Showing posts with label Jimmy Rogers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jimmy Rogers. Show all posts

Friday, September 15, 2023

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Bill's Blues MP3
Bill's Blues FLAC

Friday, January 21, 2022

Jimmy Rogers - With Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters

Album: With Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters
Size: 154,4 MB
Time: 66:50
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1991/1994
Styles: Blues, Chicago blues
Art: Full

1. Okie Dokie Stomp (2:28)
2. Blues In D-Natural (6:28)
3. Same Old Blues (5:33)
4. Rock This House (6:45)
5. Gold Tailed Bird (7:18)
6. Why Did You Do It (7:13)
7. Can't Sleep For Worrying (4:55)
8. Walking By Myself (4:15)
9. Left Me With A Broken Heart (5:53)
10. Got My Mojo Working (6:03)
11. Shake Your Money Maker (6:03)
12. You're Sweet (3:51)

Jimmy Rogers is one of the most important and influential figures in the history of Chicago blues. The last remaining link to such classic figures as Sonny Boy Williamson, Little Walter and Otis Spann, Jimmy helped pioneer and develop the archetypal Chicago Blues sound with his bandmate Muddy Waters from 1947 to 1954. Today he's still a leader in a vital and satisfying tradition. "All my career I've wanted to make a Chicago blues album. When I heard the tapes of this concert, I knew I had ... I will always be grateful to Jimmy Rogers." (Ronnie Earl)

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

With Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters mc
With Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters zippy

Monday, January 17, 2022

The Jimmy Rogers All-Stars - Blues Blues Blues

Album: Blues Blues Blues
Size: 129,4 MB
Time: 55:53
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1999
Styles: Electric blues
Art: Full

1. Blow Wind Blow (Feat. Jeff Healey) (5:00)
2. Blues All Day Long (Feat. Eric Clapton) (4:45)
3. Trouble No More (Feat. Mick Jagger & Keith Richards) (4:22)
4. Bright Lights Big City (Feat. Taj Mahal) (3:41)
5. Ev'ry Day I Have The Blues (Feat. Lowell Fulson) (5:09)
6. Sweet Home Chicago (Feat. Stephen Stills) (4:10)
7. Don't Start Me To Talkin' (Feat. Mick Jagger & Keith Richards) (4:34)
8. That's All Right (Feat. Eric Clapton) (4:48)
9. Ludella (Feat. Taj Mahal) (3:53)
10. Goin' Away Baby (Feat. Mick Jagger & Keith Richards) (4:52)
11. Worried Life Blues (Feat. Stephen Stills) (5:15)
12. Gonna Shoot You Right Down (Boom Boom) (Feat. Jimmy Page, Robert Plant & Eric Clapton) (5:18)

Jimmy Rogers was very much a musician's musician - the kind of guitarist that earned accolades from contemporaries and successors alike - yet one who never wins a wide, mainstream audience. Blues Blues Blues was designed as the album that would find Rogers a larger audience, and as such, it has all the bells and whistles of a big-deal blues album. It has the classics ("Trouble No More," "Bright Lights, Big City," "Sweet Home Chicago," "Don't Start Me to Talkin'"), remakes of Rogers standards ("Ludella," "That's All Right"), cult covers (Muddy Waters' "Blow Wind Blow," which kicks off the album on just the right note) and an astounding number of guest appearances, including cameos from (get ready): Jimmy Page and Robert Plant, Keith Richards and Mick Jagger, Lowell Fulson, Johnnie Johnson, Eric Clapton, Taj Mahal, Ted Harvey, Carey Bell, Stephen Stills, and Jeff Healey.

That's a lot of star power - too much, as a matter of fact - since they occasionally overwhelm Rogers himself. And it has to be said that Rogers' playing simply isn't as dynamic or overpowering as it once was. Nevertheless, when it's judged alongside other contemporary electric blues albums, Blues Blues Blues holds up very well. Like its peers, such as John Lee Hooker's Point Blank recordings, the record is slick and well-crafted - it may be blues-lite, but it's highly enjoyable. And it's likely that it would have broken Rogers' career wide open, if he had lived to see its release. Knowing that makes Blues Blues Blues a little bittersweet. Yes, it's enjoyable, but it would have been great to hear Rogers really tear it up on his final record. /Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Blues Blues Blues mc
Blues Blues Blues zippy

Friday, March 12, 2021

Jimmy Rogers - Chicago Blues Festival (Live '94)

Size: 164.3 MB
Time: 71:00
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2021
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Front

01. Another Mule (Live) ( 5:30)
02. Who You Thinking Of (Live) ( 4:06)
03. Rock This House (Live) ( 6:47)
04. I'm Just Another Man (Live) ( 8:36)
05. Rock This House (Reprise) (Live) ( 4:59)
06. Big Boss Man (Live) ( 4:51)
07. Lemon Squeezer (Live) ( 5:16)
08. Introductions (Live) ( 2:26)
09. Blow Wind Blow (Live) ( 5:11)
10. Talk, Pt.1 (Live) ( 0:34)
11. Juke (Live) ( 2:56)
12. Talk, Pt.2 (Live) ( 0:30)
13. Going Down Slow (Live) (10:10)
14. Talk, Pt.3 (Live) ( 1:09)
15. Pitch A Boogie Woogie (Live) ( 7:54)

Personnel: Jimmy Rogers (vocal & guitar), Jimmy D. Lane (guitar), Madison Slim (harp).

Chicago blues singer, guitarist and harmonicist (born June 3, 1924 in Ruleville, Mississippi - died: December 19, 1997 in Chicago, Illinois). Best known as member of Muddy Waters' band in the late 1940s and 1950s. He had solo hits on the R&B chart with "That's All Right" in 1950 and "Walking By Myself" in 1954. He withdrew from the music industry at the end of the 1950s, only returning to recording and touring in the 1970s.

Chicago Blues Festival '94 MP3
Chicago Blues Festival '94 FLAC

Friday, February 19, 2021

Jimmy Rogers - A Blues Guitar Giant

Size: 73,6 MB
Time: 31:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2020
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

1. The World Is In A Tangle (2:58)
2. Back Door Friend (3:10)
3. Chicago Bound (2:41)
4. That's All Right (2:47)
5. Walking By Myself (2:48)
6. My Last Meal (3:04)
7. Goin' Away Baby (2:44)
8. Blues All Day Long (3:04)
9. My Baby Don't Love Me No More (2:18)
10. This Has Never Been (2:51)
11. Money, Marbles And Chalk (3:17)

Guitarist Jimmy Rogers was the last living connection to the groundbreaking first Chicago band of Muddy Waters (informally dubbed "the Headhunters" for their penchant of dropping by other musicians' gigs and "cutting their heads" with a superior on-stage performance). Instead of basking in world-wide veneration, he was merely a well-respected Chicago elder boasting a seminal '50s Chess Records catalog, both behind Waters and on his own.

Born James A. Lane (Rogers was his stepdad's surname), the guitarist grew up all over: Mississippi, Atlanta, West Memphis, Memphis, and St. Louis. Actually, Rogers started out on harp as a teenager. Big Bill Broonzy, Joe Willie Wilkins, and Robert Jr. Lockwood all influenced him, the latter two when he passed through Helena. Rogers settled in Chicago during the early '40s and began playing professionally around 1946, gigging with Sonny Boy Williamson, Sunnyland Slim, and Broonzy. Rogers was playing harp with guitarist Blue Smitty when Muddy Waters joined them. When Smitty split, Little Walter was welcomed into the configuration, Rogers switched over to second guitar, and the entire post-war Chicago blues genre felt the stylistic earthquake that directly followed. Rogers made his recorded debut as a leader in 1947 for the tiny Ora-Nelle logo, then saw his efforts for Regal and Apollo go unissued.

Those labels' monumental errors in judgment were the gain of Leonard Chess, who recognized the comparatively smooth-voiced Rogers' potential as a blues star in his own right. (He first played with Muddy Waters on an Aristocrat 78 in 1949 and remained his indispensable rhythm guitarist on wax into 1955.) With Walter and bassist Big Crawford laying down support, Rogers' debut Chess single in 1950, "That's All Right," has earned standard status after countless covers, but his version still reigns supreme. Rogers' artistic quality was remarkably high while at Chess. "The World Is in a Tangle," "Money, Marbles and Chalk," "Back Door Friend," "Left Me with a Broken Heart," "Act Like You Love Me," and the 1954 rockers "Sloppy Drunk" and "Chicago Bound" are essential early-'50s Chicago blues.

In 1955, Rogers left Muddy Waters to venture out as a bandleader, cutting another gem, "You're the One," for Chess. He made his only appearance on Billboard's R&B charts in early 1957 with the driving "Walking by Myself," which boasted a stunning harp solo from Big Walter Horton (a last-second stand-in for no-show Good Rockin' Charles). The tune itself was an adaptation of a T-Bone Walker tune, "Why Not," that Rogers had played rhythm guitar on when Walker cut it for Atlantic. By 1957, blues was losing favor at Chess, the label reaping the rewards of rock via Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley. Rogers' platters slowed to a trickle, though his 1959 Chess farewell, "Rock This House," ranked with his most exciting outings (Reggie Boyd's light-fingered guitar wasn't the least of its charms).

Rogers virtually retired from music for a time during the '60s, operating a Westside clothing shop that burned down in the aftermath of Dr. Martin Luther King's tragic assassination. He returned to the studio in 1972 for Leon Russell's Shelter logo, cutting his first LP, Gold-Tailed Bird (with help from the Aces and Freddie King). There were a few more fine albums - notably Ludella, a 1990 set for Antone's - but Rogers never fattened his discography nearly as much as some of his contemporaries have. Jimmy's son, Jimmy D. Lane, played rhythm guitar in his dad's band and fronts a combo of his own on the side. Rogers died December 19, 1997. At the time of his death, he was working on an all-star project featuring contributions from Eric Clapton, Taj Mahal, Robert Plant, and Jimmy Page, and Mick Jagger and Keith Richards; upon its completion, the disc was issued posthumously in early 1999 under the title Blues, Blues, Blues. /Biography by Bill Dahl, AllMusic

A Blues Guitar Giant mc
A Blues Guitar Giant zippy

Thursday, January 2, 2020

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

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

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

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

Club Beat: Stirring Up Some Blues

Friday, May 11, 2018

The Aces - Chicago Beat

Size: 142,0 MB
Time: 61:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1976/1999
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. Tell Me Mama (2:50)
02. Hoo Doo Man (3:59)
03. Take A Little Walk With Me (3:17)
04. Whole Lot Of Lovin' (3:30)
05. Got My Mojo Workin' (3:40)
06. Ace's Shuffle (2:55)
07. Blues For Marcelle (5:17)
08. Kansas City (6:05)
09. Early In The Morning (4:10)
10. Money, Marbles And Chalk (4:15)
11. Route 66 (4:56)
12. Blue Shadows (3:38)
13. Wee Wee Baby (3:23)
14. Fannie Mae (2:44)
15. Ace's Shuffle (3:56)
16. Stop, Stop, Stop (3:02)

Personnel: Louis Myers (vocals, guitar, harmonica); Fred Below (vocals, drums); Eddie Taylor, Jimmy Rogers , Mickey Baker (guitar); Willie Mabon (piano).

Common wisdom says that Muddy Waters was the man responsible for turbo charging the Delta blues and creating what we now call Chicago blues. Waters' importance is inestimable, but to lay all the credit at his feet is to ignore the contributions of those who quite literally used Waters' music as a jumping-off point, and blazed historical trails of their own. Of all the great musicians who passed through Waters' bands, perhaps the most important of all was harmonica player and singer Little Walter Jacobs. Jacobs left Waters' band at the age of 22 already a seasoned veteran of the road and the recording studio. He quickly recruited his own superb band, and came very close to eclipsing his former boss' success during the heyday of Chicago blues in the '50s, with two number one hits among his ten appearances on the nationwide Billboard R&B charts; Waters himself had 12 songs reach the Billboard charts, but he never scored a number one hit. Much of Little Walter's success can be attributed to the fact that he was doing something new, different, and thoroughly urban; where Waters' appeal lay heavily with Southern emigres longing for familiar sounds, Walter's swinging, modern, jazz-inflected style found favor with a younger generation of city blues fans not so closely tied to the "down-home" sounds of the South.

But Little Walter couldn't have done it alone -- he needed accompanists who shared his desire to push the edge of the blues envelope, so he recruited his band from among the most accomplished and forward-thinking blues musicians available in Chicago. His first recording and touring band in 1952 was one that he'd sometimes sat in with while still with Waters -- The Aces, featuring brothers David and Louis Myers on guitars. The Myers brothers were born in Byhalia, MS, and had learned the rudiments of guitar from their father before the family relocated to Chicago in the early '40s while both brothers were still in their early teens. There their musical tastes were formed by equal doses of the big-band swing that was popular at the time, pop ballads they heard on the radio, and the blues that was being played all around their southside neighborhood. By the late '40s they had assumed the roles they'd play for much of their musical careers: older brother Dave providing basslines and chords into which Louis wove his tastefully jazzy blues riffing. Their rock-solid musical foundation provided the perfect base for the veteran bluesman they soon found themselves backing, but their musical precociousness drove them to eventually form the Aces, which incorporated some of the more modern and sophisticated influences that had raised eyebrows with the older blues crowd. The Aces were rounded out by schooled jazz drummer Fred Below, a Chicago native for whom the rough Southern blues rhythms were almost completely foreign; after his first gig with the group he was so musically disoriented that he decided to quit the band, but was persuaded to stick it out and adapt his jazz techniques to the blues, ultimately becoming the most in-demand blues drummer in Chicago (in addition to putting the beat to many of rock & roll pioneer Chuck Berry's early hits). Little Walter approached his harmonica like a jazz saxophone player, and the Aces provided the propulsive backing of a swinging big band. It would have been near impossible at the time to find three musicians who were better suited to providing the solid foundation for Walter's musical innovations than the Aces, who had the musical and dynamic range, swing sensibilities, and melding of individual strengths that made them the standard by which all of Little Walter's later ensembles -- and most harp-led blues bands since -- have been measured.

Unfortunately this band was not to last; the Aces had been establishing their own name around town, but when their first records with Little Walter were released by the Chess Records subsidiary Checker as by "Little Walter and His Night Caps" or "...and His Jukes" (to capitalize on the popularity of his first hit "Juke," recorded during a session while he was still with Waters), there was dissension in the ranks. The first to leave was Louis, who was replaced by Robert Jr. Lockwood in 1954. Almost 40 years old at the time, Lockwood's roots were in the Delta; as Robert Johnson's stepson, he had a firm handle on the deepest of blues, but had been studying jazz guitarists since at least the '30s, and had been recording since before WWII. He proved to be an adept foil for Walter's harp excursions, and many of Walter's jazziest adventures were supported and driven by Lockwood's sophisticated guitar riffing.

Dave Myers was the next to leave, joining his brother Louis in 1955 in a re-formed Aces that featured Junior Wells (who had played with them pre-Walter) and later Otis Rush. Dave was replaced by 19-year-old guitar prodigy Luther Tucker, who had been hanging around the band and occasionally sitting in with them, as well as with other local blues acts. Although Tucker's role was initially the same as Dave's -- thumping out basslines on his guitar and providing chordal fills behind Lockwood -- he soon distinguished himself as one of the flashiest of the new breed of guitarists in Chicago. When given the chance to take the lead, Tucker's fleet-fingered bursts of nervous energy helped push Little Walter's music in new and exciting directions. The first wave of rock & roll was cresting, aggressively played electric guitar was moving to the forefront of popular music, and Luther Tucker was among the blues guitarists at the leading edge.

It was around this time that Fred Below vacated the drum seat, although as was the custom at Chess/Checker Records, he continued to be brought in for recording sessions for the next several years. Replacing him on the road for a time was his old drum school classmate Odie Payne, Jr., who had been playing and recording in Chicago since the late '40s with the likes of Tampa Red, Memphis Minnie, Memphis Slim and Elmore James, and later worked as the house drummer at Cobra Records, playing behind Buddy Guy, Magic Sam, Otis Rush and others. Payne's slightly more orthodox but still distinctly jazzy style was by all accounts ideally suited to Walter's music, although there's no documentation of him ever appearing on any of Walter's records.

After a short time with a still young and rambunctious Little Walter and the even younger Luther Tucker, Lockwood was began to tire of the grind, and he left Walter's band, although he continued to appear on records with him (and also notably with Sonny Boy Williamson) until the late '50s. In 1956 Jimmie Lee Robinson joined Little Walter's band, pushing Luther Tucker into the lead role that Lockwood had vacated. Robinson was another Chicago native, who had grown up around the blues-rich Maxwell Street Market area, and knew Walter from his escapades there during his earliest years in Chicago. Robinson's formative years included musical apprenticeship on Maxwell Street, followed by formal music lessons for a time, and then time spent with guitarists Freddie King, Elmore James, Eddie Taylor, and others in the early '50s. His guitar style had similarities to Tucker's, and eventually their roles carrying the top and bottom of the music melded to the point where they would trade back and forth even during songs. Unfortunately there are only a few examples of Jimmie Lee's years with Walter on record, due to the record label's insistence on not tampering with the successful studio formula that had been established by the Tucker/Lockwood/Below ensemble (usually augmented by Willie Dixon on string bass).

By the end of the '50s, Little Walter's hit-making days were behind him, and his bands soon became a revolving door through which a number of local musicians passed. In 1959 guitarist Freddie Robinson joined the band for a time (replacing Jimmie Lee Robinson, a move that has caused much confusion among discographers over the years), during which he sometimes played electric bass. Odie Payne left the band after a short time to be replaced by the solid if less musically adventurous George Hunter. During sessions over the next few years the drum throne (on sessions, at least) was also occupied by Billy Stepney, session ace Al Duncan, and even the return of Fred Below for a 1960 session. But blues tastes were changing, and his great ensembles of the past had all scattered and moved on to other pursuits with varying degrees of success. ~by Scott Dirks

Chicago Beat

Monday, October 23, 2017

Jimmy Rogers - Blues Greats: Jimmy Rogers

Year: 2011
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:49
Size: 132,3 MB
Styles: Blues, Chicago blues
Scans: Full

1. That's All Right (2:49)
2. Luedella (2:53)
3. Goin' Away Baby (2:44)
4. Today, Today Blues (3:10)
5. The World's In A Tangle (2:56)
6. She Loves Another Man (2:54)
7. Money, Marbles And Chalk (3:19)
8. Left Me With A Broken Heart (2:58)
9. Blues All Day Long (Blues Leave Me Alone) (3:05)
10. Chicago Bound (2:42)
11. Sloppy Drunk (3:03)
12. You're The One (2:31)
13. Walking By Myself (2:48)
14. If It Ain't Me (Who Are You Thinking Of) (2:04)
15. One Kiss (2:45)
16. I Can't Believe (2:47)
17. What Have I Done (2:44)
18. Trace Of You (2:32)
19. Rock This House (2:51)
20. My Last Meal (3:06)

Guitarist Jimmy Rogers was the last living connection to the groundbreaking first Chicago band of Muddy Waters (informally dubbed "the Headhunters" for their penchant of dropping by other musicians' gigs and "cutting their heads" with a superior on-stage performance). Instead of basking in world-wide veneration, he was merely a well-respected Chicago elder boasting a seminal '50s Chess Records catalog, both behind Waters and on his own. Born James A. Lane (Rogers was his stepdad's surname), the guitarist grew up all over: Mississippi, Atlanta, West Memphis, Memphis, and St. Louis. Actually, Rogers started out on harp as a teenager. Big Bill Broonzy, Joe Willie Wilkins, and Robert Jr. Lockwood all influenced him, the latter two when he passed through Helena. Rogers settled in Chicago during the early '40s and began playing professionally around 1946, gigging with Sonny Boy Williamson, Sunnyland Slim, and Broonzy.

Rogers was playing harp with guitarist Blue Smitty when Muddy Waters joined them. When Smitty split, Little Walter was welcomed into the configuration, Rogers switched over to second guitar, and the entire post-war Chicago blues genre felt the stylistic earthquake that directly followed. Rogers made his recorded debut as a leader in 1947 for the tiny Ora-Nelle logo, then saw his efforts for Regal and Apollo go unissued. Those labels' monumental errors in judgment were the gain of Leonard Chess, who recognized the comparatively smooth-voiced Rogers' potential as a blues star in his own right. (He first played with Muddy Waters on an Aristocrat 78 in 1949 and remained his indispensable rhythm guitarist on wax into 1955.) With Walter and bassist Big Crawford laying down support, Rogers' debut Chess single in 1950, "That's All Right," has earned standard status after countless covers, but his version still reigns supreme. Rogers' artistic quality was remarkably high while at Chess. "The World Is in a Tangle," "Money, Marbles and Chalk," "Back Door Friend," "Left Me with a Broken Heart," "Act Like You Love Me," and the 1954 rockers "Sloppy Drunk" and "Chicago Bound" are essential early-'50s Chicago blues.

In 1955, Rogers left Muddy Waters to venture out as a bandleader, cutting another gem, "You're the One," for Chess. He made his only appearance on Billboard's R&B charts in early 1957 with the driving "Walking by Myself," which boasted a stunning harp solo from Big Walter Horton (a last-second stand-in for no-show Good Rockin' Charles). The tune itself was an adaptation of a T-Bone Walker tune, "Why Not," that Rogers had played rhythm guitar on when Walker cut it for Atlantic. By 1957, blues was losing favor at Chess, the label reaping the rewards of rock via Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley. Rogers' platters slowed to a trickle, though his 1959 Chess farewell, "Rock This House," ranked with his most exciting outings (Reggie Boyd's light-fingered guitar wasn't the least of its charms).

Rogers virtually retired from music for a time during the '60s, operating a Westside clothing shop that burned down in the aftermath of Dr. Martin Luther King's tragic assassination. He returned to the studio in 1972 for Leon Russell's Shelter logo, cutting his first LP, Gold-Tailed Bird (with help from the Aces and Freddie King). There were a few more fine albums -- notably Ludella, a 1990 set for Antone's -- but Rogers never fattened his discography nearly as much as some of his contemporaries have. Jimmy's son, Jimmy D. Lane, played rhythm guitar in his dad's band and fronts a combo of his own on the side. Rogers died December 19, 1997. At the time of his death, he was working on an all-star project featuring contributions from Eric Clapton, Taj Mahal, Robert Plant, and Jimmy Page, and Mick Jagger and Keith Richards; upon its completion, the disc was issued posthumously in early 1999 under the title Blues, Blues, Blues. /Biography by Bill Dahl, AllMusic

Blues Greats: Jimmy Rogers mc
Blues Greats: Jimmy Rogers zippy

Thursday, September 7, 2017

Jimmy Rogers - Sloppy Drunk

Year: 1974/1993
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:49
Size: 134,7 MB
Styles: Electric blues
Scans: Full

1. Sloppy Drunk (3:25)
2. I Can't Sleep For Worrying (3:57)
3. Mistreated Baby (3:44)
4. Slick Chick (2:03)
5. Pretty Baby (3:39)
6. Left Me With A Broken Heart (3:35)
7. I Lost The Good Woman (5:06)
8. You're So Sweet (3:14)
9. The Last Time (3:54)
10. Shelby County (3:05)
11. Tricky Woman (3:38)
12. Sloppy Drunk Version 2 (Bonus) (5:42)
13. Gold Tailed Bird (Bonus) (3:48)
14. Walkin' By Myself (Bonus) (2:56)
15. That's Alright (Bonus) (3:35)
16. Ludella (Bonus) (3:21)

Blues legend Jimmy Rogers had not worked steadily prior to cutting these early '70s tracks since 1960. His return on this session's 16 tracks, originally recorded for Black and Blue and now reissued on CD by Evidence, was not a heralded one because there was not much mainstream attention paid to blues at the time. But Rogers' voice was in above-average shape; his sound, range, and tone were anguished and expressed with vigor and clarity. While Willie Mabon's tinkling piano chords and figures moved in and out of loping arrangements, Rogers played easy, penetrating fills, never trying for spectacular effects but nicely punctuating his leads. /Ron Wynn, AllMusic

Sloppy Drunk mc
Sloppy Drunk zippy

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Jimmy Rogers - Feelin' Good

Year: 1994
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s (from Flac)
Time: 39:15
Size: 90,6 MB
Styles: Electric blues, harmonica blues
Scans: Full

1. Rock This House (3:24)
2. You're So Sweet (2:53)
3. Harp Throb (3:17)
4. Angel Child (3:28)
5. You Don't Know (2:46)
6. Slick Chick (2:19)
7. Sharp Harp (3:32)
8. Blue And Lonesome (4:20)
9. Chicago Bound (2:14)
10. Tricky Woman (3:17)
11. St. Louis (3:27)
12. Rock With You Baby (4:12)

This Blind Pig CD reissues material from 1983-84. The legendary veteran Jimmy Rogers (taking most of the vocals and occasional guitar solos) is heard teamed up with the talented harmonica player Rod Piazza and his jumping group. The results are consistently exciting.

Piazza's harmonica serves as a perfect foil to Rogers' voice, and the impressive backup band (which also features Honey Piazza on piano) clearly enjoys jamming on the basic blues changes. The many strong solos and the superior material make this an easily recommended set. /Scott Yanow, AllMusic

Feelin' Good mc
Feelin' Good zippy

Sunday, April 30, 2017

Jimmy Rogers, Big Moose Walker - Chicago Bound

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:06
Size: 89.5 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1998/2015
Art: Front

[2:46] 1. Chicago Bound
[3:43] 2. St Louis
[3:31] 3. Do You Swear
[4:25] 4. Anna Lee
[4:58] 5. Sloppy Drunk
[3:27] 6. Lemon Squeezer
[2:52] 7. Last Time
[4:27] 8. Whoopin' Foolin' With You
[5:58] 9. One Room Little Country Shack
[2:57] 10. Goin' Away Baby

Johnny "Big Moose" Walker/ Piano, Vocals; John Primer/Guitar; Jimmy Rogers/Guitar, Performer, Vocals; Luther "Slim" Adams/Guitar; Billy Branch/Harp; Willie Kent/Bass.

Johnny Walker--Big Moose, Busy Head, Moose John, J. W. Walker--by whatever name he was called him, he was Chicago’s irrepressible wild man of blues piano. He wore a splendid smile and long, wavy hair; in his briefcase he carried a gorilla mask and a “Big Moose” jersey. Just as musicians and audiences enjoyed Moose’s antics, they also admired the exuberant, two-fisted blues he played. He’s worked alongside the best in the business and rambled from coast to coast.

Jimmy Rogers (June 3, 1924 – December 19, 1997) was a Chicago blues singer, guitarist and harmonica player, best known for his work as a member of Muddy Waters's band in the early 1950s. He also had solo hits on the R&B chart with "That's All Right" in 1950 and "Walking by Myself" in 1954. He withdrew from the music industry at the end of the 1950s but returned to recording and touring in the 1970s.

Chicago Bound mc
Chicago Bound zippy

Saturday, April 8, 2017

Jimmy Rogers - Blue Bird

Size: 133,6 MB
Time: 57:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1994
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. I'm Tired Of Crying Over You (3:45)
02. Blue Bird (4:46)
03. Walkin' By Myself (2:30)
04. Rock Me (4:22)
05. I Lost A Good Woman (4:18)
06. Howlin' For My Darling (4:12)
07. Why Are You So Mean To Me (5:28)
08. Blues Falling (2:23)
09. Lemon Squeezer (3:57)
10. That Ain't It (Baby I Need You (2:08)
11. Smokestack Lightning (4:26)
12. Blue And Lonesome (4:08)
13. Big Boss Man (3:06)
14. Jam Session (8:15)

This was Jimmy Rogers' last "proper" Chicago blues album, and it deservedly won a W.C. Handy Award in 1995. There are no moonlighting rock stars here; they would come out in droves for Rogers' subsequent album Blues Blues Blues. And with the exception of the last track -- which is basically pianist Johnnie Johnson showing off for eight minutes -- Rogers sits squarely in the spotlight for the duration of Blue Bird. As expected, Rogers revisits a fair amount of his earlier repertoire ("Walking By Myself," "I Lost a Good Woman"), but he also digs up several original tunes that he had never gotten around to recording until now. Throw in a few Chicago standards ("Big Boss Man," "Rock Me," "Smokestack Lightning"), and you have a solid, laid-back, and tremendously satisfying album by one of the underrated masters. The backing band is a mix of Chicago blues brethren (Carey Bell on harp, Dave Myers on bass, Ted Harvey on drums) and family (Rogers' son Jimmy D. Lane on lead guitar), plus Johnson, who is perhaps a rock star by association since he played with Chuck Berry for 18 years. This one's a must-have.

Blue Bird

Saturday, April 1, 2017

Various Artists - Antone's 20th Anniversary (2 CD)

Antone's 20th Anniversary is a double-disc set that celebrates the legendary Texas club and its rich musical legacy. Over the course of the set, some of the biggest and best names of not only Texas blues, but American blues contribute positively ripping live tracks - it's always a joy to hear the likes of Buddy Guy, James Cotton, Kim Wilson, and Doug Sahm, and each of these artists, among many others, turn in first-rate contributions on this set.

For a strong encapsulation of the American blues/blues-rock scene of the '70s, '80s, and '90s, Antone's 20th Anniversary delivers the goods. /Thom Owens, AllMusic

Album: Antone's 20th Anniversary - CD 1
Year: 1996
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:56
Size: 126,7 MB
Styles: Blues
Scans: Full

1. Jimmy Rogers - Got My Mojo Working (5:20)
2. Buddy Guy - The Things I Used To Do (5:53)
3. Doyle Bramhall - Wee, Wee, Baby (6:22)
4. Pinetop Perkins - Big Fat Mama (5:15)
5. Angela Strehli Band - Big Town Playboy (6:15)
6. Doug Sahm - Crazy, Crazy Baby (2:04)
7. Snooky Pryor - Nine Below Zero (6:48)
8. Lavelle White - Go To The Mirror (6:45)
9. Sue Foley - Truckin' Little Woman (3:52)
10. Teddy Morgan - Jungle Swing (6:19)

Antone's 20th Anniversary - CD 1 mc
Antone's 20th Anniversary - CD 1 zippy

Album: Antone's 20th Anniversary - CD 2
Year: 1996
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:56
Size: 115,4 MB
Styles: Blues
Scans: Full

1. Pinetop Perkins - Intro/Chicken Shack (1:32)
2. Pinetop Perkins - Little Girl, Little Girl (7:00)
3. Jimmy Rogers - Chicago Bound (3:19)
4. Angela Strehli - What It Takes (3:56)
5. James Cotton - How Long Can A Bell Ring (5:28)
6. Lazy Lester - A Woman (5:31)
7. Pete Mayes - I'm Ready (4:07)
8. Teddy Morgan - Going Back Home (4:23)
9. Luther Tucker - Sweet Home Chicago (4:34)
10. Guy Forsyth - You're Still Here (4:43)
11. Kim Wilson - I'm Leaving You (5:17)

Antone's 20th Anniversary - CD 2 mc
Antone's 20th Anniversary - CD 2 zippy

Friday, December 16, 2016

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

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

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

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

Together Again One More Time/Still Not Ready For Eddie mc
Together Again One More Time/Still Not Ready For Eddie zippy

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Bob Corritore - All-Star Blues Sessions

Year: 1999
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:02
Size: 131,0 MB
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Scans: Full

1. Hip Shakin' (3:47)
2. Out On The Road (3:49)
3. Naptown Blues (3:21)
4. Everybody's Fishin' (2:50)
5. Hear That Rumblin' (2:24)
6. Five Long Years (4:09)
7. How Many More Years (3:03)
8. Goin' Down South (2:30)
9. Cool Calm Collected (2:54)
10. Coal Black Mare (3:52)
11. Little Girl (3:48)
12. Tired Of Being Alone (1:53)
13. Showers Of Rain (3:29)
14. I Had My Fun (3:18)
15. Jennie Bea (3:38)
16. Nappy's Driftin' Blues (8:09)

Recorded, helmed, and mostly produced by Phoenix, AZ blues renaissance man Bob Corritore (club owner, record label exec, writer, manager, radio DJ, and harp player), this hour-long disc is a potent example of loose, straight-ahead blues played with guts and low-boil intensity. Spanning 1986-1998, these 16 tracks recorded in Phoenix and Tempe studios feature a variety of classic bluesmen such as Lil' Ed Williams, Henry Gray, R.L. Burnside, Bob Margolin, Jimmy Rogers, Pinetop Perkins, and Bo Diddley (who is prominently pictured with Corritore in the CD's tray). It's well-recorded - clean but never slick - and the performances find a genuine and spontaneous rugged midtempo groove. Which is exactly what the blues should be.

So even if you've never heard of such vocalists as Dino Spells, Jimmy Dotson, Clarence Edwards, or Chico Chism, they prove nearly as gifted and freewheeling as some of the more recognizable names. Corritore, who plays prominent harp on every track, is an exceptionally talented musician, even if his instrument seems a little higher in the mix than you might expect. The songs, all of which are covers, are especially well selected. Instead of jaunts through traditional, often stale standards, most are relatively obscure choices that allow the band to stretch out in a variety of established blues tempos. Even when Nappy Brown digs into Charles Brown's oft-covered "Driftin' Blues," (altered here to "Nappy's Driftin' Blues"), the vocalist tears through it with the passion and intensity of someone who wrote the song. A take on Eddie Boyd's popular "Five Long Years" is similarly inspired.

This is a real find for deep blues fans and an enjoyable if not essential listen for everyone else. Bob Corritore has assembled a classy collection that finds all of his players - both popular and obscure - in top form. /Hal Horowitz, AllMusic

(See booklet for recording info and personnel details.)

All-Star Blues Sessions mc
All-Star Blues Sessions zippy

Saturday, June 18, 2016

Jimmy Rogers - Chicago Bound: Complete Solo Records As & Bs 1950-1959

Size: 173,8 MB
Time: 73:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Front

01. That's All Right (With Little Walter) (2:46)
02. Luedella (With Little Walter) (2:50)
03. Goin' Away Baby (With Little Walter & Muddy Waters) (2:41)
04. Today Today Blues (With Little Walter & Muddy Waters) (3:07)
05. The World's In A Tangle (With His Rocking Four) (2:54)
06. She Loves Another Man (With His Rocking Four) (2:51)
07. Money, Marbles And Chalk (With Little Walter) (3:15)
08. Chance To Love (With Little Walter) (3:17)
09. I Used To Have A Woman (3:09)
10. Back Door Friend (3:08)
11. Last Time (With Muddy Waters & Willie Dixon) (2:41)
12. Out On The Road (With Muddy Waters & Willie Dixon) (2:50)
13. Left Me With A Broken Heart (With Little Walter & Muddy Waters) (2:54)
14. Act Like You Love Me (With His Rocking Four) (2:58)
15. Chicago Bound (With His Rocking Four) (2:38)
16. Sloppy Drunk (With His Rocking Four) (3:00)
17. Blues Leave Me Alone (With His Rocking Four) (3:05)
18. You're The One (With Little Walter & Willie Dixon) (2:28)
19. If It Ain't Me (Who Are You Thinking Of) (With Otis Spann & Willie Dixon) (2:01)
20. Walking By Myself (With Otis Spann & Willie Dixon) (2:45)
21. One Kiss (2:42)
22. I Can't Believe (2:43)
23. What Have I Done (With Otis Spann & Willie Dixon) (2:40)
24. Trace Of You (With Otis Spann & Willie Dixon) (2:28)
25. My Last Meal (With Otis Spann & Willie Dixon) (3:04)
26. Rock This House (With Otis Spann & Willie Dixon) (2:47)

One of the all-time greats of the Chicago Blues scene best known for his work as a member of Muddy Waters' band in the '50s. Collected here are the A & B sides of every solo 78 and 45 Jimmy Rogers released on the Chess label between 1950 and 1959.

Features an all-star backing from the likes of Otis Span, Little Walter and of course Muddy Waters.

His best known numbers, many of which are now blues standards are all featured including, 'Words in a Tangle', 'That's Alright' and 'Walking By Myself'. The latter being covered by Freddie King, Magic Sam and Gary Moore amongst many others.

If you like Chicago blues then this will not disappoint!

MC
Ziddu

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Jimmy Rogers - Chicago Bound

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:30
Size: 95.0 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1976/2007
Art: Front

[2:33] 1. You're The One
[3:16] 2. Money, Marbles And Chalk
[2:51] 3. Luedella
[3:50] 4. Act Like You Love Me
[3:20] 5. Back Door Friend
[2:43] 6. Last Time
[3:06] 7. I Used To Have A Woman
[3:00] 8. Sloppy Drunk
[3:02] 9. Blues Leave Me Alone
[2:51] 10. Out On The Road
[2:42] 11. Goin' Away Baby
[2:46] 12. That's All Right
[2:40] 13. Chicago Bound
[2:46] 14. Walking By Myself

Starkly printed in black and white with washed-out, grainy photographs, this is one heavy slab of blues by a player who is not as well-known as he should be. Guitarist Jimmy Rogers was usually overshadowed by the leaders he worked for, Muddy Waters particularly. He was also sometimes confused with the hillbilly singer Jimmie Rodgers, and although they might have sounded good together, they don't have anything in common. This reissue collection grabs 14 tracks done at various times in the mostly early '50s which involve practically a who's who of performers associated with the most intense and driving Chicago blues. This includes the aforementioned Waters, leaving behind his role as leader for a few numbers to add some stinging guitar parts. There is also a pair of harmonica players, each of whom could melt vinyl siding with their playing. These are the Walters, big and little, as in Big Walter Horton and Little Walter. Pianist Otis Spann, bassist Willie Dixon, and drummer Fred Belew are also on hand, meaning the rhythm section action is first class. Blues listeners who have only skimmed the surface of the music may not have really discovered Rogers, as his reputation increased in the years after his death and he had nowhere near the following and status of Waters or even Little Walter. Some of the tracks here are numbers the musicians got together and played with Rogers at the end of what was probably an already grueling session by Waters. "Sloppy Drunk" is a killer track that joins the long list of great blues numbers concerning the inebriated, while "Walking by Myself" is a fine example of the kind of shuffling rhythm these players are so good at. The CD era was an opportunity to put together larger selections of Rogers' material, complete with outtakes and selections that are much rarer than the material here. If a listener's reaction to this album is as positive as it ought to be, they can be assured the pickings will be equally tasty if they decide to go for more extensive documentation of this artist. ~Eugene Chadbourne

Chicago Bound mc
Chicago Bound zippy

Friday, March 11, 2016

VA - Wolf Records 20th Anniversary Collection

Size: 171,3 MB
Time: 73:09
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2003/2015
Styles: Blues
Art: Front

01 Vaan Shaw - Morning Rain (5:11)
02 Michael Coleman - Shake Your Booty (4:29)
03 Larry Garner - Nobody Special (3:37)
04 Vance Kelly - Woman In Every Town (6:03)
05 John Primer - Blues Behind Closed Doors (6:56)
06 Dana Gillespie - Blue Temptation (4:19)
07 Magic Slim - Spider In My Stew (4:34)
08 Jimmy Rogers - Last Time (2:51)
09 Muddy Waters - (I'm Your) Hoochie Coochie Man (2:42)
10 Albert King - I Wonder Why (6:06)
11 Hound Dog Taylor - Dust My Broom (3:07)
12 Pinetop Perkins - I'm Gonna Let You Go (3:30)
13 Charles Brown - Driftin' Blues (4:24)
14 Maxwell Street Jimmy Davis - Men's A Fool (3:22)
15 Sonny Boy Williamson I - Bluebird Blues (3:07)
16 Memphis Minnie - Hold Me Blues (No. 2) (2:41)
17 Roosevelt Sykes - Drivin' Wheel (2:54)
18 Son House - My Black Mama, Pt. 1 (3:08)

There's no doubting the quality of blues that Wolf Records has been releasing over the last two decades; what this collection shows is its breadth. From the Delta stylings of Son House, with a superb take on "My Black Mama," to the easier, West Coast feel of Charles Brown, the raw Chicago pump of Muddy Waters on "Hoochie Coochie Man," and even as far as British blues, in the person of Dana Gillespie, the label has indeed covered the waterfront. In addition to the big names, they've also showcased some lesser-known (but equally talented) performers like John Primer and Larry Garner who deserve a wider hearing, certainly on the basis of the tracks included here. Louisiana guitar whiz Garner might be from a younger generation, but the roots of his blues still run deep. Still, it's impossible to deny the power of the old masters -- or even mistresses, as Memphis Minnie is superbly featured on "Hold Me Blues" -- like Roosevelt Sykes, whose piano style was always unmistakable, while the late Hound Dog Taylor lets his wild slide style loose on the classic "Dust My Broom." In many ways, this stands as more than a birthday party for a label, it's almost a primer on the development of the blues -- and for a label to be able to do that shows just how good they are. ~by Chris Nickson

Wolf Records 20th Anniversary Collection

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Wild Child Butler - Lickin' Gravy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:11
Size: 105.7 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1988/1998
Art: Front

[3:07] 1. Everybody Got A Mojo
[4:39] 2. Gravy Child
[3:38] 3. Funky Butt Lover
[4:01] 4. None Of Nothing
[3:54] 5. Built For Comfort
[4:46] 6. I Love You From Now On
[4:04] 7. Spoonful
[5:05] 8. My Baby Got Another Man
[4:50] 9. Rooster Blues
[5:48] 10. Love Like A Butterfly
[2:14] 11. Speed

Bass – Aron Burton, Lee Johnson; Drums – Nate Applewhite, Sam Lay; Guitar – Jimmy Rogers, Joe Kelly, Sam Lawhorn; Harmonica – George Butler; Organ, Piano – Pinetop Perkins; Rhythm Guitar – Joe Zaklan, Wild Bill Moore; Vocals – George Butler.

Before it finally saw the light of day, this 1976 album had to undergo some overdubbing touchups a full decade later that replaced certain guitar tracks with Pinetop Perkins's keyboards. Not the best way to make an album, but the results are nevertheless pretty decent, as Butler dishes up a set of his own material, a couple of Willie Dixon copyrights, and Lightnin' Slim's "Rooster Blues." ~Bill Dahl

Lickin' Gravy mc
Lickin' Gravy zippy

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Various Artists - Antone's Anniversary Anthology Vol. 1&2

Album: Antone's Tenth Anniversary Anthology Vol. 1
Year: 1986
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:31
Size: 147,7 MB
Styles: Blues
Scans: Front, inside, tray

1. Snooky Pryor - How'd You Learn To Shake It Like That (8:16)
2. Eddie Taylor - If You Don't Want Me Baby (3:20)
3. James Cotton - Cotton Crop Blues (5:11)
4. Sunnyland Slim - Built Up From The Ground (4:09)
5. Albert Collins - Cold Cold Feeling (5:58)
6. Jimmy Rogers - Walkin' By Myself (2:20)
7. James Cotton - Sad Letter Blues (6:13)
8. Eddie Taylor - Bad Boy (3:49)
9. Buddy Guy - Look On Yonders Wall (4:12)
10. Buddy Guy - Things I Used To Do (6:25)
11. Pinetop Perkins - Caldonia (5:23)
12. Otis Rush - Double Trouble (3:47)
13. Jimmy Rogers - You're Sweet (5:21)

Chicago blues living legends were recorded live at a popular Austin, TX, club in July 1985. Included is Buddy Guy, Jimmy Rogers, Eddie Taylor, James Cotton, Snooky Pryor, Otis Rush, Albert Collins, and more. The CD has three bonus cuts. Good sound and very good performances. /Niles J. Frantz, AllMusic

Antone's Tenth Anniversary Anthology Vol. 1 mc
Antone's Tenth Anniversary Anthology Vol. 1 zippy

Album: Antone's Anniversary Anthology Vol. 2
Year: 1991
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:02
Size: 123,9 MB
Styles: Blues
Scans: Full

1. Jimmy Rogers - Chicago Bound (4:01)
2. Pinetop Perkins - Trouble Blues (5:23)
3. Calvin 'Fuzz' Jones - Shake For Me (5:44)
4. Buddy Guy - Everything Gonna Be Alright (4:37)
5. Otis Rush - Natural Ball (3:41)
6. Snooky Pryor - Sloppy Drunk (5:27)
7. James Cotton - Moanin' At Midnight (5:21)
8. James Cotton - Evan Shuffle (2:34)
9. Albert Collins - Black Cat Bone (7:03)
10. Lazy Lester - The Same Thing Could Happen To You (3:50)
11. Matt 'Guitar' Murphy - High Jack (6:16)

Cliff Antone's Austin, Texas nightclub is to blues what Gilley's is to country/western: a living showcase of some of the best musicians around. Along with the club, Antone also has a record label where he presents many of the legends of blues who have appeared at his venue, as well as some younger up-and-comers. This second volume of an anthology of music recorded at Antone's features some of the biggest names in blues history laying down strong performances. With artists like Matt "Guitar" Murphy, Albert Collins, Otis Rush, Buddy Guy and James Cotton, it would pretty hard to go wrong. When outright stars like these are surrounded by some of the best backing musicians in the business, the results should be – and here are – outstanding.

Not only does the record serve as a showcase for the above artists, but fans of those musicians may end up being even more excited because they sit in with each other for informal jams. Murphy, Cotton and former Muddy Waters guitarist Jimmy Rogers, for instance, help out Pinetop Perkins on "Trouble Blues," while Perkins sits in on piano later behind Guy. The highlight of this album is the two-song run with harpist Cotton and another former Muddy Waters guitarist, Hubert Sumlin, in a duet: Howlin' Wolf's "Moanin' at Midnight" and Waters' "Evan Shuffle." Unlike the case with most live albums, the sound quality here is stellar and the crowd knowledgeable enough to shut up while the musicians are playing. /Jim Trageser

Antone's Anniversary Anthology Vol. 2 mc
Antone's Anniversary Anthology Vol. 2 zippy