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Just In Time For Christmas  - Get It By The 25th!Johnny Copeland / Just One More TimeO r d e r  I t  H e r e:  http://ti...
23/12/2023

Just In Time For Christmas - Get It By The 25th!
Johnny Copeland / Just One More Time
O r d e r I t H e r e: http://tinyurl.com/mwzxd6zm

Blues Photo AlbumLuther Allison and Johnny Winter at the 1970 Ann Arbor Blues Festival! Photo courtesy of Bernard Alliso...
22/12/2023

Blues Photo Album
Luther Allison and Johnny Winter at the 1970 Ann Arbor Blues Festival!

Photo courtesy of Bernard Allison.

Get It By Christmas The Critically Acclaimed Johnny Winter Retrospective  Texas '63-'68O r d e r  I t  H e r e:  http://...
22/12/2023

Get It By Christmas
The Critically Acclaimed Johnny Winter Retrospective
Texas '63-'68
O r d e r I t H e r e: http://tinyurl.com/4hpettvr

Did You Miss This Crucial Blues Release?MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT  / Mr. Hurt Goes To Washington The 2 CD Set - O r d e r  T...
21/12/2023

Did You Miss This Crucial Blues Release?
MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT / Mr. Hurt Goes To Washington
The 2 CD Set - O r d e r Today - Get It Tomorrow.
http://tinyurl.com/bdzzkbee

In July of 1963, the Library of Congress was able to induce Mississippi John Hurt to come to the Coolidge Auditorium in DC and record dozens of songs as the crowning achievement of his legacy. Mississippi John Hurt sang with a warmth and reflective quality that made him sound like no other blues singer in the world, and these Library of Congress Recordings showcase his gospel-influenced style beautifully

Classic Blues AlbumsBig Mama Thornton / ‘Stronger Than Dirt’The record is one of Big Mama Thornton’s go-to albums, a def...
21/12/2023

Classic Blues Albums
Big Mama Thornton / ‘Stronger Than Dirt’
The record is one of Big Mama Thornton’s go-to albums, a defiant celebration of African American perseverance in an unjust society.

Writer Charles Waring of www.udiscovermusic.com has the story!
In 1969, when the Alabama blues pioneer Big Mama Thornton inked a deal with Chicago’s Mercury Records to record her third album, Stronger Than Dirt, she was 42 years old and trying to revive a career that had seemingly peaked a quarter-of-a-century earlier.

Back in 1953, the singer – a minister’s daughter who was born Willie Mae Thornton and dubbed “Big Mama” because of her powerful voice and imposing physique – had spent seven heady weeks at the summit of the US R&B singles chart with “Hound Dog.” A rowdy rhythm and blues number about a no-good man, “Hound Dog” was specially written for her by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. In the wake of the record’s phenomenal success, she recorded a clutch of similar-sounding follow-up singles, though none of them charted. But the singer’s career seemed set for a revival in 1956 when the rock and roll sensation Elvis Presley famously topped the US Hot 100 with his rock and roll take on “Hound Dog.” Sadly, the profile-raising boost Thornton had hoped for never materialized.

When the 1960s arrived, Thornton was still active, regularly performing live and recording the occasional independently released single. But in 1966, her career received a welcome uptick when she performed in a San Francisco bar where a young, white blues singer named Janis Joplin saw her. Joplin, then fronting the West Coast psych-blues-rock band Big Brother & The Holding Company, was purportedly mesmerized by one song in particular, a Thornton original called “Ball and Chain.” Given permission by Thornton to cover it, Joplin and the group debuted the song at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival and later included it on their second album, the following year’s chart-topping Cheap Thrills.

After many years in the doldrums, Thornton’s half-dormant career began to come alive again. She recorded her own version of “Ball and Chain” as a single for the Arhoolie label in 1968 and although it wasn’t a hit, the interest in her music drummed up by Big Brother And The Holding Company’s version was enough to send Mercury Records her way. She also did some gigs opening for Joplin, who went solo in 1968 and frequently acknowledged Thornton’s influence to her audience and in interviews.

The Chicago label put Thornton in the studio with noted West Coast producer Al Schmitt, whose credits then ranged from Duane Eddy to Jefferson Airplane. What resulted was Stronger Than Dirt, released in 1969, which showcased Thornton’s distinctive voice in a range of settings. Besides updated versions of “Hound Dog” and “Ball and Chain,” Schmitt persuaded Thornton to tackle contemporary material. She roared her way through Wilson Pickett’s “Funky Broadway,” transformed Albert King’s “Born Under A Bad Sign” into a slow after-hours jam, and injected Ray Charles’ 1966 R&B hit “Let’s Go Get Stoned” with a deep blues sensuality.

Schmitt also allowed Thornton to show her gospel music roots via her stirring renditions of Bob Dylan’s “I Shall Be Released” and Muddy Waters’ “Rollin’ Stone,” the latter transformed into a high-octane Baptist rave-up. The album’s piece de resistance, though, was her surprisingly sensitive reading of George Gershwin’s jazz standard “Summertime,” her voice shifting from a fierce low growl to an eerie high falsetto.

In August 1969, Stronger Than Dirt peaked at No. 198 on The Billboard 200, putting Big Mama Thornton’s name into the consciousness of the American mainstream public for the first time in her life. The recognition it brought her resulted in Mercury bankrolling a second album, 1970’s The Way It Is, a recording that captured her in concert. It wasn’t as successful as her Mercury debut, prompting the label and singer to part company soon after. Thornton only made three more albums after that, dying in 1984 from alcoholism at the age of 57.

A spirited woman armed with a big personality and formidable stage presence, Big Mama Thornton, like her idol Bessie Smith before her, brought to the blues – so often a male preserve – a female perspective. Her music touched not only Janis Joplin but also several blues singers who followed the trail she blazed, like Etta James, Sandra Hall, and, more recently, Shemekia Copeland.

Stronger Than Dirt remains one of the blues singer’s go-to albums, its title a testament not only to Thornton’s own resilience in a career with more downs than ups but also a defiant celebration of African American perseverance in an unjust society.

The Classic Blues Album You Need To Own!Lightnin' Hopkins / Mojo Hand (The Complete Sessions)Get It By Christmas - o r d...
20/12/2023

The Classic Blues Album You Need To Own!
Lightnin' Hopkins / Mojo Hand (The Complete Sessions)
Get It By Christmas - o r d e r h e r e: http://tinyurl.com/yckna3r6

Chuck Berry Toronto Rock & Roll Revival, 1969 The Entire Concert on 1 CD and 2 Limited Edition Vinyl LPS.O r d e r   T o...
20/12/2023

Chuck Berry
Toronto Rock & Roll Revival, 1969
The Entire Concert on 1 CD and 2 Limited Edition Vinyl LPS.
O r d e r T o d a y In Time for Christmas - http://tinyurl.com/3zbbj6s5

2 Vinyl Disc - Swirl Color. Live archive release. Chuck Berry, the songwriter and guitarist now known worldwide as the Father of Rock & Roll, came from humble beginnings. The complete Concert. Mastered from the Analog Tapes: There was no shortage of historic rock music festivals in 1969, from hig...

Blues Photo Album Lightnin' Hopkins, 1960 - Hollywood, CA
20/12/2023

Blues Photo Album
Lightnin' Hopkins, 1960 - Hollywood, CA

New To You!A giant in his day, Brook Benton scored over 50 Billboard chart hits as an artist, and also wrote hits for ot...
19/12/2023

New To You!
A giant in his day, Brook Benton scored over 50 Billboard chart hits as an artist, and also wrote hits for other performers.
We collected this 2 CD set of Hits and Rarities that features the best of this extraordinary talent.
G e t I t H e r e for Xmas: https://tinyurl.com/6fn25bcb

Soul Photo Album!Chaka Khan!  What a voice!Photo Credit : Photo by Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns
19/12/2023

Soul Photo Album!
Chaka Khan! What a voice!
Photo Credit : Photo by Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns

Blues Photo AlbumElizabeth Cotten performs at the North Carolina Folklife Festival at Eno River State Park in Durham, 19...
17/12/2023

Blues Photo Album
Elizabeth Cotten performs at the North Carolina Folklife Festival at Eno River State Park in Durham, 1978. Photograph by Jerry Cotten. North Carolina Collection, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library.

One of the most unique voices in music history.A definitive 2 cd Collection of Hits & Rarities.Get it today - Have It To...
17/12/2023

One of the most unique voices in music history.
A definitive 2 cd Collection of Hits & Rarities.
Get it today - Have It Tomorrow - c l I c k h e r e: https://tinyurl.com/yb33yv4n

New To You!Big Joe Turner / The Boss Is Back (2 CD Set)34 Unique Tracks - 16 Songs Previously UnreleasedN o w  on  H o l...
14/12/2023

New To You!
Big Joe Turner / The Boss Is Back (2 CD Set)
34 Unique Tracks - 16 Songs Previously Unreleased
N o w on H o l i d a y S @ l e: http://tinyurl.com/3e8a83k5

Blues Rock Visionaries!Canned HeatCanned Heat, the band whose motto was “Don’t forget to boogie”, were in danger of bein...
14/12/2023

Blues Rock Visionaries!
Canned Heat

Canned Heat, the band whose motto was “Don’t forget to boogie”, were in danger of being forgotten after enjoying a terrific heyday in the 1960s and early 1970s when their brand of honest, raw and integrity packed blues-rock had made them perennial festival favourites and ensured they sold big on a string of classic albums and a handful of singles – “On The Road Again”, “Going Up The Country” and “Let’s Work Together” – that are now being re-evaluated and enjoyed. Core members Alan “Blind Owl” Wilson, “Bob “The Bear” Hite, Larry “The Mole” Taylor, Henry “The Sunflower” Vestine and Fito “Cats Eyes” De La Parra specialised in psych trippy R&B that was graced with the individual member’s insane musical ability. Wilson was recognised as the prime exponent of chromatic harmonica during his all too short lifetime while Hite was no slouch on that instrument either and also bossed the vocal mic. Wilson and Vestine shared electric and acoustic guitar duties with equal panache and the rhythm section of De La Parra and Taylor maintained a hypnotic beat.

Archetypal anti-heroes of the hippy era Canned Heat endured awful luck and personal tragedy. Wilson and Hite died much too young and Vestine also perished in sad circumstances. Although their badass exploits are so legendary that we’re hardly telling tales out of school when we refer to the band’s prodigious use of illicit substances and overindulgence in alcohol, Canned Heat are not defined by the unfortunate episodes that marred their progress; rather they seem strengthened by adversity and emerge as cursed survivors. We love their music, especially the classic era discs that span 1965 origins onwards and will include acclaimed outings with John Lee Ho**er. Their live albums are also celebrations of the blues form and for those who are curious enough to test the waters, there are several high-class compilations to start that process.

Although they came together in the crucible of Topanga Canyon and recorded in Los Angeles Canned Heat weren’t entirely a product of the Californian dream. Alan Wilson gravitated West from Boston with his friend, sometimes mentor and fellow musicologist John Fahey, both men sharing a devout love for the blues of Skip James, Son House, Charley Patton and Tommy Johnson, the man whose song “Canned Heat” – a woe filled warning to those poor folks who drank the cheap ethanol the title referred to – would give them their name.

Bob Hite was another avid music collector with unmatched taste whose travels through the Deep South in search of vintage vinyl allowed him to amass an unmatched and priceless warehouse full of important 78s. Vestine was also well versed in the blues and had played briefly in an early incarnation of The Mothers of Invention. Legend has it that Frank Zappa asked him to leave because Henry was too freaky! That may be apocryphal but it probably isn’t since Vestine was a very drastic and somewhat unhinged individual, but still a mighty guitarist.

Earliest recordings were made with Johnny Otis in 1965, blues standards all. At that time the rhythm section was Frank Cook on drums, more of a jazz cat really, and Avant-Garde bassist Stuart Brotman who hung around for the sessions before departing to join Kaleidoscope. He was replaced by future Spirit stalwart Mark Andes. The young Canned Heat Blues Band, a jug ensemble with a lot more going on besides, played at the Human Be-In in 1966.

Managers Skip Taylor and John Hartmann left the William Morris Agency – West Coast branch, to look after the group once Skip had seen them mesmerise a crowd at a UCLA frat party where they co-headlined with The Doors. In June 1967 Canned Heat were a big hit at the Monterey Pop Festival (June 17) and Down Beat magazine decided they had seen the future of white blues genius is the shape of Wilson and Vestine. Part of their set is available to view on D.A. Pennebaker’s documentary of the event so seeing is believing.

Their first album proper, simply Canned Heat (1967) was produced by Cal Carter and followed the formula of only playing blues covers. Signed to Liberty Records, Canned Heat suffered the first of their long line of internally afflicted disasters when they were busted in Denver, Colorado and made the local news for all the wrong reasons.

But that debacle began to lend them the outlaw chic that was both a boon – in that they attracted a hard-core biker crowd – and a liability once record company execs came face to face with their entourage.

The actual album is wonderful with excellent versions of “Rollin’ and Tumblin’” (Muddy Waters), “Dust My Broom” (Robert Johnson/Elmore James) and a lengthy take on Robert Petway’s “Catfish Blues” that gives them their boogie on a template.

While this album sold well enough in California it was the ensuing Boogie with Canned Heat that rewarded them with household name status in 1968 since it featured original material like Alan Wilson’s reworking of Floyd Jones’ “On the Road Again”: that went top ten. With guests, Dr. John and Sunnyland Slim adding piano (Dr. John also gets the credit for his horn arrangements) this record became an ultra-hip artefact of the time and sold well in Europe as well in America.

With Larry Taylor and Fito de la Parra now holding down the backbeat, they went from strength to strength on the double Living the Blues (1968), Wilson again hitting pay dirt with his brilliant “Going Up the Country” intoned in his trademark spectral falsetto. This song would become the unofficial anthem of the Woodstock festival the following year. Side one of this epic item is comprised of formally perfect blues but the second side soars away on a suite called “Parthenogenesis”, rollicking, psychedelic and exciting, and then offers another 40 minutes plus of Canned Heat live at the Kaleidoscope, Hollywood (they were that club’s house band for most of 1968), blowing up a storm on their “Refried Boogie (Parts 1 & 2).
Again the specialists are top-notch. Jazz Crusader Joe Sample is on piano, Dr. John struts his stuff, John Fahey adds guitar and John Mayall delivers some crisp keyboards. Most striking of all is the double-tracked flute played by Jim Horn on “Going Up the Country” that helps give this classic single an immediately euphoric impact.

Hallelujah (1969) and Future Blues are progressive blues discs of the first order and cry out to be discovered today. Vestine left after the former but was replaced by another mercurial guitarist in Harvey Mandel. Hallelujah contains Canned Heat favourites like Wilson’s “Get Off My Back” and Hite’s anti-cop anthem “Sic ‘em Pigs”, while “Future Blues” returns them to the charts thanks to a spirited reworking of Wilbert Harrison’s “Let’s Work Together” which is arguably the definitive reading of this often covered tune. Dr. John was on hand for the third album running and the Heat hombres also came to the production fore with Skip Taylor, revealing a more sophisticated sound that boded well for the new decade.

Just as they should have become massive however Canned Heat were dismayed by Wilson’s death in 1970. On the eve of a prestigious return to Europe for a German engagement and then England to play at Hyde Park Wilson’s body was found in the undergrowth of Hite’s Topanga home. The Heat had already been seen on British shores earlier in the year at the Bath Festival and many who witnessed their performance rated them at the zenith of blues-rock, and this during the era when the revival of that form was all the rage.

For confirmation of their ranking check out Canned Heat ’70 Live in Europe, recorded at London’s Royal Albert Hall and other UK venues; a five star summary of some of their work, it’s only too bad it isn’t a double-disc or more. What you get to hear is Wilson’s slide guitar skill, Hite at his vocal peak and Mandel’s splintering lead. The Taylor/De La Parra axis also holds the centre together brilliantly on “That’s All Right Mama”, “London Blues” and the dizzy “Back Out on the Road” medley.

Ho**er’n’Heat (1971) still features Alan Wilson, albeit posthumously. Another double album, this time helmed by Bob Hite, it dates back to Wilson’s final spring and is an evocative and poignant document that allows the great John Lee Ho**er room to do his thing while the Heat cook behind him. It was also John Lee’s first charting disc, reaching #78 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Rave reviews for Ho**er’n’Heat were obviously tempered by despair at Wilson’s demise: aged 27 he became yet another victim of that particular number – Brian Jones, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison, Gram Parsons, Tim Buckley and Kurt Cobain being other members of that unfortunately blighted club.

But maintaining their usual the show must go on work ethic Canned Heat regroup for Historical Figures and Ancient Heads with new personnel and the returning Vestine. The title references the way the band saw themselves in late 1971 – as known musicians who might be about to drop off the radar. There was a prescient moodiness in the fringes that backed this notion up but The New Age (1973) located their more optimistic gene with Hite returning to the songwriting chair.

For a career overview, we recommend that the interested listener discovers Let’s Work Together: The Best of Canned Heat where you get to hear them in ‘classic’ line-up. Also Uncanned! The Best of Canned Heat which features a much longer and unreleased alternate take of “On the Road Again” as well as gems from the catalogue such as “Human Condition”, “An Owl Song” and “Amphetamine Annie”.

Not so much maligned, more overlooked or consigned to the history books it’s now blindingly apparent that Canned Heat were the equal of many of their more successful peers and a damn sight better than most of them. One of those groups who like The Doors always sounded transcendental when heard crackling across the airwaves; their recorded artefacts are well worth another look. As country blues bands go they are amongst the very elite. In terms of boogie power, they are unrivalled.

Words: Max Bell for www.udiscovermusic.com

Get The Blues This Christmas!Now on Sale Online and at finer Indie Record Stores Nationwide.
14/12/2023

Get The Blues This Christmas!
Now on Sale Online and at finer Indie Record Stores Nationwide.

Blues Photo Album!Luther Allison and Johnny Winter perform at Ann Arbor Blues Festival, 1970Shared by The Chicago Blues ...
14/12/2023

Blues Photo Album!
Luther Allison and Johnny Winter perform at Ann Arbor Blues Festival, 1970
Shared by The Chicago Blues Society
Check out the new Johnny Winter Release - TEXAS '63-68
N o w on s a l e: http://tinyurl.com/mx98e97s

Blues Photo AlbumROBERT JR LOCKWOOD
12/12/2023

Blues Photo Album
ROBERT JR LOCKWOOD

14 Days Before Christmas!Rev. Gary Davis / Let Us Get Together (2 CDs / Previously Unreleased Tracks)N o w    S  A L E: ...
12/12/2023

14 Days Before Christmas!
Rev. Gary Davis / Let Us Get Together (2 CDs / Previously Unreleased Tracks)
N o w S A L E: http://tinyurl.com/5xtdt3wv

Behind The Blues Mike Stoller Talks about Big Mama Thornton , Elvis & Hound Dog!Writer BRIAN HIATT of www.rollingstone.c...
12/12/2023

Behind The Blues
Mike Stoller Talks about Big Mama Thornton , Elvis & Hound Dog!

Writer BRIAN HIATT of www.rollingstone.com has the story:
Baz Luhrmann‘s box-office-topping new movie Elvis does manage to show the powerhouse singer Big Mama Thornton (played by Shonka Dukureh) performing “Hound Dog,” a song she recorded in 1952, four years before Elvis Presley. But it leaves out two very significant players: songwriters Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, who wrote “Hound Dog” as teenagers for Thornton, and went on to write “Jailhouse Rock,” “You’re So Square (I Don’t Care),” “Trouble,” and other hits for Presley himself.

Leiber died in 2011, but Stoller is thriving at age 89 — and he tells our Rolling Stone Music Now podcast that after many decades behind the scenes, he didn’t mind the omission. “Well, I didn’t expect anything,” he says with a laugh, “so therefore, I was not disappointed in that regard.” (To hear the whole episode, listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or press play above.)

On the episode, Stoller tells the whole story of “Hound Dog” and explains why, in his opinion, contemporary observers who are convinced Presley “stole” the song from Big Mama Thornton are misguided. For one thing, while Presley was well aware of Thornton’s version of the song, his rendition was directly inspired by yet another iteration of “Hound Dog,” by the group Freddie Bell and the Bellboys — and he uses their musical and lyrical alterations.

That said, while Stoller came to admire Presley’s talents, he never was all that fond of his take on “Hound Dog.” “It didn’t have the groove that Big Mama’s record had, which was fantastic,” says Stoller, who also tells the whole story of the original Thornton studio session for the song. Neither Leiber and Stoller nor Thornton ever got paid much for her version of the song, and Stoller acknowledges that as a tragedy, along with the general lack of cultural recognition for her. “That’s true of not only Big Mama, but of many black performers and songwriters,” he says, noting that he and Leiber “did, on occasion, send her some funds.”

Stoller also defends Presley against charges of cultural appropriation, accusations he says would be more appropriately leveled at Pat Boone, who did truly execrable and whitewashed versions of songs like Little Richard’s “Tutti Frutti.” “Pat Boone didn’t really love the music,” says Stoller. “He was just trying to make a buck off of it.”

12/12/2023

Remembering Willie Mae Thornton born on December 11, 1926, better known as Big Mama Thornton, was an American rhythm-and-blues singer and songwriter.

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Here's Johnny!The perfect gift for the music collector on your list!O r d e r   T o d a y - H a v e It Tomorrow: https:/...
09/12/2023

Here's Johnny!
The perfect gift for the music collector on your list!
O r d e r T o d a y - H a v e It Tomorrow: https://tinyurl.com/52u334jb

Blues Photo AlbumMuddy Waters and John Lee Ho**erMuddy Waters (left) visits John Lee Ho**er (right) in Ho**er's hotel ro...
09/12/2023

Blues Photo Album
Muddy Waters and John Lee Ho**er
Muddy Waters (left) visits John Lee Ho**er (right) in Ho**er's hotel room, following an interview with Pete Welding (not pictured). Chicago, Illinois, February 3, 1964.
Photographer - Rayburn Flerlage (1915-2002)
Chicago History Museum, ICHI-114580; Raeburn Flerlage, photographer

Wednesday Night Classic Blues AlbumSonny Boy Williamson & The YardbirdsSonny Boy Williamson & the Yardbirds is a live al...
07/12/2023

Wednesday Night Classic Blues Album
Sonny Boy Williamson & The Yardbirds

Sonny Boy Williamson & the Yardbirds is a live album by Chicago blues veteran Sonny Boy Williamson II backed by English rock band the Yardbirds. It was recorded at the Crawdaddy Club in Richmond, Surrey on December 8, 1963. However, the performances were not released until early 1966, after a string of Top 40 hits by the Yardbirds.

Williamson sings and/or plays the harmonica on all of the songs. Although they are in a supporting role, the album also presents some of the earliest recordings by the Yardbirds, whose members included Eric Clapton on lead guitar. Numerous reissues have appeared over the years, sometimes with additional tracks recorded around the same time.
German music impresarios Horst Lippmann and Fritz Rau organized the first annual American Folk Blues Festival in 1962. They arranged for several well-known American blues artists to perform in concert in several European cities. Sonny Boy Williamson participated during the second festival tour in 1963 and his performances are identified as some of the most memorable of the festival. At the conclusion of the festival, he returned to England for a more extensive club tour.

The Yardbirds' manager, Giorgio Gomelsky, who promoted some of the early American Folk Blues Festivals in England, persuaded Lippmann to attend one of the group's shows (by another account, Williamson also saw one of their performances). A deal was struck and the Yardbirds backed Williamson for several English dates between December 1963 and February 1964. Part of the arrangement included that Lippmann and Rau record some live performances (as they had done for the festival tour) and finance a solo studio demo by the group.

At their first meeting, Clapton wanted to impress Williamson with his familiarity with American blues and asked "Isn't your real name Rice Miller?" The Yardbirds had been performing "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl", which is often attributed to John Lee Williamson, also known as "Sonny Boy Williamson I"; "Rice Miller" is one of several names associated with "Sonny Boy Williamson II"). According to Clapton, Williamson "slowly pulled out a small penknife and glared at me. It went downhill from there".

Williamson and the group rehearsed for their upcoming club performances and prepared a set list. Yardbirds' rhythm guitarist Chris Dreja recalled:

We spent a very cold afternoon in the club working out stops, breaks, numbers and tempos. Then we recorded that night with Sonny Boy getting more and more pi**ed [drunk on Scotch whiskey that he carried with him]. When we got on stage it was nothing like the rehearsal, so none of the songs on the album have the band starting or finishing at the same time.

Blues Photo Album Sonny Boy Williamson II (Rice Miller) back from England in a bowler hat and tailored suit, 1965.
07/12/2023

Blues Photo Album
Sonny Boy Williamson II (Rice Miller) back from England in a bowler hat and tailored suit, 1965.

Putting Spells On Listeners Since 1956!This Holiday Get The Most Complete Collection of Screamin' Jay Hawkins - BECAUSE ...
06/12/2023

Putting Spells On Listeners Since 1956!
This Holiday Get The Most Complete Collection of Screamin' Jay Hawkins - BECAUSE YOUR MINE: HITS & RARITIES (2 CD SET). O r d e r Today Get It Tomorrow: https://tinyurl.com/bdf6swjw

2 CD Set / 30 Songs. Hits & Rarities. Includes the Original Unreleased version of "I Put A Spell On You" and two previously unreleased tracks. Includes 15 tracks currently unavailable on CD & Vinyl. More than a "one hit wonder" Jalacy J. "Screamin' Jay" Hawkins had a powerful, operatic vocal deli...

Tuesday Night's Blues Classic Album!Albert Collins, Robert Cray, and Johnny Copeland: Showdown! (Alligator, 1985)A feel-...
06/12/2023

Tuesday Night's Blues Classic Album!
Albert Collins, Robert Cray, and Johnny Copeland: Showdown! (Alligator, 1985)

A feel-good collaboration between two Texas veteran guitar slingers and newcomer, Cray, Showdown! begins with an electrifying version of T-Bone Walker’s “T-Bone Shuffle” setting the tone for what is a thoroughly enjoyable blues summit characterized by some exceptional guitar playing. Though there’s a competitive aspect to the album, it’s notable for an absence of macho posturing, with each musician seemingly content to share the spotlight with his fellow blues brother. Showdown! deservedly won a Grammy in 1986, and is clearly among the best blues albums ever.

Blues Photo Album Bonnie Raitt with the great Sippie Wallace (born as Beulah Thomas, November 1, 1898 – November 1, 1986...
06/12/2023

Blues Photo Album
Bonnie Raitt with the great Sippie Wallace (born as Beulah Thomas, November 1, 1898 – November 1, 1986)
1972

Give The Gift Of Music This Holiday Season!Johnny Copeland - The most complete collection of his groundbreaking early ye...
05/12/2023

Give The Gift Of Music This Holiday Season!
Johnny Copeland - The most complete collection of his groundbreaking early years!
O r d e r T o d a y, get it tomorrow!: https://tinyurl.com/yssup5sc

Online shopping from a great selection at CDs & Vinyl Store.

Monday Classic Blues Album!Hard Again – Muddy WatersWhen Chess Records was sold in 1975 to All Platinum Records, reducin...
05/12/2023

Monday Classic Blues Album!
Hard Again – Muddy Waters

When Chess Records was sold in 1975 to All Platinum Records, reducing itself to reissues only, Chicago blues legend Muddy Waters decided to leave the label behind.

For a short time, he recorded no new material, at least until he signed to Blue Sky (founded by Johnny Winter) in 1976.

The first studio album he recorded was Hard Again, released in 1977, and to a positive reception.

The album is often considered a comeback record for Waters, with six new songs having been written for the album which, in the words of Rolling Stone writer Dan Oppenheimer, marked “the end of a long dry spell”.

Waters steers relatively clear of his own guitar throughout much of the album, but when he plays he soars, and it does very little to take away from both Waters’ brilliant, affirmative vocals, and the incredible musicianship that backs him.

Credit Harry Sprinks www.jazzfuel.com

Home Of The Blues & Soul Photo AlbumQuincy Jones and Ray Charles preparing for an appearance on a Merv Griffin televisio...
05/12/2023

Home Of The Blues & Soul Photo Album
Quincy Jones and Ray Charles preparing for an appearance on a Merv Griffin television special circa 1970

Classic Blues Albums SaturdayWillie Dixon / I Am The Blues  (1970)I Am the Blues is the sixth studio Chicago blues album...
02/12/2023

Classic Blues Albums Saturday
Willie Dixon / I Am The Blues (1970)

I Am the Blues is the sixth studio Chicago blues album released in 1970 by the well-known bluesman Willie Dixon. It is also the title of Dixon's autobiography, edited by Don Snowden.

The album features songs written by Dixon and originally performed by other artists for Chess Records.

Four of the nine songs on I Am the Blues – "Back Door Man", "Spoonful", "I Ain't Superstitious", "The Little Red Rooster" – were originally performed by Howlin' Wolf. "Back Door Man" and "Spoonful" were recorded by Howlin' Wolf in June 1960 featuring bass work by Willie Dixon, piano work by Otis Spann, drum work by Fred Below, and guitar work by Hubert Sumlin. "The Little Red Rooster" was recorded in June 1961 with guitar work by Howlin' Wolf and Hubert Sumlin, piano work by Johnny Jones, bass work by Dixon, and drum work by Sam Lay. "I Ain't Superstitious" was recorded in December 1961 with Howlin' Wolf, Hubert Sumlin, and Jimmy Rogers on guitar, Henry Gray on piano, Willie Dixon on bass, and Sam Lay on drums.

The songs "You Shook Me", "I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man", and "The Same Thing" were first recorded by Muddy Waters. "I'm You Hoochie Coochie Man" was recorded on January 7, 1954 with Waters on vocals and guitar, Little Walter on harmonica, Jimmy Rogers on guitar, Otis Spann on piano, Willie Dixon on bass, and Fred Below on drums. "You Shook Me" was recorded on June 27, 1962 and "The Same Thing" was recorded on April 9, 1964.

"The Seventh Son" was recorded by Willie Mabon in 1955. "I Can't Quit You, Baby" was not even released on Chess Records; instead it was recorded and released by Otis Rush on the Cobra record label.

The album was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 1986

Big Joe TurnerGreat Photo - does anyone know what year it was taken?
02/12/2023

Big Joe Turner
Great Photo - does anyone know what year it was taken?

The Stuff Legends Are Made Of!Big Joe Turner / The Boss Is Back (2 CDs)G E T    I T   H E R E:  https://tinyurl.com/yyky...
02/12/2023

The Stuff Legends Are Made Of!
Big Joe Turner / The Boss Is Back (2 CDs)
G E T I T H E R E: https://tinyurl.com/yyky9ddh

34 TRACKS / 2 CD SET ' 16 SONGS PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED ' 10 SONGS NEVER BEFORE AVAILABLE ON CD Hall of Fame Inductee! Doc Pomus said that rock and roll wouldn't have happened without Big Joe Turner. Indeed, Turner's mastery of every genre including blues, jazz, R&B and swing gave way to his uptemp...

New Blues Music For YouRev. Gary Davis / Let Us Get Together (2 cds / previously unreleased performances)O r d e r   T o...
02/12/2023

New Blues Music For You
Rev. Gary Davis / Let Us Get Together (2 cds / previously unreleased performances)
O r d e r T o d a y - G e t It Tomorrow: https://tinyurl.com/4pfb3d7y

REVEREND GARY DAVIS / LET US GET TOGETHER - Previously Unreleased Material. Ordained Baptist Minister, Reverend Gary Davis hailed from the Piedmont South Carolina. He grew up playing the distinctive style of Piedmont blues. With the decline of the Southern blues scene Reverend Gary moved to New Y...

Blues Photo AlbumSon House, Howling Wolf, Los Angeles, CA, April, 1965. Photo by Dick Waterman
02/12/2023

Blues Photo Album
Son House, Howling Wolf, Los Angeles, CA, April, 1965.
Photo by Dick Waterman

Remembering Brownie McGheeSonny Terry and Brownie McGhee / Working Man Blues (2 cds)The most comprehensive collection of...
30/11/2023

Remembering Brownie McGhee
Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee / Working Man Blues (2 cds)
The most comprehensive collection of this Blues / Folk heroes

Get it Here https://tinyurl.com/5738jrh4 or at your local Indie Record Store!

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