Showing posts with label Sammy Lawhorn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sammy Lawhorn. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Sammy Lawhorn - After Hours

Size: 225 MB
Time: 37:25
File: Flac
Released: 1980
Styles: Blues
Art: Front, back

1. After Hours (5:05)
2. Hot Cha (4:39)
3. Mean Old World (5:48)
4. Mercy, Mercy, Mercy (4:10)
5. Honky Tonk (4:24)
6. How Much More Long (3:30)
7. I Wonder Why (5:23)
8. Work Out Fine (4:26)

Thanks to Didier Tricard, Sammy Lawhorn can record his first and only album during a tour in France. Accompanied by Johnny Dollar (guitar), Nick Charles (bass) and Roosevelt Shaw (drums), he proposes an almost entirely instrumental album (only two titles sung) in which shines his agile and creative guitar. According to the Blues Discography, he would have participated in another session in Chicago in 1981. It should have given rise to a record issued by Gerim but it never saw the light of the day.

After Hours FLAC (vinyl)

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Muddy Waters - The London Muddy Waters Sessions

Year: 1972/1989
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:22
Size: 85,3 MB
Styles: Electric blues, Chicago blues
Scans: Full

1. Blind Man Blues (3:34)
2. Key To The Highway (2:29)
3. Young Fashioned Ways (4:28)
4. I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town (3:59)
5. Who's Gonna Be Your Sweet Man When I'm Gone (5:06)
6. Walkin' Blues (3:06)
7. I'm Ready (4:13)
8. Sad Sad Day (5:22)
9. I Don't Know Why (4:00)

The London Muddy Waters Sessions is a studio album by Muddy Waters, released in 1972 on Chess Records and the concept was to combine American bluesmen with British blues/rock stars. The album was an attempt to capitalize on the British rediscovering of traditional blues music and blues artists. In 1971 Howlin' Wolf had made a similar album, The London Howling' Wolf Sessions.

The album features Waters on acoustic guitar, backed by Sammy Lawhorn and Rory Gallagher on guitar, Carey Bell Harrington on harmonica, Rick Grech on bass, George Fortune and Steve Winwood on piano and organ, Mitch Mitchell from Jimi Hendrix Experience and Herbie Novelle on drums and Rosetha Hightower on vocals, Ernie Royal an Joe Newman on trumpet, Garnett Brown on trombone and Seldon Powell on tenor saxophone. Irish blues-rocker Gallagher, who begun a successful solo career following the demise of his trio, Taste, provided bitten-off riffs and slightly speedy edge on tracks like "Young Fashion Ways". Winwood reprised his keyboard role on the Howlin' Wolf sessions, making appearances on three tracks. Fortune, a swinging-jazz-blues player, played on the remaining tracks.

Mitchell, who worked with Georgie Fame's Blues Flames prior to joining the Jimi Hendrix Experience and drew his greatest inspiration from jazzmen such as Elvin Jones, played on most of the album. On the shuffles like "I'm Ready" and "Blind Man Blues", the drummer is New York session veteran Novelle. Grech was best known as one-fourth of Blind Faith, along with Winwood and two ex-Cream members, Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker (Clapton was played on Howlin' Wolf London session). At this time, Grech was a member of Traffic, another band lead by Winwood. Blues harp man Carey Bell, was essential. Like Muddy, Bell was born in Mississippi and came of age in Chicago and like Lawhorn he was a long-time member of Waters' band having previously worked with John Lee Hooker, Eddie Taylor and Earl Hooker among others. Bell alternated between a standard Marine Band harp and the big double-key chromatic harp which is his specialty. /Wikipedia

The London Muddy Waters Sessions mc
The London Muddy Waters Sessions zippy

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Little Willie Anderson - Swinging The Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 38:50
Size: 88.9 MB
Styles: Chicago blues, Harmonica blues
Year: 1979/2002
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. Come Here Mama
[3:43] 2. Willie's Women Blues
[3:30] 3. Lester Leaps In
[2:59] 4. Everything Gonna Be Alright
[4:07] 5. Late Night
[3:27] 6. 69th Street Bounce
[4:17] 7. Looking For You Baby
[3:33] 8. Been Around
[4:08] 9. Wes Side Baby
[6:27] 10. Big Fat Mama

Blues on Blues has been defunct for quite some time, but Earwig recently restored Anderson's only album to digital print. It's a loose, informal affair, Anderson's raw vocals and swinging harp backed by an all-star crew: guitarists Robert Jr. Lockwood, Sammy Lawhorn, and Jimmie Lee Robinson; bassist Willie Black, and drummer Fred Below. Anderson only revived one Walter standard, having brought a sheaf of his own intermittently derivative material to the session (although he does take a stab at bluesifying Lester Young's jazz classic "Lester Leaps In").

Swinging The Blues (see comments)

Mo' Albums...
Joe Turner - Big Joe Is Here
Dan Pickett - His Chicago Blues