Showing posts with label Z.Z. Hill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Z.Z. Hill. Show all posts

Sunday, September 1, 2024

Z.Z. Hill - The Bluest Blues

Size: 78.6 MB
Time: 33:23
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1971/2023
Styles: Electric Blues, Blues Soul
Art: Front

01. It Ain't No Use (3:13)
02. Ha Ha (Laughing Song) (2:27)
03. Second Chance (3:40)
04. Our Love Is Getting Better (2:49)
05. Faithful And True (4:31)
06. Choking Kind (3:04)
07. Hold Back (One Man At A Time) (3:41)
08. A Man Needs A Woman (A Woman Needs A Man) (3:16)
09. Early In The Morning (4:16)
10. I Think I'd Do It (2:22)

Texas-born singer Z.Z. Hill managed to resuscitate both his own semi-flagging career and the entire genre at large when he signed on at Jackson, Mississippi-based Malaco Records in 1980 and began growling his way through some of the most uncompromising blues to be unleashed on Black radio stations in many a moon. His impressive 1982 Malaco album Down Home Blues remained on Billboard's soul album charts for nearly two years, an extraordinary run for such a blatantly bluesy LP. His songs "Down Home Blues" and "Somebody Else Is Steppin' In" have graduated into the ranks of legitimate blues standards.

Arzell Hill started out singing gospel with a quintet called the Spiritual Five, but the output of B.B. King, Bobby Bland, and especially Sam Cooke made a more indelible mark on his approach. He began gigging around Dallas, fashioning his distinctive initials after those of B.B. King. When his older brother Matt Hill (a budding record producer with his own label, M.H.) invited Z.Z. to go west to Southern California, the young singer did.

His debut single on M.H., the gutsy shuffle "You Were Wrong" (recorded in an L.A. garage studio), showed up on the pop chart for a week in 1964. With such a relatively successful showing his first time out, Hill's fine subsequent singles for the Bihari Brothers' Kent logo should have been even bigger. However, "I Need Someone (To Love Me)," "Happiness Is All I Need," and a raft of other deserving Kent 45s (many produced and arranged by Maxwell Davis) went nowhere commercially for the singer. Excellent singles for Atlantic, Mankind, and Hill (another imprint operated by brother Matt, who served as Z.Z.'s producer for much of his career) preceded a 1972 hookup with United Artists that resulted in three albums and six R&B chart singles over the next couple of years.

From there, Z.Z. moved on to Columbia, where his 1977 single "Love Is So Good When You're Stealing It" became his biggest-selling hit of all. But Hill's vocal grit was never more effective than on his blues-soaked Malaco output. From 1980 until 1984, when he died suddenly of a heart attack, Z.Z. bravely led a personal back-to-the-blues campaign that doubtless helped to fuel the subsequent contemporary blues boom. It's a shame he couldn't stick around to see it blossom.

The Bluest Blues MP3
The Bluest Blues FLAC

Saturday, May 19, 2018

Z.Z. Hill - Blues Business

Size: 81,2 MB
Time: 35:06
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1997
Styles: Modern Electric Blues, Blues Soul
Art: Full

01. Right Arm For Your Love (3:32)
02. Please Don't Make Me (Do Something Bad To You) (3:52)
03. Friday Is My Day (4:03)
04. Get You Some Business (3:13)
05. I'm A Blues Man (3:33)
06. Outside Thang (3:21)
07. Woman Don't Go Astray (2:24)
08. You're Ruining My Bad Reputation (2:47)
09. Everybody Knows About My Good Thing (4:58)
10. She Got The Goods On Me (3:18)

Texas-born singer Z.Z. Hill managed to resuscitate both his own semi-flagging career and the entire genre at large when he signed on at Jackson, MS-based Malaco Records in 1980 and began growling his way through some of the most uncompromising blues to be unleashed on black radio stations in many a moon. His impressive 1982 Malaco album Down Home Blues remained on Billboard's soul album charts for nearly two years, an extraordinary run for such a blatantly bluesy LP. His songs "Down Home Blues" and "Somebody Else Is Steppin' In" have graduated into the ranks of legitimate blues standards (and few of those have come along over the last couple of decades). Arzell Hill started out singing gospel with a quintet called the Spiritual Five, but the output of B.B. King, Bobby Bland, and especially Sam Cooke made a more indelible mark on his approach. He began gigging around Dallas, fashioning his distinctive initials after those of B.B. King. When his older brother Matt Hill (a budding record producer with his own label, M.H.) invited Z.Z. to go west to Southern California, the young singer did.
His debut single on M.H., the gutsy shuffle "You Were Wrong" (recorded in an L.A. garage studio), showed up on the pop chart for a week in 1964. With such a relatively successful showing his first time out, Hill's fine subsequent singles for the Bihari Brothers' Kent logo should have been even bigger. But "I Need Someone (To Love Me)," "Happiness Is All I Need," and a raft of other deserving Kent 45s (many produced and arranged by Maxwell Davis) went nowhere commercially for the singer. Excellent singles for Atlantic, Mankind, and Hill (another imprint operated by brother Matt, who served as Z.Z.'s producer for much of his career) preceded a 1972 hookup with United Artists that resulted in three albums and six R&B chart singles over the next couple of years. From there, Z.Z. moved on to Columbia, where his 1977 single "Love Is So Good When You're Stealing It" became his biggest-selling hit of all. But Hill's vocal grit was never more effective than on his blues-soaked Malaco output. From 1980 until 1984, when he died suddenly of a heart attack, Z.Z. bravely led a personal back-to-the-blues campaign that doubtless helped to fuel the subsequent contemporary blues boom. It's a shame he couldn't stick around to see it blossom. ~Bio by Bill Dahl

Blues Business MP3
Blues Business FLAC

Friday, February 9, 2018

Various - Mississippi's Music

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:22
Size: 154.2 MB
Styles: Delta blues, Gospel blues, Electric blues
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[5:16] 1. Z.Z. Hill - Down Home Blues
[3:00] 2. King Floyd - Groove Me
[5:14] 3. The Sensational Nightingales - Saints Hold On
[4:07] 4. Bobby Blue Bland - Members Only
[3:40] 5. Dorothy Moore - Misty Blue
[4:32] 6. Grady Champion - White Boy With The Blues
[3:41] 7. Keri Leigh - Here's Your Mop Mr. Johnson
[4:10] 8. The Canton Spirituals - All Of My Burdens
[4:14] 9. Little Milton - The Blues Is Alright
[4:26] 10. Bobby Rush - Scootchin
[5:28] 11. Mississippi Mass Choir - Your Grace And Mercy
[3:37] 12. Mckinley Mitchell - The End Of The Rainbow
[3:39] 13. The Jackson Southernaires - I Need You To Hold My Hand
[4:38] 14. Johnnie Taylor - I Found A Love
[4:38] 15. Denise Lasalle - Your Husband Is Cheating On Us
[2:56] 16. The Beat Daddys - Mississippi

The blues and Mississippi are synonymous to music lovers. The repertoire of any blues or rock band is full of songs, guitar licks, and vocal inflections borrowed from Mississippi bluesmen – from Robert Johnson, Charley Patton, Tommy Johnson, and Son House to Skip James, Mississippi John Hurt, Mississippi Fred McDowell, Sonny Boy Williamson, Big Joe Williams, Bukka White, and Furry Lewis – just to mention some.

As far as historians can tell, the blues were born in the Mississippi Delta, an elaboration on work chants, “sorrow” slave songs, and the lyrical and haunting “field hollers.” As early as the American Civil War, white soldiers noted a different music created by black soldiers – songs about marching and other toils of war in which they “extemporized a half-dissonant middle part.” These songs were direct precursors to the blues, if not the real thing already.

Mississippi's Music mc
Mississippi's Music zippy

Thursday, February 8, 2018

Z.Z. Hill - 2 albums: Thrill On The Z.Z. Hill (Remastered) / The Brand New Z.Z. Hill (Remastered)

Album: Thrill On The Z.Z. Hill (Remastered)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:38
Size: 65.6 MB
Styles: Soul blues
Year: 1984/2013
Art: Front

[4:25] 1. I Think I'd Do It
[3:56] 2. Early In The Morning
[3:19] 3. Hold Back (One Man At A Time)
[2:52] 4. Put A Little Love In Your Heart
[5:31] 5. Faithful And True
[3:40] 6. Just As I Am
[2:32] 7. Touch 'em With Love
[2:20] 8. The Z.Z. Thrill

An American blues singer who helped define the soul blues tradition, Z.Z. Hill was perhaps best known for his 1970’s and 1980’s recordings for the Malaco label and for the track “Down Home Blues,” cited as the best known blues song of the 1980’s. In 1971 Hill hooked up with iconic producer Jerry Williams Jr., better known as Swamp Dogg to record an album in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. Years later, 1983 to be exact, they hooked up again using some of Z.Z.’s vocals from the first session and recorded all new music tracks to produce “Thrill On The (Z.Z.) Hill.” Long out of print, the album finally becomes available in the digital realm, newly remastered.

Thrill On The Z.Z. Hill (Remastered) mc
Thrill On The Z.Z. Hill (Remastered) zippy

Album: The Brand New Z.Z. Hill (Remastered)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:11
Size: 78.3 MB
Styles: Soul blues
Year: 1971/2013
Art: Front

[4:55] 1. It Aint' No Use
[4:32] 2. Ha Ha (The Laughing Song)
[4:57] 3. Second Chance
[4:02] 4. Our Love Is Getting Better
[3:15] 5. Faithful And True
[3:10] 6. The Chokin' Kind
[3:07] 7. Hold Back (One Man At A Time)
[3:18] 8. A Man Needs A Woman (A Woman Needs A Man)
[2:49] 9. Early In The Morning

Sounding like the middle ground between Bobby "Blue" Bland and Otis Redding, Z.Z. Hill had only just begun to make an impression on the charts after a few singles for Kent and United Artists when his contract was sold and he found himself recording for Jerry "Swamp Dogg" Williams, a prospect he didn't especially appreciate. Under duress, in a mere three days, Hill cut the vocal tracks for an LP and a handful of singles, and that album, The Brand New Z.Z. Hill, proved to be one of the most ambitious projects of his career. A song cycle about Hill's romantic dilemmas with two different women, Brand New featured dialogue interludes along with ten songs, several of which were written by Williams with Gary Bonds (who was leaving the "U.S." out of his name at the time). Concept albums may have been all the rage in 1970, but as a narrative piece, Brand New leaves a certain amount to be desired, as the story doesn't flow very well and the dialogue sections distract more than they bring the listener in. But the material is strong -- especially "Faithful and True," "Chokin' Kind," and "Laughing Song (Ha Ha)" -- and Williams brought together a fine crew of Muscle Shoals session players who give these sessions an updated Stax Records feel that suits Hill's gritty but heartfelt vocal style beautifully. If Williams' more ambitious production notions don't quite click on The Brand New Z.Z. Hill, when it gets down to serving up some rough-and-ready Southern soul, this album delivers the goods, and it's a better fit (and more interesting) than the sound of Hill's best known work for Malaco in the '80s. Alive Naturalsound's 2013 reissue includes eight bonus tracks, taken from the singles Hill cut at the tail-end of the Brand New sessions, and if "Put a Little Love in Your Heart" was a bad match for the blues/soul icon, "Just as I Am" and "I Think I'd Do It" are just what the doctor ordered. ~Mark Deming

The Brand New Z.Z. Hill (Remastered) mc
The Brand New Z.Z. Hill (Remastered) zippy

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Z.Z. Hill - 2 albums: I'm A Blues Man / Bluesmaster

Album: I'm A Blues Man
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:36
Size: 79.2 MB
Styles: Blues/R&B/Soul
Year: 1983/1990
Art: Front

[3:31] 1. I'm A Blues Man
[2:49] 2. Three Into Two Won't Go
[3:22] 3. Cheatin' Love
[2:54] 4. Shade Tree Mechanic
[3:25] 5. It's Been So Long
[4:09] 6. Get A Little, Give A Little
[4:14] 7. Please Don't Let Our Good Thing End
[4:05] 8. Steal Away
[2:43] 9. Blind Side
[3:20] 10. I Ain't Buying What You're Selling

Fueled by more impressive material from the pens of Jackson, Johnson, and LaSalle, Hill was in an amazing groove during the years prior to his untimely demise, and the crack Malaco house band was certainly up to the task. Just like the title track ably demonstrated, Z.Z. Hill had indeed rechristened himself as a blues man of the first order. ~Bill Dahl

I'm A Blues Man

Album: Bluesmaster
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:18
Size: 78.6 MB
Styles: Blues/R&B/Soul
Year: 1984/2005
Art: Front

[2:44] 1. You're Ruining My Bad Reputation
[2:55] 2. Bottom Line Woman
[3:16] 3. She Got The Goods On Me
[3:24] 4. Breakdown
[3:03] 5. Personally
[2:44] 6. Champange Lady
[3:07] 7. Be Strong Enough To Hold On
[4:05] 8. Stop You From Givin' Me The Blues
[3:12] 9. Friday Is My Day
[3:31] 10. I'll Be Your Witness
[2:13] 11. Why Don't You Spend The Night

Issued the year he died, Bluesmaster boasted more competent soul-blues hybrids by the man who reenergized the blues idiom with his trademark growl. LaSalle's "You're Ruining My Bad Reputation," "Friday Is My Day" (written by legendary Malaco promo man Dave Clark), and a nice reading of Paul Kelly's slinky "Personally" rate with the standouts. ~Bill Dahl

Bluesmaster