Showing posts with label Johnny Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Johnny Jones. Show all posts

Monday, August 5, 2024

Johnny Jones - 1956-1966: The Session Years

Album: 1956-1966: The Session Years
Size: 134,3 MB
Time: 57:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Blues/R&B
Art: Full

1. Every Night In The Week (2:33)
2. Now That We're Together (1:54)
3. Best Of Luck Baby (2:27)
4. Sittin' Here Drinking (3:00)
5. Somebody Somewhere (2:33)
6. Slave To Love (2:23)
7. I'm Just What You're Looking For (2:14)
8. Fiesta (2:12)
9. Nightmare (2:27)
10. Blue Night (2:09)
11. Pipe Dreams (2:08)
12. Oh Baby (2:09)
13. I'm Going Home (2:41)
14. Crazy About You Baby (2:25)
15. Let Me Down Easy (2:20)
16. Sugar Daddy (2:46)
17. Mojo Blues (2:08)
18. Slow Down Baby (3:08)
19. Strung Out (1:50)
20. Finger Lickin' (2:24)
21. 24 Hours A Day (1:59)
22. Mercy On My Soul (5:23)
23. Lucky Lou (1:20)
24. Pickin' Berries (1:11)

A talented Tennessee blues/R&B guitarist who played with giants like Junior Wells, Freddie King, and Bobby "Blue" Bland, Johnny Jones never made a high-profile name for himself, in part because he wasn't a singer. He did record with some bands, however, and this 24-track compilation is almost equally divided between work he did as part of the Jimmy Beck Orchestra (in the 1950s) and the Imperial Seven (in the '60s). The lack of original release information (including dates) on this anthology makes it kind of hard to assess how good a job this CD does of functioning as an overview of Jones' work during the period, however. The liner notes aren't at all clear as to who the credited artist was on all of these cuts, and it's important to note that at least some of these were actually billed to entirely different acts upon their initial release, especially as the Jimmy Beck Orchestra was a studio group for the Calvert, Champion, and Cherokee labels.

As for what's here, the Jimmy Beck Orchestra sides are just adequate '50s R&B with some flashes of rock & roll, with vocals variously taken by Gene Allison, Earl Gaines, Larry Birdsong, Charles Walker, and Christine Kittrell. Jones asserts himself more on the generally more impressive Imperial Seven sides, playing in a blues-rock style somewhat similar to Freddie King (especially on "Crazy About You Baby") on more modern-style tunes with a considerably more soulful grit. Again various singers - including Earl Gaines (again), Rudy Greene, Levert Allison, Sam Baker, and even (as spoken narrator) famed Nashville DJ "John R" Richbourg" - take vocals.

There's a Jimi Hendrix connection to the Imperial Seven tracks in that Billy Cox, who played in Hendrix's bands in 1969 and 1970, is on bass, while Larry Lee, who briefly played in Hendrix's band with Cox in 1969, is on rhythm guitar. Indeed Jones sounds a bit like Hendrix does on the latter's pre-fame recordings - bluesy and a little raw, and not as into a pure blues bag as some of his peers, though Jones of course wouldn't evolve like Hendrix did. The two final cuts are live instrumental recordings from the mid-'60s syndicated television show THE !!!! BEAT [sic]. /Richie Unterberger, AllMusic

Tracks 1-11 credited to Johnny Jones with The Jimmy Beck Orchestra.
Tracks 12-24 credited to Johnny Jones with The Imperial Seven (aka The Beat Boys).

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

1956-1966: The Session Years mc
1956-1966: The Session Years gofile

Thursday, September 24, 2020

Johnny Jones - Doin' The Best I Can

Size: 372 MB
Time: 151:03
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

CD A:
01. Sweet Little Woman (Little Johnny Jones) (3:05)
02. I May Be Wrong (Little Johnny Jones) (2:52)
03. Wait Baby (Little Johnny Jones) (3:11)
04. Hoy, Hoy (Little Johnny Jones) (2:40)
05. Chicago Blues (Little Johnny Jones) (3:13)
06. Doin' The Best I Can (Little Johnny Jones) (2:41)
07. Come On If You're Coming (Tampa Red) (2:53)
08. Please Try To See It My Way (Tampa Red) (3:06)
09. One Sunday Morning (Big Maceo) (2:50)
10. Just Tell Me Baby (Big Maceo) (2:31)
11. Do You Remember (Big Maceo) (2:27)
12. Big City Blues (Big Maceo) (2:33)
13. It's Too Late Now (Tampa Red) (2:58)
14. I'll Find My Way (Tampa Red) (2:38)
15. Midnight Boogie (Tampa Red) (2:47)
16. I Miss My Lovin' Blues (Tampa Red) (2:56)
17. Since My Baby's Been Gone (Tampa Red) (2:49)
18. She's A Cool Operator (Tampa Red) (3:04)
19. Look A-There, Look A-There (Tampa Red) (2:44)
20. True Love (Tampa Red) (2:45)
21. All Mixed Up Over You (Tampa Red) (2:49)
22. So Much Trouble (Tampa Red) (3:02)
23. Ti-Ri-Lee (Big Joe Turner) (2:56)
24. Oke-She-Moke-She-Pop (Big Joe Turner) (2:47)
25. TV Mama (Big Joe Turner) (2:48)

CD B:
01. Baby What's Wrong (Elmore James) (2:56)
02. I Believe (Elmore James) (3:17)
03. Sinful Woman (Elmore James) (2:54)
04. I Held My Baby Last Night (Elmore James) (3:25)
05. Round House Boogie (J.T. Brown) (2:49)
06. Kickin' The Blues Around (J.T. Brown) (3:00)
07. Saxony Boogie (J.T. Brown) (2:39)
08. Dumb Woman Blues (J.T. Brown) (3:16)
09. Early In The Morning (Elmore James) (2:50)
10. Hawaiian Boogie (Elmore James) (2:21)
11. Can't Stop Lovin' (Elmore James) (2:26)
12. Make A Little Love (Elmore James) (2:51)
13. Make My Dreams Come True (Elmore James) (2:43)
14. Strange Kinda Feelin' (Elmore James) (2:33)
15. Dark And Dreary (Elmore James) (2:48)
16. Sho' Nuff I Do (Elmore James) (2:54)
17. 1839 Blues (Elmore James) (3:16)
18. Cut That Out (Junior Wells) (2:52)
19. Ways Like An Angel (Junior Wells) (3:17)
20. Hoodoo Man (Junior Wells) (3:06)
21. Tomorrow Night (Junior Wells) (2:28)
22. Eagle Rock (Junior Wells) (2:22)
23. Junior's Wail (Junior Wells) (2:55)
24. The Twelve Year Old Boy (Elmore James) (3:05)
25. Coming Home (Elmore James) (2:27)
26. It Hurts Me Too (Elmore James) (3:05)
27. Knocking At Your Door (Elmore James) (2:38)
28. Elmore's Contribution To Jazz (Elmore James) (2:19)

In 40 short years on earth, Johnny Jones established himself as one of the greatest piano players ever to inhabit the Chicago blues scene. Best known for his rock-solid accompaniment to slide guitarist Elmore James both in the studio and as an onstage member of James' Broomdusters, "Little Johnny" also waxed a handful of terrific sides as a leader.

Jones arrived in Chicago from Mississippi in 1946 well-versed on the 88s. Influenced greatly by pianist Big Maceo Merriwether, Jones followed him into Tampa Red's band in 1947 after Maceo suffered a stroke. Johnny Jones's talents were soon in demand as a sideman -- in addition to rolling the ivories behind Tampa Red for RCA Victor from 1949 to 1953, he backed Muddy Waters on his 1949 classic "Screamin' and Cryin'" and later appeared on sides by Howlin' Wolf.

But it's Elmore James that he'll forever be associated with; the indispensable pianist played on James's halcyon 1952-56 Chicago sessions for the Bihari brothers' Meteor, Flair, and Modern logos, as well as dates for Checker, Chief, and Fire. The Broomdusters (rounded out by saxist J.T. Brown and drummer Odie Payne, Jr.) held down a regular berth at the West Side blues club Sylvio's for five years.

When he got the chance to sit behind a microphone, Jones's insinuating vocal delivery was equally enthralling. Muddy Waters, Jimmy Rogers, and Leroy Foster backed Jones on his 1949 Aristocrat label classic "Big Town Playboy" (later revived by Eddie Taylor, another unsung Chicago hero), while Elmore James and saxist J.T. Brown were on hand for Jones's 1953 Flair coupling "I May Be Wrong"/"Sweet Little Woman" (the latter a wonderfully risqué "dozens" number). The rocking "Hoy Hoy," his last commercial single, was done in 1953 for Atlantic and also featured James and his group in support. Jones continued to work in the clubs (with Wolf, Sonny Boy Williamson, Syl Johnson, Billy Boy Arnold, and Magic Sam, among others) prior to his 1964 death of lung cancer.

Ironically, Jones was reportedly the first cousin of another Chicago piano great, Otis Spann. ~Bill Dahl

Doin' The Best I Can MP3
Doin' The Best I Can FLAC

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

Various - Blues In The Bar: Drinkin' Songs

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 83:25
Size: 191.0 MB
Styles: Assorted blues styles
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[3:26] 1. Floyd Dixon - Hey, Bartender
[2:42] 2. Johnny Otis - Drinkin' Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee
[4:08] 3. Albert Collins - I Ain't Drunk
[3:30] 4. Koko Taylor - Beer Bottle Boogie
[4:24] 5. Lil Ed & The Blues Imperials - 20% Alcohol
[2:33] 6. Saffire-The Uppity Blues Women - Let The Gin Do The Talking
[4:50] 7. Rusty Zinn - Drinking My Last Dime
[4:51] 8. Roy Buchanan - Beer Drinking Woman
[8:13] 9. Smokin' Joe Kubek & Bnois King - Stop Drinking
[3:48] 10. Bob Margolin - Brown Liquor
[3:19] 11. Cephas & Wiggins - No Ice In My Bourbon
[2:39] 12. Roomful Of Blues - Juice, Juice, Juice
[4:29] 13. Billy Boy Arnold - Whiskey, Beer And Reefer
[5:47] 14. William Clarke - Drinking By Myself
[2:35] 15. Lonnie Brooks - One More Shot
[3:56] 16. Joe Louis Walker - Too Drunk To Drive Drunk
[2:41] 17. Johnny Jones - Sloppy Drunk Blues
[5:24] 18. Elvin Bishop - My Whiskey Head Buddies
[5:16] 19. Carey Bell - When I Get Drunk
[4:47] 20. Little Charlie & The Nightcats - I Don't Drink Much

Booze Blues: The sorrow one occasionally feels when drunk. Usually occurs when one drinks when he/she is in a bad mood. The affected person will often be saddened by anything and/or everything wrong in that person's life, no matter how important or trivial (most often trivial). Often accompanied (but not remedied) by more drinking.

Blues In The Bar: Drinkin' Songs mc
Blues In The Bar: Drinkin' Songs zippy

Thursday, November 16, 2017

Johnny Jones - Can I Get An Amen?

Year: 2007
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:32
Size: 121,0 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Front, sleeve, cd, tray

1. Don't Throw Your Love On Me So Strong (5:53)
2. Chip Off The Old Block (3:48)
3. Suspicion (4:32)
4. Can I Get An Amen? (7:32)
5. Galloping Dominoes (4:15)
6. I Was Raised On The Blues (5:29)
7. I Done Did That Already (3:47)
8. Herb Stuffing (3:44)
9. I Can't Do That (5:46)
10. Ain't Nothing A Young Girl Can Do (7:40)

The Tennessee blues guitarist Johnny Jones emerged from the same 1950s Chicago scene that nurtured Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf, and also later worked with Junior Wells, Freddie King, and, briefly, a young Jimi Hendrix.

Though he had mostly retired from active performing by the late 1970s, this 1998 live set finds him in Europe, in energetic form and with his stinging guitar technique still very much intact on songs such as the Chicago blues 'Don't Throw Your Love on Me So Strong," the slow blues of the title track, and the suggestive, New Orleans-style "Ain't Nothing a Young Girl Can Do." /AllMusic

Can I Get An Amen? mc
Can I Get An Amen? zippy

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Johnny Jones - Blues Is In The House

Year: 2001
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:02
Size: 136,1 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. A Fool Never Learns (3:44)
2. Girlfriend Blues (5:02)
3. I'm Gonna Love You (4:09)
4. Stacked In The Black (3:39)
5. I Could Be Dangerous (6:14)
6. I'll Be The Judge Of That (3:15)
7. Love Recession (5:04)
8. Good Idea At The Time (3:12)
9. Your Stuff Is Rough (4:00)
10. Farm Boy (4:08)
11. Why Can't We Be Alone (5:07)
12. Really (3:57)
13. A Rock And A Hard Case (3:32)
14. The Blues Is In The House (3:50)

Guitarist and singer/songwriter Johnny Jones writes and sings about thoroughly modern themes in a tradition-based blues style. The Nashville-based Jones is one of a handful of veteran, virtuoso bluesmen who are local heroes on the Nashville blues scene, which is surprisingly healthy given Nashville's legacy as a home for country music.

Jones was born in 1936 and moved to Memphis at age 13. He moved with his mother to Chicago in the early '50s, in time to learn from and share stages with the likes of Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf. For a time, Jones shared an apartment with harmonica player Walter McCollum, and together, the pair formed a small group that worked regularly with harmonica player Junior Wells and guitarist Freddie King.

After tiring of long Chicago winters, Jones moved south again, this time to Nashville, to pursue a career as a studio guitarist. He formed a band in the early '60s, the Imperial Seven. That band worked regularly at the famous New Era Club in Nashville. While working in studios with the Imperial Seven, blues-rock master Jimi Hendrix would come sit in from time to time. Also in the 1960s, Jones played rhythm guitar along with Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown in the house band for a Dallas TV show, The Beat.

In 1968 he formed a new band, the King Casuals, which cut several singles for Peachtree. By the end of the 1970s, frustrated by the feast or famine nature of a bluesman's income and irregular pay schedules, Jones retired, aside from an occasional stint playing guitar for Bobby "Blue" Bland when his tour bus would be making its way through Tennessee. Around Nashville in the late '90s, Jones accompanied the likes of Earl Gaines, Roscoe Shelton, Charles Walker, and others at local clubs.

He finally released his debut album under his own name, I Was Raised on the Blues, in 1999. Two years later, he released Blues Is in the House for the Toronto-based Northern Blues Music label; the album was very well received by college and public radio DJs. He has long remained one of the stars of Nashville's often overlooked blues club scene. /Biography by Richard Skelly, AllMusic

Blues Is In The House mc
Blues Is In The House zippy

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Various - The Blues Meets The Beatles

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:36
Size: 138.7 MB
Styles: Pop/Rock/Blues
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:11] 1. Stan Webb - She Loves You
[3:16] 2. Earl Green - From Me To You
[2:28] 3. Fred James - I'm Down
[3:58] 4. Charles Walker - Don't Let Me Down
[3:38] 5. Paul Lamb - Norwegian Wood
[4:08] 6. Johnny Jones - Come Together
[6:07] 7. Stan Webb - I Saw Her Standing There
[3:10] 8. Earl Green - Run For Your Life
[2:31] 9. Al Garner - The Word
[3:13] 10. Ruby Turner - You Can't Do That
[2:49] 11. Earl Gaines - Oh Darling
[4:28] 12. Fred James - Why Don't We Do It In The Road
[4:03] 13. Mo'indigo - I Call Your Name
[3:13] 14. Paul Lamb - Get Back
[3:46] 15. Roscoe Shelton - Let It Be
[3:30] 16. Tony Wilson - I Feel Fine
[2:00] 17. Lee Moses - Day Tripper

The Blues Meets The Beatles

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Various - The End Of An Era: 20 Years In Bluesland

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:05
Size: 139.8 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[3:29] 1. Roscoe Shelton - She's The One
[5:37] 2. Earl Gaines - I Believe In Your Love
[5:24] 3. Johnny Jones - I Can't Do That
[3:12] 4. Al Garner - Fatback
[4:23] 5. Herbert Hunter - Her Love Is Killing Me
[4:37] 6. Larry Ladon - Automobile
[3:27] 7. Charles Walker - You Got The Walk
[5:11] 8. Freddie Waters - Full Moon On Main Street
[4:09] 9. Dave Riley - Heat Up The Oven
[3:21] 10. Sam Lay - I'm The One
[6:43] 11. Homesick James Williamson - Crawlin' Kingsnake
[4:24] 12. Frank Frost - Born To Be Wise
[3:23] 13. Sam Carr - All My Life
[3:36] 14. Fred James - Herb Stuffing

Although the liner notes to this 14-track blues collection are otherwise thorough, one not so insignificant element is missing: the original release and recording dates of the material. The common thread seems to be that they were all produced by Fred James, who also plays guitar on all of the cuts, one of which, the instrumental "Herb Stuffing," is credited to James himself. Though James also wrote the notes, the time frame of the tracks (four of which were previously unissued) is maddeningly unspecific, though it can be deduced that they were all done sometime in the 20 years prior to this 2010 release. At any rate, these are pretty average, workmanlike contemporary electric blues, not many of them by big names in the field, with Earl Gaines, Frank Frost, Sam Lay, and Johnny Jones being the biggest. Sometimes performances of particular strength cut through to get noticed, especially Gaines' ballad "I Believe in Your Love," which has a rich and moving vibrato vocal. James is a decent and versatile guitarist, too, but in part owing to the substandard documentation, it's not a notable compilation of 20th into 21st century blues. ~Richie Unterberger

The End Of An Era: 20 Years In Bluesland mc
The End Of An Era: 20 Years In Bluesland zippy

Saturday, May 16, 2015

VA - Acoustic Blues Nuggets

Size: 174,4 MB
Time: 74:08
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Acoustic Blues
Art: Front

01 Anders Osborne - Call On Me (2:56)
02 Ann Rabson - Serial Love (3:32)
03 Corey Harris - She Moves Me (2:09)
04 Kenny Neal - Morning After (3:04)
05 Lonnie Mack - Oreo Cookie Blues (4:51)
06 Sonny Terry - So Tough With Me (4:11)
07 Little Charlie & The Nightcats - Too Close Together (3:07)
08 Saffire - The Uppity Blues Women/Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby (2:33)
09 Big Walter Horton - Trouble In Mind (4:37)
10 Charlie Musselwhite - Newport News Blues (3:58)
11 Buddy Guy & Junior Wells - Catfish Blues (3:33)
12 Johnny Jones - Early In The Morning (2:34)
13 Bob Margolin - Worried Life Blues (5:17)
14 Gaye Adegbalola - Let Go, Let God (4:29)
15 Johnny Winter - Bad Girl Blues (4:32)
16 Shemekia Copeland - Beat Up Guitar (4:26)
17 The Holmes Brothers - Close The Door (3:42)
18 Cephas & Wiggins - Hard Liquor (4:13)
19 John Jackson - She's So Sweet (2:58)
20 Carey & Lurrie Bell - Short Dress Woman (3:17)

Acoustic Blues Nuggets

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Johnny Jones & Billy Boy Arnold - Johnny Jones With Billy Boy Arnold

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 42:46
Size: 97.9 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1979/1992
Art: Front

[3:53] 1. The Dirty Dozens
[2:55] 2. Hello, Baby
[2:41] 3. Sloppy Drunk Blues
[2:09] 4. Worried Life Blues
[3:15] 5. I Believe I'll Give It Up
[2:31] 6. Early In The Morning
[4:23] 7. One Room Country Shack
[2:50] 8. She Wants To Sell My Monkey
[4:06] 9. I Hear My Black Name Ringing
[2:33] 10. Ouch!
[3:04] 11. Nine Below Zero
[3:06] 12. I Have Got To Go
[5:13] 13. Love Her With A Feeling

Harmonica – Billy Boy Arnold; Keyboards, Vocals – Johnny Jones; Vocals – Billy Boy Arnold (tracks: 3, 6, 9, 12).

Thank heaven Norman Dayron had the presence of mind to capture these sides by Chicago pianist Johnny Jones when he played at the Fickle Pickle in 1963 -- as little as remains on tape of his talents as a singer, we're eternally indebted to Dayron's actions. Jones's insinuating vocals and bedrock 88s are abetted by harpist Billy Boy Arnold on these performances, and that's it -- he had no rhythm section to fall back on. ~Bill Dahl

Johnny Jones With Billy Boy Arnold mc
Johnny Jones With Billy Boy Arnold zippy

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Johnny Jones - Live In Europe

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 50:33
Size: 115.8 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[5:07] 1. Galloping Dominoes
[4:05] 2. Sneaky Suspicion
[4:14] 3. Groove Thing
[3:22] 4. Baptism Of Fire
[4:50] 5. Mighty Low
[5:01] 6. I Can't Do That
[8:44] 7. Blues Is Alright
[5:52] 8. Stormy Monday
[5:29] 9. Don't Throw Your Love On Me So
[3:46] 10. Chip Off The Old Block

thank you gerard for the link to the following article (see in comments).

Born in 1936, Jones had living in Memphis as a teen before moving with his mother to Chicago during the early-1950s. A self-taught guitarist, Jones was in a small blues group that played with both harp legend Junior Wells and guitarist Freddie King. Unaccustomed to the cold Chicago winters, however, Jones moved back to the south, landing in Nashville.

In the "Music City" during the early-1960s, Jones found a thriving blues and R&B scene, mostly centered on the city's Jefferson Street and anchored by the famous New Era Club. Jones formed the Imperial 7, playing often at the New Era, where a young soldier from Fort Campbell, Kentucky named Jimi Hendrix would come and sit in on guitar.

Jones mentored Hendrix for a couple of years before the guitarist left for New York City, fame and fortune. "For two years, (Hendrix) was under my wing. I had what he had to have. I had that lowdown smell of Mississippi in mine," Jones said of his own guitar style in an interview with The Tennessean newspaper. One of Nashville blues community's favorite stories is that Hendrix challenged his teacher to a six-string duel at Club Baron during the early-1960s, with Jones coming out the winner based on the audience's applause.

Jones would stay busy throughout the 1960s. He played guitar behind Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown on the Nashville-produced R&B music TV show The!!!!Beat and was a member of the house band for the Night Train TV show. For a short while, Jones fronted the King Casuals, a band formed by Hendrix in the early-60s as the King Kasuals. Jones also toured with soul-blues giant Bobby "Blue" Bland. But by the 1970s, the guitarist had tired of the musician's daily struggle for dollars-and-cents, and Jones retired from performing.

During the late-1990s, though, Jones got back into the music business, backing R&B singers like Charles Walker and Roscoe Shelton in local Nashville nightclubs. In 1999, Jones released his first solo album, I Was Raised On The Blues, a long overdue showcase for his underrated guitar skills. A couple of years later, he recorded Blues Is In The House for the Northern Blues label, earning Jones widespread critical acclaim. Later that year, In The House, a live album of Jones backing the dynamic soul singer Charles Walker (now with the Dynamites) was released.

As a bluesman, Jones was relatively obscure, yet his presence could be felt on Nashville's growing blues scene during the late-1990s and early-00s. Jones and his Jefferson Street colleagues were recognized for their musical contributions by Night Train to Nashville: Music City Rhythm & Blues, 1945-1970, an exhibit that ran at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum from March 2004 through December 2005. Jones (with the Imperial 7) also had a song placed on the Night Train To Nashville double-CD that was produced by Daniel Cooper and Michael Gray to accompany the exhibit.

The talented guitarist continued to perform, appearing at the ninth annual Jefferson Street Jazz & Blues Festival in June 2009. "Anytime I get the chance to play my guitar, it's more than money. It's therapy for me," Jones told The Tennessean in 2005. "I need to get time with my guitar every day." ~ Reverend Keith A. Gordon

Live In Europe mc
Live In Europe zippy

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Various - The Alligator Records Playlists: Drinking

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 91:03
Size: 208.4 MB
Styles: Assorted
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:45] 1. Little Charlie & The Nightcats - I Don't Drink Much
[4:47] 2. Roy Buchanan - Beer Drinking Woman
[3:06] 3. Lee Rocker - Crazy When She Drinks
[4:24] 4. Lil Ed & The Blues Imperials - 20% Alcohol
[4:07] 5. Albert Collins - I Ain't Drunk
[3:18] 6. Cephas & Wiggins - No Ice In My Bourbon
[3:48] 7. Bob Margolin - Brown Liquor
[3:54] 8. Joe Louis Walker - Too Drunk To Drive Drunk
[2:39] 9. Roomful Of Blues - Juice, Juice, Juice
[4:27] 10. A.C. Reed - Don't Drive Drunk
[4:02] 11. Detroit Junior - If I Hadn't Been High
[3:30] 12. Koko Taylor - Beer Bottle Boogie
[2:41] 13. Johnny Jones - Sloppy Drunk Blues
[5:16] 14. Carey Bell - When I Get Drunk
[4:28] 15. Billy Boy Arnold - Whiskey, Beer And Reefer
[2:51] 16. Koko Taylor - Hey Bartender
[2:40] 17. Johnny Otis - Drinkin' Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee
[7:09] 18. Son Seals - The Woman I Love
[4:51] 19. Rusty Zinn - Drinking My Last Dime
[5:46] 20. William Clarke - Drinking By Myself
[3:16] 21. Corey Harris - Moosemilk Blues
[2:33] 22. Saffire The Uppity Blues Women - Let The Gin Do The Talking
[2:34] 23. Lonnie Brooks - One More Shot

The Alligator Records Playlists: Drinking

Monday, March 17, 2014

Johnny Jones - I Was Raised On The Blues

Size: 117,9 MB
Time: 50:38
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1998
Styles: Modern Electric Blues, Memphis Blues
Art: Front

01. Chip Off The Old Block (3:11)
02. Don't Throw Your Love On Me So Strong (5:21)
03. I Was Raised On The Blues (4:56)
04. Can I Get An Amen (7:28)
05. Groove Thing (4:12)
06. Galloping Dominoes (4:17)
07. Herb Stuffing (3:40)
08. Sneaky Suspicion (4:09)
09. Mighty Low (7:03)
10. I Done Did That Already (3:02)
11. Baptism Of Fire (3:14)

Guitarist and singer/songwriter Johnny Jones writes and sings about thoroughly modern themes in a tradition-based blues style. The Nashville-based Jones is one of a handful of veteran, virtuoso bluesmen who are local heroes on the Nashville blues scene, which is surprisingly healthy given Nashville's legacy as a home for country music.

Jones was born in 1936 and moved to Memphis at age 13. He moved with his mother to Chicago in the early '50s, in time to learn from and share stages with the likes of Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf. For a time, Jones shared an apartment with harmonica player Walter McCollum, and together, the pair formed a small group that worked regularly with harmonica player Junior Wells and guitarist Freddie King.

After tiring of long Chicago winters, Jones moved south again, this time to Nashville, to pursue a career as a studio guitarist. He formed a band in the early '60s, the Imperial Seven. That band worked regularly at the famous New Era Club in Nashville. While working iBiography by Richard Skellyn studios with the Imperial Seven, blues-rock master Jimi Hendrix would come sit in from time to time. Also in the 1960s, Jones played rhythm guitar along with Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown in the house band for a Dallas TV show, The Beat. In 1968 he formed a new band, the King Casuals, which cut several singles for Peachtree. By the end of the 1970s, frustrated by the feast or famine nature of a bluesman's income and irregular pay schedules, Jones retired, aside from an occasional stint playing guitar for Bobby "Blue" Bland when his tour bus would be making its way through Tennessee. Around Nashville in the late '90s, Jones accompanied the likes of Earl Gaines, Roscoe Shelton, Charles Walker, and others at local clubs. He finally released his debut album under his own name, I Was Raised on the Blues, in 1999. Two years later, he released Blues Is in the House for the Toronto-based Northern Blues Music label; the album was very well received by college and public radio DJs. He has long remained one of the stars of Nashville's often overlooked blues club scene. ~Biography by Richard Skelly

Thanks to Marc.
I Was Raised On The Blues

Monday, November 25, 2013

Johnny Jones & Charles Walker - In The House: Live At Lucerne Vol. 2

Size: 134,3 MB
Time: 57:38
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001
Styles: Memphis Blues
Art: Front

01. I Can't Do That (5:44)
02. The Drifter (3:33)
03. Slave To Love (5:24)
04. Gypsy Woman (4:17)
05. Finger Lickin' (4:38)
06. They All Look Better In Green (3:56)
07. Can I Get An Amen (6:32)
08. Chicken Scratch (3:52)
09. Storming And Raining Blues (5:13)
10. Strain On My Heart (4:48)
11. 99, 000 Watts Of Soul Power (3:54)
12. Nothing A Young Girl Can Do (5:41)

Personnel:
Johnny Jones – gtr/voc
Charles Walker – gtr
Billy Earheart – org
Mary-Ann Brandon – voc
Fred James – gtr
Jeff Davis – bass
Andy Arrow – drums

Volume 2 is a trip way down to Memphis as Johnny Jones and Charles Walker can really cook the blues meets soul stew. (…) Both of them can sing and nail down every song they perform. Plus, their backing band is as soulful as it get, especially on churchy songs like “Strain On My Heart”. Not only the music is absolute high class (…) but the sound quality, production values and packing also set high standards. I love this kind of live production, real concert played from the first song to the last one, no silence or fading. If there is something as good as being there in Lucerne, sitting in a first row and listening to the blues, this is it, “In The House”. This series is as essential as “The Bluesville Years” classic blues series releases some years ago by the Prestige/Fantasy label. A must have for all serious blues fans.

Thanks to Marc.
In The House: Live At Lucerne Vol. 2