three years, eventually moving to and calling Chicago home. Johnny, though, as hinted in the opening line, is not exactly your traditional blues pianist. He respects and honors the tradition but puts his own stamp on the music as evidenced by his four originals here and the inclusion of Gil Scott-Heron’s “Lady Day and John Coltrane.” He’s fluent in the blues language but takes in influences of jazz and rock as well. But, one thing that is indisputably clear is that he has plenty of friends and admirers.

He covers tunes from two of the most acclaimed blues pianists – Roosevelt Sykes and Otis Spann, as well two from Sonny Boy Williamson, and one each from Elmore James, Willie Dixon, and Big Bill Broonzy along with his four originals. He begins with Sykes barrelhouse tune “44 Blues” with John Primer on the vocal and Bob Margolin on guitar before rumbling into his own skittering, creatively chordal “Hammer and Tickle.” Primer joins again on guitar for Dixon’s “Down In The Bottom” while harmonica great Billy Boy Arnold sings and blows, joined by guitarist Billy Flynn on Williamson’s “You’re An Old Lady,” a standout track. Iguana then delivers another of his wild boogie-woogie heaven originals with the crashing, undulating “Land of Precisely Three Dances,” like most herein, of the two- or three-minute variety.

B.B. King’s nephew, newcomer Phillip Michael-Scales, takes the lead vocal on the Gil Scott-Heron tune which is followed by another wild original, “Big Easy Woman.” Lil’ Ed Williams assumes the lead on both vocals and stinging guitar for Otis Spann’s slow blues, “Burning Fire” and for the Elmore James rave-up “Shake Your Money Maker,” one that he’s likely played countless times. While Lil’ Ed kills the slide guitar, Iguana is a veritable Jerry Lee Lewis and more on the piano here on his following original “Motorhome.” (which is barreling down the highway at highly dangerous speed).

Naturally, Iguana closes the album in the same frenetically energetic style, first taking Williamson’s “Stop Breaking Down,” perhaps made most famous by the Rolling Stones on Exile on Main Street. Matt Skoller takes the incendiary harp solo and takes no prisoners on his vocal as well with Billy Flynn returning on guitar. Broonzy’s “Hot Dog Mama” closes with Billy Boy Arnold singing and Flynn in the guitar chair.

Kudos to Larry Skoller, who wrote the liners, with statements like these – “This is no imitation. This is no pure homage. Half a century of blues piano greats are honored here, but Johnny Iguana has made an album that lets his own voice ring out. Accompanied by many of Chicago’s greatest living blues artists, Johnny has created a blues piano album like no other. It’s traditional, it’s contemporary, it’s audacious…” Throughout, this has all the hallmarks of a down-home, sweaty session in one of those tiny Chicago blues clubs. That studio was surely alive! ~Jim Hynes

Johnny Iguana's Chicago Spectacular! MP3
Johnny Iguana's Chicago Spectacular! FLAC

Thursday, April 30, 2020

John Primer & Bob Corritore - The Gypsy Woman Told Me

Size: 113,7 MB
Time: 48:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. Keep A-Driving (4:08)
02. The Gypsy Woman Told Me (3:35)
03. Knockin' On Your Door (3:55)
04. Gambling Blues (3:17)
05. Little Bitty Woman (3:41)
06. Walking The Back Streets And Crying (5:00)
07. I Got The Same Old Blues (3:35)
08. My Imagination (4:00)
09. Let's Get Together (3:56)
10. Left Me With A Broken Heart (3:53)
11. Walked So Long (4:37)
12. Ain't Gonna Be No Cuttin' Loose (4:42)

Blues harmonica ace BOB CORRITORE teams up with frequent musical partner, acclaimed blues guitarist/vocalist (formerly with Muddy Waters, Magic Slim and Junior Wells) JOHN PRIMER for THE GYPSY WOMAN TOLD ME, the follow up to the highly successful recent VizzTone releases by Bob Corritore and Friends, DON'T LET THE DEVIL RIDE and DO THE HIP SHAKE, BABY! Here is that rare album that's fully connected to the core of Chicago Blues. Both John Primer and Bob Corritore are experienced veterans of the genre, fluent in its sacred, expressive vocabulary. With a team of A-list players, Primer and Corritore fulfill and expand their branded presentation of Chicago blues on THE GYPSY WOMAN TOLD ME, their third collaborative effort. Produced by Bob Corritore, Clarke Rigsby, and Kid Andersen. With Billy Flynn, Jimi 'Primetime' Smith, Kid Andersen, Bob Welsh, Ben Levin, Kedar Roy, Troy Sandow, Mike Hightower, June Core, and Brian Fahey.

The Gypsy Woman Told Me MP3
The Gypsy Woman Told Me FLAC

Monday, March 30, 2020

VA - Blues Singles Collection Vol. 1

Size: 259,3 MB
Time: 113:16
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Blues

01 Connor Selby - (Move Me) Like That Good Ol' Rock & Roll (4:27)
02 Lilly Martin - Ain't No Love In The Heart Of The City (3:27)
03 Sari Schorr - Back To LA (Single Edit) (3:32)
04 David Bromberg - Big Road (4:24)
05 Chris Kramer - Corona Roads (3:17)
06 Geoff Achison - Eyes On The Prize (4:04)
07 The Bros. Landreth & Mariel Buckley - Goodbye (3:51)
08 Zoe Schwarz Blue Commotion - Hello My Old Friend (5:33)
09 Larkin Poe - Holy Ghost Fire (3:22)
10 Dani Wilde - Howling At The Moon (4:46)
11 Steve Earle - John Henry Was A Steel Drivin’ Man (3:28)
12 Kenny 'Blues Boss' Wayne & Dawn Tyler Watson - Just Do It! (3:46)
13 Gina Sicilia - Lose My Head (3:06)
14 Seasick Steve - Love & Peace (5:59)
15 Jono Manson & Joan Osborne - Loved Me Into Loving Again (4:21)
16 Ruthie Foster - Mack The Knife (Live) (7:16)
17 Wilson Pickett - Many Roads To Travel (6:31)
18 Nuno Mindelis - Monami Zeca (4:45)
19 Robert Jon & The Wreck - Oh Miss Carolina (4:12)
20 Ruthie Foster - Phenomenal Woman (Live) (5:28)
21 John 'Papa' Gros - Please Don't Bury Me (3:23)
22 John Kay - Rain Love Sun - John Kay (2:12)
23 Larkin Poe - She's A Self Made Man (3:01)
24 John Primer & Bob Corritore - The Gypsy Woman Told Me (3:35)
25 The Reverend Shawn Amos, The Brotherhood, Ruthie Foster - Troubled Man (3:35)
26 Lazer Lloyd & Tyler James Boer - We're Gonna Make It (2020 Field Sessions) (3:22)
27 The Bros. Landreth & Mariel Buckley - When I Call Your Name (4:21)

A collection of blues singles released in March 2020 done by myself.

Blues Singles Collection Vol. 1

Saturday, July 6, 2019

John Primer & The Real Deal Blues Band - The Soul Of A Blues Man (Feat. Billy Flynn)

Size: 142.8 MB
Time: 62:03
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Chicago Blues, Blues Soul
Art: Front

01. Slip Away (5:07)
02. Help Me Through The Day (5:33)
03. Meet Me In The Morning (4:11)
04. You Shouldn't Tell A Lie (5:05)
05. Nothing Takes The Place Of You (5:34)
06. Stagger Lee (5:03)
07. Please Don't Leave Me (5:31)
08. Get Your Money Where You Spend Your Time (4:41)
09. Rainy Night In Georgia (6:43)
10. Meet Me In The Park (5:18)
11. Members Only (3:56)
12. Still Called The Blues (5:14)

Personnel:
John Primer - Vocals, Guitar
Steve Bell - Harmonica
Ronnie Hicks - Keyboard
Lenny Media -Drums
Chuckaluck - Bass

Special Guests:
Billy Flynn - 2nd Guitar
Charlie Kimble - Saxophone

Those who’ve followed John Primer over time know he can sing a bit of soul music: like most contemporary Chicago bluesmen, he’s apt to include a Tyrone Davis standard during a typical show. But what we get in Soul of a Bluesman is completely unexpected, and beyond fantastic. Primer pulls out all the stops in delivering a wide-ranging set of soul blues, some searing, some mellow. Songs made famous by Bobby Bland and Freddie King, Lloyd Price, Johnnie Taylor, Toussaint McCall, Brook Benton, and Clarence Carter shine alongside a sterling selection of straightforward blues that will satisfy Primer’s core audience.
Cut live at the House of Tone studio with John’s working group, the Real Deal Blues Band (Steve Bell, Lenny Media, and Ronnie Hicks, with guests Charlie Kimble on sax, Chuck-a-Luck on electric bass and the great Billy Flynn on guitar), many of these tracks groove harder than the originals, without sacrificing any emotional resonance. And Soul gives John a fresh palette with which to demonstrate yet again how underrated he is as a vocalist, with powerful, nuanced singing. He and his chief instrumental foil, harp man Steve Bell, play with rare inventiveness and melodicism. With serious soul and Chicago blues power, from the driving, churchy “Meet Me in the Morning” through the gorgeous reading of “Rainy Night in Georgia” to the funky take on “Still Called the Blues” that closes the program, Soul of a Bluesman finds John Primer at his absolute best. ~TOM HYSLOP- Contributing Editor, Blues Music Magazine

The Soul Of A Blues Man

Friday, June 7, 2019

John Primer - Blues Behind Closed Doors

Year: 1998
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:35
Size: 137,5 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. 1839 (3:16)
2. Somebody Have Mercy (4:57)
3. Good Morning Heartache (8:04)
4. Don't You Hear Me Cryin' For You (4:48)
5. Blues Behind Closed Doors (7:00)
6. I'm Just A Fool (4:22)
7. Smokestack (4:45)
8. Next Time You See Me (4:31)
9. Country Boy (5:31)
10. Yes, I'm Crazy About My Baby (3:54)
11. It Ain't Easy Been Easy (4:28)
12. Tore Down (3:54)

By any yardstick, Chicago guitarist John Primer has paid his dues. Prior to making The Real Deal for Mike Vernon's Atlantic-distributed Code Blue label, Primer spent 13 years as the ever-reliable rhythm guitarist with Magic Slim & the Teardrops. Before that, he filled the same role behind Chicago immortals Muddy Waters and Willie Dixon. All that grounding has paid off handsomely for Primer. His sound is rooted in the classic Windy City blues sound of decades past: rough-edged and uncompromising and satisfying in the extreme. He's one of the last real traditionalists in town.

By the time he came to Chicago in 1963, Primer was thoroughly familiar with the lowdown sounds of Waters, Wolf, Jimmy Reed, B.B. and Albert King, and Elmore James. He fronted a West Side outfit for a while called the Maintainers, dishing out a mix of soul and blues before joining the house band at the Southside blues mecca Theresa's Lounge for what ended up being a nine-year run. Elegant guitarist Sammy Lawhorn proved quite influential on Primer's maturing guitar approach during this period. Always on the lookout for aspiring talent, Willie Dixon spirited him away for a 1979 gig in Mexico City. After a year or so as one of Dixon's All-Stars, Primer was recruited to join the last band of Muddy Waters, playing with the Chicago blues king until his 1983 death. Right after that, Primer joined forces with Magic Slim; their styles interlocked so seamlessly that their partnership seemed like an eternal bond.

But Primer deserved his own share of the spotlight. In 1993, Michael Frank's Chicago-based Earwig logo issued Primer's debut domestic disc, Stuff You Got to Watch. It was a glorious return to the classic '50s Chicago sound, powered by Primer's uncommonly concise guitar work and gruff, no-nonsense vocals. With the 1995 emergence of The Real Deal - produced by Vernon and featuring all-star backing by harpist Billy Branch, pianist David Maxwell, and bassist Johnny B. Gayden, Primer's star appeared ready to ascend. He soon transferred back to the Wolf label for sets such as 1997's Cold Blooded Blues Man, 1998's Blues Behind Closed Doors, and 2000's It's a Blues Life. /Biography by Bill Dahl, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Blues Behind Closed Doors mc
Blues Behind Closed Doors zippy

Thursday, May 2, 2019

Bob Corritore & Friends - Do The Hip-Shake Baby!

Source: Lossless Digital Download
Size: 116,1 MB
Time: 49:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock, Blues Gospel
Art: Full

01. Shake Your Hips (Feat. Mighty Joe Milsap) (4:06)
02. Gonna Tell Your Mother (Feat. Alabama Mike & L.A. Jones) (2:40)
03. Bitter Seed (Feat. Oscar Wilson) (2:27)
04. The Twist (Feat. Henry Gray) (2:41)
05. You Better Slow Down (Feat. Bill 'Howl-N-Madd' Perry) (4:05)
06. Worried Blues (Feat. Alabama Mike) (4:07)
07. Love Deep As The Ocean (Feat. John Primer) (4:13)
08. Trying To Make A Living (Feat. Sugaray Rayford & Junior Watson) (3:40)
09. Stand By Me (Feat. Alabama Mike & Andy T) (4:25)
10. I'm Gonna Keep What I've Got (Feat. Mighty Joe Milsap) (3:27)
11. I Got The World In A Jug (Feat. John 'Primetime' Smith) (3:15)
12. Few More Days (Feat. Alabama Mike) (2:20)
13. Keep The Lord On With You! (Feat. Sugaray Rayford & Kid Ramos) (7:29)

DO THE HIP-SHAKE BABY! is the brilliant follow-up to harmonica ace BOB CORRITOREs acclaimed 2018 release, DONT LET THE DEVIL RIDE. The thirteen songs culled from recording sessions from 2016 to 2018 feature an amazing array of special guests, including Alabama Mike, Sugaray Rayford, Oscar Wilson, Henry Gray, Bill Howl-N-Madd Perry, Jimi Primetime Smith, The Fremonts, Andy T band featuring Anson Funderburgh, Junior Watson, Kid Ramos, Johnny Main, Bob Stroger, Fred Kaplan, Bob Welsh, LA Jones, Adrianna Marie, Nathan James and more! Sterling vocalists, amazing guitarists, killer piano, fantastic rhythm sections, and Bob Corritores soulful harmonica to connect it all together.This is a carefully assembled collection of fun loving blues, rhythm and blues, early rock n roll, soul and gospel rock songs. Imagine a live-music dance-club in 1968 complete with go-go dancers! Bob refers to this as his Harmonica-a-go-go album! Mixed at Greaseland Studios by Kid Andersen, this the 14th album of Corritores illustrious career, and his best yet!

Do The Hip-Shake Baby!

Monday, January 28, 2019

Tony Holiday - Porch Sessions

Size: 134,9 MB
Time: 57:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2019
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. Pickpocket Fingers (Feat. James Harman & Kid Ramos) (3:51)
02. They Call Me John Primer (Feat. John Primer & Bob Corritore) (6:21)
03. A Woman Named Trouble (Feat. Jake Friel & John Nemeth) (5:09)
04. Becky Ann (Feat. Mitch Kaxhmar & Ronnie Shellist) (3:36)
05. That's Alright (Feat. Charlie Musselwhite & Aki Kumar) (6:33)
06. Three Way Party (Feat. Mitch Kashmar & Ronnie Shellist) (5:09)
07. Special Friend (Feat. James Harman & Kid Ramos) (5:11)
08. Hip To It (Feat. Mitch Kashmar & Ronnie Shellist) (3:17)
09. Blues Hit Big Town (Feat. John Nemeth) (1:37)
10. Tell Me Baby (Feat. John Primer & Bob Corritore) (3:03)
11. Goin' To Court (Feat. James Harman & Kid Ramos) (4:24)
12. Coin Operated Woman (Feat. Johnny Burgin) (4:23)
13. This Time I'm Gone For Good (Feat. William G. Kidd & Ronnie Shelllist) (4:57)

Tony Holiday is a vocalist and harp player who is rapidly emerging as a star on the international blues scene. He has been recognized by blues legends like Charlie Musselwhite and Rick Estrin as one of the finest up-and-comers in the game right now and is steadily building his own legend one gig at a time. Speaking of gigs, he plays up to 200 of them a year across the US and has brilliantly recorded his latest album Porch Sessions in between them on the actual porches of some of the blue’s best-known musicians. Hitting the streets January 25th, 2019 on the VizzTone Label Group, Porch Sessions by Tony Holiday is reminiscent of Alan Lomax’s landmark field recordings and the live recordings that have surfaced from Chicago’s famed Maxwell Street era over the years. It is all about the real blues captured live as it happens.

Tony, along with his partner Landon Stone, have crisscrossed America in pursuit of this project and have ended up on some pretty significant front porches. Live sessions were tracked featuring some of the blue’s biggest names, including Charlie Musselwhite, John Primer, Kid Ramos, John Nemeth, Kid Andersen, Rockin’ Johnny Burgin, and more. The down-and-dirty format is a genius move, as it connects listeners directly to the live blues experience. Studio slickness is replaced by in-the-moment performances and off-the-cuff deliveries. It’s like sitting in on a rehearsal or impromptu jam where the musicians are playing for the simple joy of doing so.

Highlights abound on Porch Sessions by Tony Holiday and hardcore blues fans will love every inch of this record. The opening cut features guitarist Kid Ramos and singer/harpist James Harman getting down on a number called “Pickpocket Fingers,” a Jimmy Reed-ish shuffle about a girl with a “Buster Keaton smile” that’s immediately engaging and sets the tone for what’s to follow. Ramos’ rhythm playing is absolutely popping and will make you want to move, even in this intimate context. Chicago guitarist and Muddy Water’s bandleader John Primer checks in with “They Call Me John Primer” and brings the classic interwoven Windy City sound with him. Bob Corritore adds harp in all the right places and Primer sounds as full of life as he ever has.

One of the best cuts on Porch Sessions is the humid and sultry “A Woman Named Trouble,” which showcases Jake Friel on vocals and John Nemeth on harmonica. Built on a subtle-yet-simmering funk groove, the track creates that smoky 3AM headspace that made many of us fall in love with the truth of the blues. When Friel tells us his woman “can make a baby out of a full-grown man,” we are left with no choice but to believe.

Charlie Musselwhite and Aki Kumar guest on the venerable standard “That’s Alright” with Kumar handling vocals. The two harps fill the track with lonesome, moaning licks that will keep listeners in a trance and put the full emotional power of the instrument on display. Tony Holiday and guitarist Rockin’ Johnny Burgin team up on the low-key bounce of “Coin Operated Woman” to great effect, keeping everything right in the pocket, and the set closes with “This Time I’m Gone For Good,” a slow, heavy minor blues spotlighting William G. Kidd on vocals and Ronnie Shellist on harmonica that’s pure midnight heartbreak.

Porch Sessions is nothing but fun from beginning to end and it’s immensely refreshing to bask in its casual glory. This is the raw, homespun blues, the kind of music that made possible all that came after it, and Tony Holiday deserves praise for recording these folks playing it in the most human setting there is.

Highly recommended. ~Mike O’Cull

Porch Sessions

Friday, September 14, 2018

VA - Chicago Plays The Stones

Size: 125,6 MB
Time: 53:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Front

01 John Primer - Let It Bleed (4:00)
02 Billy Boy Arnold - Play With Fire (3:44)
03 Buddy Guy - Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker) (4:51)
04 Ronnie Baker Brooks - (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction (3:43)
05 Billy Branch - Sympathy For The Devil (5:55)
06 John Primer - Angie (4:55)
07 Leanne Faine - Gimme Shelter (4:01)
08 Jimmy Burns - Beast Of Burden (3:48)
09 Mike Avery - Miss You (4:15)
10 Omar Coleman - I Go Wild (5:43)
11 Carlos Johnson - Out Of Control (4:34)
12 Jimmy Burns - Dead Flowers (4:20)

Chicago Plays The Stones

Wednesday, May 30, 2018

John Primer - 2 albums: It's A Blues Life / Cold Blooded Blues Man

Album: John Primer & The Real Deal Blues Band - It's A Blues Life
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:09
Size: 151.4 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[5:31] 1. I've Been Abused
[4:49] 2. Maggie
[6:22] 3. Last Night
[4:23] 4. Mama Talk To Your Daughter
[5:47] 5. Party Girl
[4:17] 6. Empty Arms
[8:35] 7. Lonsome For Your Love
[5:27] 8. Sweet As A Georgia Peach
[4:22] 9. Every Time You Leave Me
[5:43] 10. Can't You See What You're Doing To Me
[4:29] 11. Give Me Back My Wig
[6:18] 12. Rock Me

JOHN PRIMER - gtr/voc, TOM HOLLAND - gtr, STEVE BELL - hca, KEN BARKER - pno, NICK HOLT - bass, BERT ROBINSON - drums.

Tradition, style, mentor, leader, storyteller, veteran--all these words describe bluesman John Primer. Song after song, show after show, year after year, Primer delivers intense, soul-grabbing music straight from the heart.

It's A Blues Life mc
It's A Blues Life zippy

Album: Cold Blooded Blues Man
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:46
Size: 139.1 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[5:49] 1. Dreaming
[4:39] 2. Cuttin' Loose
[4:03] 3. Cold Blooded Blues Man
[5:30] 4. What Love Will Do
[5:01] 5. Meet Her In The Dark
[7:10] 6. Sad, Sad Day
[4:42] 7. Mojo Hand
[3:23] 8. Cairo
[4:18] 9. I'm Worried
[4:20] 10. Malted Milk
[4:01] 11. Waitin' For My Time
[4:45] 12. Love In Vain
[2:59] 13. Red House

JOHN PRIMER - gtr/voc w/ LITTLE MACK SIMMONS - hca, DETROIT JR. - pno, NICK HOLT - bass, EARL HOWELL - drums, EDDIE SHAW - sax, MAGIC SLIM - gtr, BILLY BRANCH - hca, CHRIS SANDERA - hca.

Singer/songwriter/guitarist John Primer surrounded himself with a bunch of Chicago Blues all-stars (George Baze, Nick Holt, Earl Howell, Billy Branch) for this mid-'90s release. It was easy to attract these stalwarts for his fifth solo record since Primer himself was already established on the who's who list of Chicago blues. In 1963, he relocated from Mississippi to the Windy City and slowly secured his place in the blues pantheon. By the time these recordings were made, he had already finished regular stints with Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters and Magic Slim (who makes a guest appearance on one track).

On this self-produced disc, John chooses to mix traditional acoustic Delta with electric Chicago blues over the course of 13 tracks that last 60 minutes. The material was recorded between 1991 and 1994. It captures the intensity and vivacity of John's live performances which his other studio material has struggled to deliver.

Cold Blooded Blues Man mc
Cold Blooded Blues Man zippy

Saturday, April 7, 2018

Bonnie Lee - I'm Good

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:20
Size: 106.1 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1983/2002
Art: Front

[3:15] 1. I'm Good
[3:27] 2. Fast Life
[3:09] 3. Summer Is Gone
[4:28] 4. Sad And Evil Woman
[4:22] 5. You Got Me Running
[6:05] 6. I Love You Baby
[2:43] 7. Tryin' To Make A Livin'
[6:08] 8. Got The Blues
[4:04] 9. Bye, Bye, Baby
[4:18] 10. I Need Someone
[4:14] 11. I've Got A Man

Bass – Willie Kent; Drums – Cleo Williams, Tim Taylor (10); Guitar – John Primer, Johnny B. Moore, Luther Adams, Magic Slim; Saxophone – Fred Laster; Vocals – Bonnie Lee.

Bonnie Lee was a longtime fixture of Chicago's contemporary blues scene as well as one of the last surviving links to its postwar heyday. Born Jessie Lee Frealls on June 11, 1931, in Bunkie, LA, Lee grew up in Beaumont, TX, where she studied piano and sang in her church's choir. Gospel singer Lillian Ginn was sufficiently impressed to extend an invitation to join her on tour, but Lee's mother refused to grant her permission. As a teen Lee nevertheless toured the South as a member of the Famous Georgia Minstrels, befriending blues legends Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown and Big Mama Thornton along the way. She relocated to Chicago in 1958, hitching a ride with a delivery van driver and settling at the West Side apartment of an aunt. After toiling in anonymity as a singer and dancer, in 1960 Lee signed to J. Mayo Williams' Ebony label to cut her debut single, "Sad and Evil Woman," credited at Williams' insistence to Bonnie "Bombshell" Lane, a moniker she reportedly despised. The single fared poorly, and Lee continued touring the Chicago jazz and blues club circuit, developing a potent voice as earthy as it was electrifying. Family obligations forced her to retire from music during the middle of the decade, but in 1967 she resurfaced alongside the legendary pianist Sunnyland Slim, a longtime confederate of Muddy Waters. Lee regularly opened for Slim in the years that followed, becoming a legend on the North Side blues circuit via residencies at clubs including Wise Fools, B.L.U.E.S., and Blue Chicago. In the late '70s, she also cut a handful of singles for Slim's own Airway label. Lee also enjoyed a decade-long collaboration with renowned bassist Willie Kent, during which time she recorded the 1995 Delmark LP Sweetheart of the Blues as well as the 1998 Wolf Records set I'm Good. In addition, she contributed to myriad compilations, most notably Women of Blue Chicago and Chicago's Finest Blues Ladies. Health problems nevertheless plagued Lee throughout the latter half of her life, and she died September 7, 2006, at the age of 75. ~ Jason Ankeny

I'm Good mc
I'm Good zippy

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Magic Slim & The Teardrops - 2 albums: Magic Blues / Black Tornado

Album: Magic Blues
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:37
Size: 115.9 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1995
Art: Front

[4:34] 1. Spider In My Stew
[3:55] 2. Rough Dried Woman
[6:13] 3. Sometimes I Wonder
[4:28] 4. Oh Wee Baby
[5:06] 5. Wonder What's The Matter
[4:13] 6. Stranded On The Highway
[3:54] 7. Evil
[3:37] 8. Why Does A Woman Treat A Man So Bad
[6:07] 9. Don't Tell Me 'bout Your Troubles
[4:44] 10. I'm Doing Too Bad
[3:41] 11. I Got To Leave

Bass – Nick Holt; Drums – Jerry Porter (2); Guitar – John Primer; Guitar, Vocals – Morris Holt; Vocals – John Primer (tracks: 7).

This is Slim's third studio record for Wolf Records! On this CD you can feel why they call him Magic Man! He is a great singer, guitar player and the band, The Teardrops, plays the style he likes! "Spider in my Stew", "Rough Dried Woman", I´aint doing too bad",... all are here!!

Magic Blues mc
Magic Blues zippy

Album: Black Tornado
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:17
Size: 106.0 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[3:09] 1. Jealous Man
[3:12] 2. Wake Me Up Early
[5:23] 3. Still A Fool
[2:51] 4. Black Tornado
[2:58] 5. Playin' With My Mind
[5:23] 6. I Can't Trust My Woman
[3:17] 7. Magic Boogie
[3:08] 8. You Got Bad Intentions
[5:47] 9. Crazy Woman
[3:41] 10. Young Man's Blues
[3:51] 11. It's Alright
[3:30] 12. Love Like I Wanna

Bass, Backing Vocals – Nick Holt; Drums – Allen Kirk (2); Guitar – Michael Dotson (2); Vocals, Guitar – Shawn Holt (tracks: 10); Vocals, Lead Guitar – Magic Slim (tracks: 1 to 9, 11, 12).

Magic Slim has released a pile of albums, all of them true to his group's house-rocking credo. The idea this time around was to hook him up with producer Dick Shurman and get Slim to record tunes he hadn't committed to wax yet. With a tight version of the Teardrops aboard (the ubiquitous Nick Holt on bass and vocals, Michael Dotson on rhythm, Allen Kirk on drums, and Slim's son Shawn Holt making a guest appearance on "Young Man's Blues"), Slim turns in a solid effort here. But perhaps the biggest change this time around is the inclusion of four original tunes from Slim, big news for a combo that many consider to be the ultimate blues cover band. Counting Nick Holt's "Playin' with My Mind" and Shawn Holt's "Young Man's Blues," the original material is up to the 50-percent mark, making this their most adventuresome outing to date. ~Cub Koda

Black Tornado mc
Black Tornado zippy