Showing posts with label Snooky Pryor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Snooky Pryor. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Snooky Pryor - Mind Your Own Business

Album: Mind Your Own Business
Size: 138,5 MB
Time: 60:10
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1996/2009
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Art: Full

1. Mind Your Own Business (5:30)
2. Come On Down To My House (5:49)
3. Goin' Back To Arkansas (5:34)
4. Motty And Me (4:38)
5. I'm So Glad (5:27)
6. You Set Me Free (4:45)
7. Miss Fanny Brown (4:53)
8. Good Or Bad Times (4:08)
9. Shake Your Boogie (4:16)
10. Diggin' My Potatoes (5:08)
11. No More Monkey Business (4:57)
12. Little Brown Hen (5:00)

Only recently has Snooky Pryor finally begun to receive full credit for the mammoth role he played in shaping the amplified Chicago blues harp sound during the postwar era. He's long claimed he was the first harpist to run his sound through a public address system around the Windy City - and since nobody's around to refute the claim at this point, we'll have to accept it! James Edward Pryor was playing harmonica at the age of eight in Mississippi. The two Sonny Boys were influential to Pryor's emerging style, as he played around the Delta.

He hit Chicago for the first time in 1940, later serving in the Army at nearby Fort Sheridan. Playing his harp through powerful Army PA systems gave Pryor the idea to acquire his own portable rig once he left the service. Armed with a primitive amp, he dazzled the folks on Maxwell Street in late 1945 with his massively amplified harp. Pryor made some groundbreaking 78s during the immediate postwar Chicago blues era. Teaming with guitarist Moody Jones, he waxed "Telephone Blues" and "Boogie" for Planet Records in 1948, encoring the next year with "Boogy Fool"/"Raisin' Sand" for JOB with Jones on bass and guitarist Baby Face Leroy Foster in support.

Pryor made more classic sides for JOB (1952-1953), Parrot (1953), and Vee-Jay ("Someone to Love Me"/"Judgment Day") in 1956, but commercial success never materialized. He wound down his blues-playing in the early '60s, finally chucking it all and moving to downstate Ullin, IL, in 1967. For a long while, Pryor's whereabouts were unknown. But the 1987 Blind Pig album Snooky, produced by guitarist Steve Freund, announced to the world that the veteran harpist was alive and well, his chops still honed. A pair of solid discs for Antone's, Too Cool to Move and In This Mess Up to My Chest, followed. Pryor stayed busy until his death in 2006. /Biography by Bill Dahl, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Mind Your Own Business mc
Mind Your Own Business gofile

Thursday, August 8, 2024

Snooky Pryor - In This Mess Up To My Chest

Album: In This Mess Up To My Chest
Size: 130,7 MB
Time: 56:38
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1994
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Art: Full

1. Bury You In A Paper Sack (4:35)
2. Pay For All Our Sins (5:52)
3. Stick Way Out Behind (3:23)
4. Can I Get A Witness? (4:08)
5. When The Saints Go Marching In (3:43)
6. Take It Easy, Greasy (5:04)
7. Slow Down, Baby (3:26)
8. Bluebird Blues (5:42)
9. Hello, Little Baby (4:12)
10. She Tried To Ruin Me (5:16)
11. My Baby's Too Sweet To Die (4:52)
12. Judgement Day (6:20)

Only recently has Snooky Pryor finally begun to receive full credit for the mammoth role he played in shaping the amplified Chicago blues harp sound during the postwar era. He's long claimed he was the first harpist to run his sound through a public address system around the Windy City - and since nobody's around to refute the claim at this point, we'll have to accept it! James Edward Pryor was playing harmonica at the age of eight in Mississippi. The two Sonny Boys were influential to Pryor's emerging style, as he played around the Delta.

He hit Chicago for the first time in 1940, later serving in the Army at nearby Fort Sheridan. Playing his harp through powerful Army PA systems gave Pryor the idea to acquire his own portable rig once he left the service. Armed with a primitive amp, he dazzled the folks on Maxwell Street in late 1945 with his massively amplified harp. Pryor made some groundbreaking 78s during the immediate postwar Chicago blues era. Teaming with guitarist Moody Jones, he waxed "Telephone Blues" and "Boogie" for Planet Records in 1948, encoring the next year with "Boogy Fool"/"Raisin' Sand" for JOB with Jones on bass and guitarist Baby Face Leroy Foster in support.

Pryor made more classic sides for JOB (1952-1953), Parrot (1953), and Vee-Jay ("Someone to Love Me"/"Judgment Day") in 1956, but commercial success never materialized. He wound down his blues-playing in the early '60s, finally chucking it all and moving to downstate Ullin, IL, in 1967. For a long while, Pryor's whereabouts were unknown. But the 1987 Blind Pig album Snooky, produced by guitarist Steve Freund, announced to the world that the veteran harpist was alive and well, his chops still honed. A pair of solid discs for Antone's, Too Cool to Move and In This Mess Up to My Chest, followed. Pryor stayed busy until his death in 2006. /Biography by Bill Dahl, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

In This Mess Up To My Chest mc
In This Mess Up To My Chest gofile

Friday, April 7, 2023

Snooky Pryor - The Snooky Pryor Story Vol. 1: Chicago Blues Harmonica Pioneer

Size: 177.6 MB
Time: 76:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2023
Styles: Chicago Blues, Harmonica Blues
Art: Front

01. Snooky And Moody’s Boogie (2:20)
02. Telephone Blues (2:47)
03. Stockyard Blues (With Floyd Jones) (2:52)
04. Keep What You Got (With Floyd Jones) (2:19)
05. My Baby Walked Out (With Johnny Young) (2:56)
06. Let Me Ride Your Mule (With Johnny Young) (2:41)
07. Boogy Fool (2:27)
08. Raisin’ Sand (2:42)
09. My Head Can’t Rest Anymore (With Baby Face Leroy) (3:14)
10. Take A Little Walk With Me (With Baby Face Leroy) (3:10)
11. Back To Korea Blues (With Sunnyland Slim) (3:05)
12. It’s All Over Now (With Sunnyland Slim) (3:07)
13. Fine Boogie (3:07)
14. I’m Getting Tired (2:35)
15. Going Back On The Road (2:48)
16. Harp Instrumental (2:38)
17. Rough Treatment (With Moody Jones) (2:43)
18. Why Should I Worry (With Moody Jones) (2:50)
19. Hold Me In Your Arms (3:00)
20. (Real) Fine Boogie (2:35)
21. Cryin’ Shame (2:53)
22. Eighty Nine Ten (2:39)
23. Lonesome Blues (With Homesick James) (2:49)
24. Late Hours At Midnight (With Homesick James) (2:21)
25. Crosstown Blues (2:59)
26. I Want You For Myself (2:52)
27. Uncle Sam Don’t Take My Man (3:19)

Only recently has Snooky Pryor finally begun to receive full credit for the mammoth role he played in shaping the amplified Chicago blues harp sound during the postwar era. He's long claimed he was the first harpist to run his sound through a public address system around the Windy City -- and since nobody's around to refute the claim at this point, we'll have to accept it! James Edward Pryor was playing harmonica at the age of eight in Mississippi. The two Sonny Boys were influential to Pryor's emerging style, as he played around the Delta. He hit Chicago for the first time in 1940, later serving in the Army at nearby Fort Sheridan. Playing his harp through powerful Army PA systems gave Pryor the idea to acquire his own portable rig once he left the service. Armed with a primitive amp, he dazzled the folks on Maxwell Street in late 1945 with his massively amplified harp. Pryor made some groundbreaking 78s during the immediate postwar Chicago blues era. Teaming with guitarist Moody Jones, he waxed "Telephone Blues" and "Boogie" for Planet Records in 1948, encoring the next year with "Boogy Fool"/"Raisin' Sand" for JOB with Jones on bass and guitarist Baby Face Leroy Foster in support. Pryor made more classic sides for JOB (1952-1953), Parrot (1953), and Vee-Jay ("Someone to Love Me"/"Judgment Day") in 1956, but commercial success never materialized. He wound down his blues-playing in the early '60s, finally chucking it all and moving to downstate Ullin, IL, in 1967. For a long while, Pryor's whereabouts were unknown. But the 1987 Blind Pig album Snooky, produced by guitarist Steve Freund, announced to the world that the veteran harpist was alive and well, his chops still honed. A pair of solid discs for Antone's, Too Cool to Move and In This Mess Up to My Chest, followed. Pryor stayed busy until his death in 2006. ~Bill Dahl

The Snooky Pryor Story Vol. 1: Chicago Blues Harmonica Pioneer MP3
The Snooky Pryor Story Vol. 1: Chicago Blues Harmonica Pioneer FLAC

Friday, February 4, 2022

VA - Blues Live From Mountain Stage

Size: 139.3 MB
Time: 58:43
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1995
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Rock
Art: Full

01 The Nighthawks - Leave My Woman Alone (Live) (2:42)
02 Tracy Nelson - It Hurts Me Too (Live) (4:26)
03 Paul Geremia - Slidell Blues (Live) (3:40)
04 Snooky Pryor - That's The Way To Do It (Live) (2:57)
05 John Hammond - My Daddy Was A Jockey (Live) (3:23)
06 Charlie Musselwhite - Blues Why Do You Worry Me (Live) (5:13)
07 Chris Smither - The Devil's Real (Live) (4:22)
08 Cephas & Wiggins - Black Cat On The Line (Live) (5:06)
09 William Clarke - Lonesome Bedroom Blues (Live) (4:04)
10 John Jackson - Louisiana Blues (Live) (2:26)
11 The Legendary Blues Band - Got Love If You Want It (Live) (3:55)
12 Johnnie Johnson - That'll Work (Live) (5:23)
13 Charles Brown - Quicksand Blues (Live) (5:09)
14 Duke Robillard - Gee I Wish (Live) (5:52)

The Blues Live from Mountain Stage series continues documenting contemporary roots music's finest performers with this fine collection of blues performances, featuring artists including Charles Brown ("Quicksand Blues"), Charlie Musselwhite ("Blues Why Do You Worry Me?"), and Tracy Nelson ("It Hurts Me Too"). ~by Jason Ankeny

Blues Live From Mountain Stage MP3
Blues Live From Mountain Stage FLAC

Monday, January 24, 2022

Snooky Pryor - Too Cool To Move

Album: Too Cool To Move
Size: 113,5 MB
Time: 49:09
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1992
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Art: Full

1. Keyhole In Your Door (3:40)
2. Can I Be Your Friend (3:38)
3. Bottle It Up And Go (3:02)
4. Hold Me In Your Arms (3:35)
5. Don't You Want To Know (2:50)
6. Cheatin' And Lyin' (3:51)
7. Walkin' With Snooky (3:14)
8. Fire, Fire (3:51)
9. Coal Black Mare (3:27)
10. Lovin' You Is Killin' Me (4:51)
11. Boogie Twist (4:54)
12. My Baby Been Gone (3:09)
13. Please Be Careful (5:01)

Another excellent recent set from the veteran harpist, cut down in Austin with a mixture of Texans and Chicagoans in support: pianist Pinetop Perkins, guitarists Duke Robiilard and Luther Tucker, and drummer Willie "Big Eyes" Smith. Pryor's made quite a substantial to his long-dormant discography in the last few years. /Bill Dahl, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Too Cool To Move mc
Too Cool To Move 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, June 14, 2019

Snooky Pryor - Birth Of The Blues Legend

Year: 2012
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:58
Size: 122,9 MB
Styles: Blues, harmonica blues
Scans: Front

1. Boogie Twist (2:46)
2. Raisin' Sand (2:45)
3. Uncle Sam, Don't Take My Man (3:15)
4. Hold Me In Your Arms (3:00)
5. Real Fine Boogie (2:35)
6. Cryin' Shame (2:55)
7. Big Guns (2:59)
8. Fine Boogie (3:08)
9. Eighty Nine Ten (2:39)
10. Why Should I Worry? (2:52)
11. Stop The Train, Conductor (2:38)
12. Boogy Fool (2:28)
13. Harp Instrumental (2:38)
14. Rough Treatment (2:45)
15. Walking Boogie (2:34)
16. I'm Getting Tired (2:36)
17. Going Back On the Road (2:48)
18. Can't We Get This Straight? (2:38)
19. My Head Is Turning Grey (2:52)

Only recently has Snooky Pryor finally begun to receive full credit for the mammoth role he played in shaping the amplified Chicago blues harp sound during the postwar era. He's long claimed he was the first harpist to run his sound through a public address system around the Windy City - and since nobody's around to refute the claim at this point, we'll have to accept it! James Edward Pryor was playing harmonica at the age of eight in Mississippi. The two Sonny Boys were influential to Pryor's emerging style, as he played around the Delta.

He hit Chicago for the first time in 1940, later serving in the Army at nearby Fort Sheridan. Playing his harp through powerful Army PA systems gave Pryor the idea to acquire his own portable rig once he left the service. Armed with a primitive amp, he dazzled the folks on Maxwell Street in late 1945 with his massively amplified harp. Pryor made some groundbreaking 78s during the immediate postwar Chicago blues era. Teaming with guitarist Moody Jones, he waxed "Telephone Blues" and "Boogie" for Planet Records in 1948, encoring the next year with "Boogy Fool"/"Raisin' Sand" for JOB with Jones on bass and guitarist Baby Face Leroy Foster in support.

Pryor made more classic sides for JOB (1952-1953), Parrot (1953), and Vee-Jay ("Someone to Love Me"/"Judgment Day") in 1956, but commercial success never materialized. He wound down his blues-playing in the early '60s, finally chucking it all and moving to downstate Ullin, IL, in 1967. For a long while, Pryor's whereabouts were unknown. But the 1987 Blind Pig album Snooky, produced by guitarist Steve Freund, announced to the world that the veteran harpist was alive and well, his chops still honed. A pair of solid discs for Antone's, Too Cool to Move and In This Mess Up to My Chest, followed. Pryor stayed busy until his death in 2006. /Biography by Bill Dahl, AllMusic

Birth Of The Blues Legend mc
Birth Of The Blues Legend zippy

Thursday, February 21, 2019

Various - American Blues Legends '73

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 57:14
Size: 132.9 MB
Released: 2001
Styles: Country blues, Delta blues, Acoustic blues
Art: Front

1. Boogie Woogie Red - Viper Song (2:00)
2. Boogie Woogie Red - After Hours (4:06)
3. Boogie Woogie Red - Red's Boogie (4:54)
4. Snooky Pryor - Dangerous Woman (3:56)
5. Snooky Pryor - Sloppy Drunk (3:21)
6. Snooky Pryor - Bottle Up & Go (4:07)
7. Homesick James Williamson - Shake Your Moneymaker (4:29)
8. Homesick James Williamson - Tin Pan Alley (2:37)
9. Homesick James Williamson - Dust My Broom (3:39)
10. Washboard Willie - I Feel So Fine (2:22)
11. Washboard Willie - Kansas City (3:19)
12. Red - Sassy (2:09)
13. Whispering Smith - Take Me Back Baby (2:54)
14. Whispering Smith - Texas Flood (3:50)
15. Lightnin' Slim - Love Bug (3:47)
16. Lightnin' Slim - Walking In The Park (5:35)

Included pdf thanks to Xyros.

American Blues Legends '73

Tuesday, October 2, 2018

Snooky Pryor - All My Money Gone

Size: 137,1 MB
Time: 58:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. Ain't That Just Like A Woman (4:04)
02. All My Money Gone (3:58)
03. Homesick And Snooky's Boogie (3:41)
04. I'm Gonna Call Up My Baby (4:17)
05. Boogie Twist (4:57)
06. Blue Bird Blues (5:15)
07. Break It Up, Baby (3:40)
08. After You There Won't Be Nobody Else (4:28)
09. Look What You Doin' To Me (3:11)
10. Big Road Blues (4:19)
11. Snooky's Off The Wall Blues (6:23)
12. Keep Your Arms Around Me (3:07)
13. Trouble In Mind (3:46)
14. Work With Me Annie (3:10)

Snooky Pryor created the amplified down home sound of post-war Chicago Blues. His singin´ and harp playing was influenced by John Lee Williamson (Sonny Boy I.) He recorded in the 50´s on the Labels J.O.B., Parrot & Vee Jay Records. In the 70´s and 80´s he toured again frequently and also recorded great CD´s (mostly on Electo-Fi Records and Blind Pig). In the 70´s he recorded the Wolf-CD “Sad and Lonesome” with Homesick James and also toured Austria. This CD is a mix of unreleased live and studio recordings!!!
Special guest is Homesick James, who is also singing two songs!! This CD is Blues history!

All My Money Gone MP3
All My Money Gone FLAC

Monday, March 12, 2018

Homesick James - The Sensational Recordings: Shake Your Money Maker

Size: 126,4 MB
Time: 53:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2018
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Front & Back

01. Louise, Louise Blues (2:51)
02. My Baby's Gone (3:26)
03. Tin Pan Alley (2:47)
04. Baby Please Set A Date (2:45)
05. Three Ball Blues (3:42)
06. Got To Move (3:30)
07. That's All Right (3:04)
08. Sweet Home Chicago (4:14)
09. Someday Baby Blues (2:45)
10. Dust My Broom (2:52)
11. Moonshine Woman Blues (3:03)
12. Bobby`s Rock (3:13)
13. My Baby's Gone (Take 2) (3:35)
14. Cross Road Blues (3:13)
15. Dust My Broom (Take 2) (4:21)
16. Shake Your Money Maker (2:08)
17. Come On In My Kitchen (2:20)

On this CD are three different recording sessions… the first part is a live recording of Homesick alone, the second part is a live recording from 1979 with Snooky Pryor and the last part is a recording at Homesick´s home at N. Bosworth street in Chicago from 1975. All These recordings have never been on LP or CD before and there are songs which Homesick has never recorded again in the last 20 years of his life.

The Sensational Recordings

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

VA - Hard Core Harp: 20 Years Of Blues Harmonica Masters On Electro-Fi Records

Size: 179,4 MB
Time: 76:33
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Harmonica Blues
Art: Front

01. Paul Oscher - Alone With The Blues (5:24)
02. Billy Boy Arnold - Mellow Chick Swing (2:21)
03. James Harman - Bonetime (3:10)
04. Mark Hummel - It's Too Late Brother (4:11)
05. George Harmonica Smith - Crazy 'bout You Baby (4:10)
06. Harmonica Shah - She Used To Be Beautiful (4:39)
07. Snooky Pryor - Rock-A-While (4:58)
08. Sam Myers - Ninety Nine (3:36)
09. Willie 'Big Eyes' Smith - Don't Think I'm Crazy (4:20)
10. Billy Boy Arnold - I Wish You Would (3:49)
11. Al Lerman - Liquified Boogie (2:29)
12. Little Mack Simmons - Leaving In The Morning (3:49)
13. Sam Myers - Coming From The Old School (4:25)
14. Bill Boy Arnold - Sweet Honey Bee (4:37)
15. Harrison Kennedy - Afraid To Fail (3:25)
16. Rip Lee Pryor - Pitch A Boogie Woogie (3:12)
17. Snooky Pryor - Headed South (7:21)
18. George Harmonica Smith - Juke (2:49)
19. Mark Hummel - Harpoventilating (3:39)

20 Years of Blues Harmonica Masters on Electro-Fi Records. Electro-Fi Records celebrates it's 20th Anniversary with the release of HARD CORE HARP featuring the very best of today's Blues Harmonica Artists: MARK HUMMEL, JAMES HARMAN, HARMONICA SHAH, PAUL OSCHER, BILLY BOY ARNOLD and more, along with Blues Harp Masters of the 20th Century: SNOOKY PRYOR, GEORGE HARMONICA SMITH, SAM MYERS, LITTLE MACK SIMMONS, WILLIE BIG EYES SMITH and more. The 19 track collection from CD's released between 1997 and 2016 features 4 members of the Muddy Waters Blues Band. Special Guests include Grammy winner PINETOP PERKINS, BMA winner BOB STROGER, and Guitar Legends: MEL BROWN, BILLY FLYNN, JACK DE KEYZER and RUSTY ZINN.

This is Blues Harmonica at it's finest.

Hard Core Harp

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Snooky Pryor - Snooky

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:49
Size: 93.5 MB
Styles: Chicago blues
Year: 1987
Art: Front

[2:33] 1. Broke And Hungry
[3:55] 2. Nine Below Zero
[4:16] 3. Judgment Day
[3:51] 4. Why You Want To Do Me Like That
[3:19] 5. It Hurts Me Too
[2:30] 6. Look What You Do To Me
[3:48] 7. Cheatin' And Lyin'
[3:34] 8. Crazy 'bout My Baby
[2:52] 9. Key To The Highway
[3:44] 10. That's The Way To Do It
[3:35] 11. Money And Women
[2:48] 12. Don't Worry 'bout Me

Bass – Bob Stroger; Drums – Willie Smith; Guitar – Steve Freund; Vocals, Harmonica – Snooky Pryor.

An outstanding comeback effort by Chicago harp pioneer Snooky Pryor, whose timeless sound meshed well with a Windy City trio led by producer/guitarist Steve Freund for this set. Mostly Pryor's own stuff -- "Why You Want to Do Me like That," "That's the Way To Do It," "Cheatin' and Lyin'" -- with his fat-toned harp weathering the decades quite nicely. ~Bill Dahl

Snooky

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Homesick James, Snooky Pryor - Sad And Lonesome

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:08
Size: 101.0 MB
Styles: Harmonica blues, Chicago blues
Year: 1989/2011
Art: Front

[2:48] 1. Sad & Lonesome
[2:26] 2. Homesick's Cross Roads
[2:40] 3. It Seem Like A Dream
[3:20] 4. It's All Over Now
[3:39] 5. Shake Your Money Maker
[3:03] 6. Some Day Baby Blues
[3:01] 7. Rock Me
[2:50] 8. No More Lovin'
[4:08] 9. Push Me Well
[3:55] 10. I Believe I Get Married
[1:52] 11. Harp Boogie
[3:24] 12. Last Fair Deal
[4:08] 13. Telephone Blues
[2:46] 14. Goin' To The Pawn Shop

Blues Harp – Snooky Pryor (tracks: 1, 2, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14); Guitar – Homesick James; Vocals – Homesick James (tracks: 1, 2, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14); Vocals, Guitar – Snooky Pryor (tracks: 3, 4, 7, 9, 11, 13). Recorded Oct. 1979 At Heinz Studios, Vienna.

Random fact: Though Little Walter was the one to get most of the recognition & fame for playing riffs like a horn and amplifying his harmonica, not only was Snooky one of the first to amplify the harmonica (some would say THE first), but Snooky’s recording of “Boogie” (1948) preceded Walter’s “Juke” (1952) AND had some of the same licks in it, including the opening lick “Juke” is known for.

Homesick James had a nickname of "Look Quick" due to his propensity for moving or disappearing off a scene seemingly on the spur of the moment. During the time Earwig CEO Michael Frank knew Homesick James, from 1972 through 2006, Homesick lived in Chicago, Nashville, Atlanta, Fresno and finally Springfield, Missouri, where he died at age 96. One afternoon sitting at the bar at Rosa's Lounge in Chicago, Homesick casually said to Michael, something to the effect that he should record Homesick, and Frank thought for a moment, and said basically, 'Yeah I should, whereupon the deal was struck. Michael ended up making a solo record with Homesick, because during the first day of recording what was supposed to be an album of half band tracks and half solo tracks, Homesick started an argument with the all-star band of drummer Robert Covington, bassist Bob Stroger, and harmonica player Lester Davenport. The only one he did not argue with was pianist Sunnyland Slim. The session disintegrated and the next day Homesick played the solo tracks beautifully.

Sad And Lonesome

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

Sunday, October 30, 2016

VA - Notodden - Mississippi

Size: 135,9 MB
Time: 57:43
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Electric Blues
Art: Front

01. Lazy Lester - Bloodstains On The Wall (3:57)
02. David 'Honeyboy' Edwards - Catfish Blues (3:33)
03. Pinetop Perkins - Down In Mississippi (2:59)
04. Amund Maarud - Let's Get High (2:58)
05. Rita Engedalen - Turtle Blues (4:35)
06. Lazy Lester - I'm So Tired (3:33)
07. Snooky Pryor - How'd You Learn To Shake It Like That (4:54)
08. Pinetop Perkins - How Long (4:20)
09. Pinetop Perkins & Spoonful of Blues - Three Fork Store (6:53)
10. Lazy Lester - Kokomo Blues (4:24)
11. David 'Honeyboy' Edwards - I'm The Man And I Always Wear The Pants (3:42)
12. Snooky Pryor - Juke Joint Shuffle (1:57)
13. Jostein Forsberg - A Woman (4:16)
14. Rita Engedalen & Mel Brown - Worries & Trouble (2:20)
15. David 'Honeyboy' Edwards - Blues And Trouble (3:16)

The Notodden Blues Festival, founded in 1988, has hosted dozens of artists from Mississippi, including B. B. King, Otis Rush, Bo Diddley, Pinetop Perkins, James Cotton, Bobby Rush, Charlie Musselwhite, and Super Chikan.

Notodden - Mississippi

Friday, October 28, 2016

Various Artists - Don't Worry 'Bout the Bear

This compilation contains 33 tracks of rare 1970s blues, courtesy of the long-lost Big Bear label! Includes sides by Homesick James, Doctor Ross. Eddie "Playboy" Taylor, Lightnin' Slim, Snooky Pryor, Billy Boy Arnold, Mickey Baker, Billy Emerson and others.

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues
Time: 60:02
Size: 138,4 MB
Covers: Front, CD, Tray, Inside

Album: Don't Worry 'Bout the Bear Disc 1
(3:20) 1. Snooky Pryor - Shake Your Boogie
(3:55) 2. Homesick James & Snooky PryorAfter You There Won't Be Nobody Else
(3:48) 3. Homesick James - Crossroads
(4:19) 4. Homesick James - Highway 51
(2:18) 5. Big John Wrencher - Honeydripper
(4:00) 6. Eddie Taylor - Seems Like a Million Years
(3:29) 7. Eddie Taylor - Ready for Eddie
(5:29) 8. Doctor Ross - Don't Worry 'Bout the Bear
(4:14) 9. Doctor Ross - I'm a Mannish Boy
(4:12) 10. Doctor Ross - Got Something to Tell You
(2:01) 11. Erwin Helfer - Sneaky Pete
(2:56) 12. Erwin Helfer & Bob Hall - Homage to AA and PJ
(3:47) 13. Whispering Smith - Texas Flood
(2:27) 14. Lightnin' Slim - Walkin' in the Park
(2:25) 15. G.P. Jackson - 12th Street Boogie
(7:13) 16. Johnny Mars & Boogie Woogie Red & Baby Boy Warren - Meet Me in the Alley

Album: Don't Worry 'Bout the Bear Disc 2
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues
Time: 61:58
Size: 142,8 MB
Covers: Full

(4:33) 1. Eddie 'Guitar' Burns - She's in L.A.
(3:29) 2. Eddie 'Guitar' Burns - Do It If You Wanna
(1:58) 3. Boogie Woogie Red - Viper Song
(3:42) 4. Billy Boy Arnold - I Wish You Would
(6:03) 5. Johnny Mars - It's My Own Fault
(2:29) 6. Johnny Mars - I've Been Down So Long
(3:54) 7. Willie Mabon - Klickety Klock
(3:48) 8. Mickey Baker - Blues Fell This Morning
(3:29) 9. Mickey Baker - I'll Always Be in Love With You
(4:32) 10. Tommy Tucker - Alimony
(3:51) 11. Billy 'The Kid' Emerson - Buzzard Luck
(5:24) 12. Charles Brown - Blues for My Baby
(3:02) 13. Gene Connors - So Tired
(3:51) 14. Gene Connors - Let the Good Times Roll
(4:22) 15. Gene Connors - Honky Tonk
(3:23) 16. Cousin Joe - When a Woman Loves a Man

Don't Worry 'Bout the Bear Disc 1
Don't Worry 'Bout the Bear Disc 2
Don't Worry 'Bout the Bear Disc artwork

Monday, September 19, 2016

Various - Notodden-Mississippi

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:49
Size: 132.4 MB
Styles: Assorted blues styles
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[3:58] 1. Lazy Lester - Bloodstains On The Wall
[3:33] 2. David Honeyboy Edwards - Catfish Blues
[2:59] 3. Pinetop Perkins - Down In Mississippi
[2:59] 4. Amund Maarud - Let`s Get High
[4:38] 5. Rita Engedalen - Turtle Blues
[3:33] 6. Lazy Lester - I´m So Tired
[4:54] 7. Snooky Pryor - How`d You Learn To Shake It Like That
[4:20] 8. Pinetop Perkins - How Long
[6:53] 9. Pinetop Perkins - Three Fork Store
[4:24] 10. Lazy Lester - Kokomo Blues
[3:42] 11. David Honeyboy Edwards - I´m The Man And I Always Wear The Pants
[1:57] 12. Snooky Pryor - Juke Joint Shuffle
[4:16] 13. Jostein Forsberg - A Woman
[2:20] 14. Rita Engedalen - Worries & Trouble
[3:16] 15. David Honeyboy Edwards - Blues And Trouble

The Notodden Blues Festival, founded in 1988, has hosted dozens of artists from Mississippi, including B. B. King, Otis Rush, Bo Diddley, Pinetop Perkins, James Cotton, Bobby Rush, Charlie Musselwhite, and Super Chikan. In 1996 Notodden and Clarksdale, Mississippi, became sister cities, and cultural exchanges have included performances by Norwegian artists at Clarksdale’s annual Sunflower River Blues and Gospel Festival.

Norway is both geographically and culturally distant from Mississippi, but as the popular Notodden Blues Festival demonstrates, there seem to be no boundaries for the appreciation of the blues. African American entertainers were performing in Norway by the end of the nineteenth century, and blues was featured on traveling vaudeville shows and musical revues such as “Plantation Days” and “Chocolate Kiddies” that toured Scandinavia in the 1920s. The Mississippi-based Utica Jubilee Singers appeared in Norway in 1930, and in 1937 the swing band of Mississippi native Jimmie Lunceford, which included blues in its repertoire, began its first European tour with two performances in Oslo. The first American solo blues artist to appear in Norway was Josh White, who visited Oslo in 1950, and during the latter 1950s blues vocalists Joe Williams, Jimmy Rushing and Big Joe Turner (with pianist Pete Johnson) all appeared on jazz shows.

Notodden-Mississippi mc
Notodden-Mississippi zippy

Thursday, June 23, 2016

Snooky Pryor - Mojo Ramble

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 2003
Styles: Blues
Time: 64:30
Size: 148,0 MB
Art: Full

(7:42) 1. Dirty Rat
(6:47) 2. Shake My Hand
(9:12) 3. Come on Down to My House
(7:34) 4. It Hurts Me Too
(7:59) 5. I Learnt My Lesson Well
(9:16) 6. Let Your Hair Down, Woman
(7:45) 7. Headed South
(8:11) 8. Where Did You Learn to Shake It Like That?

Live in concert with Mel Brown and the Homewreckers in the L'l Big Horn Saloon in Cambridge, Ontario, 2001. Snooky and the band gives his audience a taste of the fire that has developed his career along with the Chicago Blues sound. The harmonica master and his band are some 500 miles away from Chicago for this night out. They've brought the right attitude from home, though, as Pryor sings about the kinds of blues that take hold from time to time. Guitarist Mel Brown and Pryor's trio, the Homewreckers, surround his sparkling vocals and exotic harp with a welcome flame.

Mojo Ramble
Mojo Ramble artwork

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Snooky Pryor & Mel Brown - Double Shot!

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 2000
Styles: Blues
Time: 57:27
Size: 132,1 MB
Art: Full

(4:52) 1. Dirty Rat
(4:56) 2. Ruby Mae
(4:31) 3. Early in the Morning
(7:34) 4. Big Leg Woman
(1:41) 5. Snooky and Mel Boogie
(4:06) 6. Rock This House
(5:23) 7. Let Your Hair Down, Woman
(3:15) 8. So Fine
(6:51) 9. That's All Right
(5:09) 10. Do the Boogaloo
(5:29) 11. Ease My Mind
(3:34) 12. Work Til My Days Are Gone

This album showcases the first collaboration on record as a duo by blues harp master Snooky Pryor & guitar ace Mel Brown; they lay down 12 scorchin' tracks, mostly originals, that show these two legends at their very best. Pryor and Brown can rightfully be presented as the strongest combination of the real blues today. Mel Brown recorded his debut ('Neck Bones And Caviar') on Electro-Fi in 1999. At the end of August Mel Brown guested on Pryor's cd 'Can't Stop Blowin'. It had been years since they'd bent a note together, but the two immediately picked up the deep-in-the-pocket groove they'd perfected onstage at Antone's club in Austin during the 1980s. Shortly after the release of his album Snooky called to propose that he and Mel should team up to record as a duo. Snooky and Mel arrived at the studio well prepared and proceeded to tear into the 13 tracks you find here. From Snooky's incendiary harp to Mel's scorching guitar, these two can burn down the house in less time than it takes most players to strike a match. When the smoke had cleared, each generously deflected praise to the other. "Nobody does it like Mel Brown. He means the world to me," proclaimed Snooky. With deep affection and respect for Snooky, Mel commented, "That's Snooky doing his Snooky thing; It will get you moving!"

Double Shot!