Friday, November 30, 2012

The Ruminants "Live From East Coulee" 2012

This is a bootleg of my band The Ruminants. It was made by Doug Misfeldt who is a LEGEND of Calgary music bootlegging. I don't know how, but he is at every gig, always. We are a "country band" but really there are influences from blues to rockabilly to surf to skiffle to folk - much like your fantastic blog. I'd like to share this album. Mostly because I believe in sharing music, but also because it was made for free, we played the show (a little charity festival called The East Coulee Museum Spring Fest) for free and we do it because we love it. Oh, and the cd cover was done by blogger Mredondo. - Todd Maduke via e-mail - web: http://theruminants.ca
Music for music's sake: The Ruminants – Mike Cremona, Todd Maduke, Sean McIntyre, and David Martin – perform a blend of dirty western ballads and provoking pop for an appreciative audience of drinkers, thinkers, and dancers. As FFWD magazine put it, “The Ruminants only use country music as a jumping point to whichever genre suits their fancy at that particular moment.” The Ruminants have performed at venues all over southern Alberta, and are considered mainstays of the Calgary alt-country scene. They recently recorded their first full-length album, in the hayloft of a barn east of Strathmore, which should hit the airwaves later this year. - from East Coulee School Museum - http://www.ecsmuseum.ca/spring_fest_2012_bios.html
trax:
1. Intro 2 Rebel Rouser 3. Hey Good Lookin 4. Saturday Night 5. Comin Home 6. Crow Black Chicken 7. That Place Is Home 8. Blood-Stained Man 9. What Goes On 10. Mule 11. Railyard 12. Who's Been Talking? 13. Anywhere But Here 14. Cold So Cold 15. Ears That Sing 16. The Gambler
...served by Todd Maduke...

"LEGENDS OF GUITAR" - Rock: The 60's, Vol. 1

Excellent 18-track CD featuring dazzling guitar work by The Ventures, Steve Cropper, Dave Edmunds, the Byrds, Chet Atkins, Lonnie Mack, and others, showing the breadth of '60s guitar work. (Cub Koda)
trax:
1. Lullaby Of The Leaves (Bob Bogle) - The Ventures 2. The Train Kept A-Rollin' (Jeff Beck) - The Yardbirds 3. Chicken Pickin' - Lonnie Mack 4. The Witch (Larry Parypa) - The Sonics 5. Hey Joe (Live At Winterland) - The Jimi Hendrix Experience 6. Boo Boo Stick Beat - Chet Atkins 7. Nine Types Of Industrial Pollution - Frank Zappa & The Mothers Of Invention 8. Abba Zaba (Ry Cooder) - Captain Beefheart & The Magic Band 9. Hot-Doggin' (Rich Fifield) - The Astronauts 10. I Ain't Got You (Eric Clapton) - The Yardbirds 11. Read Beans And Rice (Steve Cropper) - Booker T. & The MG's 12. Sabre Dance (Dave Edmunds) - Love Sculpture 13. Misirlou - Dick Dale & The Del-Tones 14. Apache (Hank Marvin) - The Shadows 15. Gold And Silver (John Cipollina & Gary Duncan) - Quicksilver Messenger Service 16. It Won't Be Wrong (Roger McGuinn) - The Byrds 17. You Really Got Me (Dave Davies) - The Kinks 18. Ball And Chain (James Gurley) - Big Brother & The Holding Company
...served by Gyro1966...

"BIG BAND, BLUES & BOOGIE" Roots Of Rock 'N' Roll - Vol 1

28 great R&B sides, 1938-1945!
trax:
1. Flyin' Home - Lionel Hampton 2. The Honeydripper - Bull Moose Jackson 3. Walk 'Em - Buddy Johnson 4. Minnie The Moocher - Cab Calloway 5. Countless Blues - The Kansas City Six 6. I Know My Love Is True - Joe Liggins 7. We Ain't Go Tnothin' - Bull Moose Jackson 8. Floogie Boo - Cootie Williams 9. If It's Good - Julia Lee 10. I Want A Tall Skinny Papa - Sister Rosetta Tharpe 11. Caldonia - Louis Jordan 12. The Boogie Beat'Ll Getcha - The Red Caps 13. Bartender Boogie - Jack McVea 14. Boogie Woogie Stomp - Albert Ammons 15. Roll 'Em Pete - Big Joe Turner & Pete Johnson 16. Who Threw The Whiskey In The Well - Wynonie Harris 17. Rock Me - Sister Rosetta Tharpe 18. Shout Sister Shout - Sister Rosetta Tharpe 19. Voot Orenee - Slim Gaillard 20. Hit That Jive Jack - Cecil Gant 21. S.K. Groove - Saunders King 22. It's All Right Baby - Big Joe Turner & Pete Johnson 23. Slim Gaillard'S Boogie - Slim Gaillard 24. Ee-Bobaliba - Big Jim Wynn 25. Five Guys Named Moe - Louis Jordan 26. Rock Woogie Big - Jim Wynn 27. I'm Woke Up Now - Big Bill Broonzy 28. Dirt Road Blues - Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup
...served by Gyro1966...

Thursday, November 29, 2012

MICKEY BAKER - Session Man & Performer Vol. 1-4

Here is great collection of Mickey Baker's great work. (He just passed away November 27, 2012.) If you asked me, and I know you didn't, but if you did, I'd say Mickey "Guitar" Baker is the greatest guitarist in rock'n'roll history. Bob Quine agreed with me. (The Hound Blog)
Of all the guitarists who helped transform rhythm & blues into rock & roll, Mickey Baker is one of the very most important, ranking almost on the level of Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley. The reason he isn't nearly as well known as those legends is that a great deal of his work wasn't issued under his own name, but as a backing guitarist for many R&B and rock & roll musicians. Baker originally aspired to be a jazz musician, but turned to calypso, mambo, and then R&B, where the most work could be found. (Allmusic)
Great article about Mickey Baker here:
http://thehoundblog.blogspot.com/search?q=mickey+baker http://home.earthlink.net/~v1tiger/mgbaker.html
(many thanks to Marty Mellow, the original uploader of this collection)

trax CD 1:
1. You Look That Good To Me - Joe Clay 2. You Look That Good To Me [Alt Take] - Joe Clay 3. Let The Good Times Roll - Louis Jordan & The Tympany Five 4. No Good Lover - Mickey & Sylvia 5. Mama He Treat's Your Daughter Mean - Ruth Brown 6. Stumblin' Block Blues - Champion Jack Dupree 7. One Scotch, One Bourbon, One Beer - Amos Milburn 7. Shake, Rattle & Roll - Joe Turner 8. It Should Have Been Me - Ray Charles 9. Need Your Love So Bad - Little Willie John 10. Get Something Out of It - The "5" Royales 10. Jack, That Cat Was Clean - Dr. Horse 11. Shame, Shame, Shame - Paul Williams 12. Caldonia - Louis Jordan & The Tympany Five 13. Come Back Maybeline - Big John Greer 14. I Smell A Rat - Young Jessie 15. Voodoo Voodoo - LaVern Baker 16. Love Is Strange - Mickey & Sylvia 17. All Around the World - Titus Turner 18. I'm a Hog For You Baby - The Coasters 19. Highway 41 - Cousin Leroy 20. Mess Around - Ray Charles 21. My Baby's Gone - Eddie Riff 22. Too Much Competition - Allan Bunn 24. Thirteen Women - Dickie Thompson 25. Did You Mean Jelly Bean [ What You Said Cabbage Head ] - Joe Clay
trax CD 2:
1. Please Tell Me - Larry Dale (With Mickey Baker's Orchestra) 1. Honey Hush - Joe Turner 2. Choo Choo Ch'Boogie - Louis Jordan & The Tympany Five 2. String Beans - Cousin Leroy 3. Titanic - Paul Williams 3. My Pigeons Gone - Charles Calhoun 4. Beware Brother Beware - Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five 5. Worried About You Baby - Roy "Mr Guitar" Gaines 5. Midnight Hours - Larry Dale 6. Country Boy - Big Tiny Kennedy 8. Pretty Soon - Young Jessie 9. Crackerjack - Joe Clay 10. Ain't That Lovin' You Baby - Eddie Riff 11. Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On - Big Maybelle 12. Money Honey - The Drifters 13. Ain't Nobody Here But Us Chickens - Louis Jordan & The Tympany Five 14. Drinkin' Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee - Larry Dale 15. Love Will Make You Fail In School - Mickey & Sylvia 16. Get On the Right Track - Joe Clay 17. Bottle It Up And Go Big - John Greer 18. Dearest - Mickey & Sylvia 18. I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town - Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five 19. Saturday Night Fish Fry - Louis Jordan & The Tympany Five 20. There Ought To Be A Law - Mickey & Sylvia 26. The Kid Brother - Mickey & Kitty 27. Crackerjack - The Cues
trax CD 3:
1. Tain't Whatcha Say It's What'cha Do - Little Esther 2. What'd I Say - Ruth Brown 3. There I've Said It Again - Big Maybelle 4. Big Bess - Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five 5. You Better Heed My Warning - Larry Dale (With Mickey Baker's Orchestra) 6. Somebody Touched Me - Ruth Brown 7. You're All of My Life To Me - Screamin' Jay Hawkins 8. Feelin' Happy - Joe Turner 9. Come Back, Uncle John - Big John Greer 10. Don't Be Angry - Nappy Brown 11. This Little Girl's Gone Rockin' - Ruth Brown 12. My Biggest Mistake - Joe Tex 13. Hello Little Boy - Ruth Brown 14. You Can Bet Your Life - Little Esther 15. Morning Light - Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five 16. That's A Pretty Good Love - Big Maybelle 17. Midnight Special Train - Joe Turner 18. Silent Partner - Champion Jack Dupree 19. Let The Boogie Woogie Roll - Clyde McPhatter & The Drifters 20. Funny (But I Still Love You) - Ray Charles 21. I'm in a Crying Mood - LaVern Baker & Jesse Stone's Orchestra 22. It's Gonna Work Out Fine - Ike & Tina Turner 23. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby - Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five 24. Bip Bam - Clyde McPhatter & The Drifters 25. Don't Let The Sun Catch You Cryin - Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five
trax CD 4:
1. No Good Lover [Alt Take] - Mickey & Sylvia 2. Things Have Changed - Sticks McGhee 3. Pitiful - Big Maybelle 5. Is It Really You? - Nappy Brown 6. Stranger Blues - Big Red McHouston Orchestra 7. Fatback and Corn Licker - Louis Jordan 8. In My Heart - Mickey & Sylvia 9. Stop, Don't Go - Annie Laurie 11. I'm Getting 'Long Alright - Big Maybelle 12. Oh What A Babe - Otis Blackwell 13. Seven Days Blues - Eddie Mack 14. Real Humdinger - The 5 Pearls 15. So Many Ways - Varetta Dillard 16. I’m Gonna Keep My Good Eye On You - Mr Bear & The Bearcats 17. Don't Take My Whiskey Away - Wynonie Harris 18. Without Someone to Call Your Own - Amos Milburn 19. It Should Have Been Me - Little George Benson 20. Shake It Up - Mickey & Sylvia 21. Such A Night - The Drifters 22. You Gotta Be Good to Yourself - Dolly Cooper & The Wanderers 23. Salt Pork West Virginia - Louis Jordan & The Tympany Five 24. Women Are the Root of All Evil - Paul Williams 26. I Won't Cry Little - David & the Harps 27. Ghost of a Chance - Mickey Baker 28. If You Only Knew - Little Jimmy Scott
...served by Gyro1966...

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

James Luther Dickinson "Dixie Fried" 1972

1972 album from the best-known unknown musician Memphis has ever produced. As a bandleader, session musician and producer, his legacy stretches back to the early '60s, when he started out in garage rock bands like Flash and the Memphis Casuals. He played the piano on The Rolling Stones' 'Wild Horses' and can be seen in the studio with the Stones in the film Gimme Shelter.
Veteran producer Jim Dickinson had been well-established as a trusted producer and sideman by the time he recorded an album of his own in 1972. Atlantic honcho Jerry Wexler had signed Dickinson and the Dixie Flyers, the label's house band for nearly all its soul recordings at the time, to record an album. Only Dickinson really felt up to it, and Dixie Fried was the result. Mixing blues, country, and unapologetic Southern boogie on nine tunes, Dickinson sounded something like a not-yet-formed Leon Russell or Dr. John (the latter of whom played on the album extensively). His wild, eclectic choice of songs makes for a mixed bag in the end. The sheer barrelhouse abandon of "Wine" is surpassed only by the New Orleans-style RB of the title track, or the carnival-barker anthem "O How She Dances," a strange and fascinating precursor to Tom Waits' signature style. On Bob Dylan's "John Brown" Dickinson loses his way a bit, and his voice (at once hesitant and overzealous) trips him up in a number of places throughout. A gem to be sure, but one of a very rough cut indeed, and of course this factor may hold special appeal to some listeners. But understandably, Dickinsonstuck to producing for a while after this one. [Sepia Tone's 2002 release is the first time this album has ever been issued on compact disc.] - John Duffy, All Music Guide

musicians:
Jim Dickinson: Vocals, Piano / Charlie Freeman: Guitar / Tommy McClure: Bass / Mike Utley: Keyboards / Sammy Lee Creason: Drums / Mac "Dr. John" Rebbenack: Piano / Albhy Galuten: Toe Piano / Jeff Newman: Pedal Steel Guitar / Jack Pennington: ? / Gimmer Nicholson: Guitar / Charlie Lawing: Alto Sax / Mike Ladd: Guitar / Terry Manning: Vocals, Guitar, Electric Piano / Jeanie Greene, Mary Holiday, Ginger Holiday: Back-up Vocals / Jimmy Crosthwait: ? / Joe Gaston: Bass / Sid Selvidge: Guitar, Piano / Edward La Paglia: ? / Ken Woodley (ex Alamo): Keyboards, Bass / Lee Baker (ex Moloch): Guitar / Brenda Kay Patterson, Mary Lindsay Dickinson: Back-up Vocals

traxfromwax:
1. Wine 2. The Strength Of Love 3. Louise 4. John Brown 5. Dixie Fried 6. The Judgement 7. O How She Dances 8. Wild Bill Jones 9. Casey Jones (On The Road Again)

"SWEET HOME CHICAGO" - A History Of Chicago Blues

Great 3 Cd compilation that highlights the rich heritage of the Chicago blues scene with 70 tracks from 1925 - 1960's and beyond.
trax CD 1:
1. Baby Don't You Want To Go - Tommy McClennan 2. Maxwell Street Blues - Papa Charlie Jackson 3. East Chicago Blues - Pinetop & Lindberg 4. Chicago Bound Blues - Bessie Smith 5. Key To The Highway - Bill "Jazz" Gillum 6. Chicago Mill Blues - Peetie Wheatstraw 7. C&A Blues - Big Bill Broonzy 8. Boogie Woogie Dance - Tampa Red 9. Kid Man Blues - Big Maceo 10. Hard Time Blues - Bertha "Chippie" Hill 11. Chicago's Too Much For Me - The Sparks Brothers 12. Western Union Man - Sonny Boy Williamson 13. Creole Queen - Little Bill Gaither 14. Jim Crow Blues - Cow Cow Davenport 15. Chicago Monkey Man Blues - Rosa Henderson 16. Diggin' My Potatoes - Washboard Sam 17. I See My Great Mistake - Memphis Slim 18. I.C. Blues - Big Bill Broonzy 19. Driving Wheel - Roosevelt Sykes 20. Chicago Blues - Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup 21. Me And My Chauffeur Blues - Memphis Minnie 22. Friar's Point Blues - Robert Nighthawk 23. Little Low Woman Blues - Sonny Boy Williamson 24. Take A Little Walk With Me - Robert Lockwood, Jr. 25. Goin' To Chicago Blues - Big Joe Turner
trax CD 2:
1. Chicago Is Just That Way - Eddie Boyd 2. You've Been Mistreating Me - Big Bill Broonzy 3. Horse Shoe Boogie - Lee Brown 4. P Vine Blues - Big Joe Williams 5. The Blues What Am - Bill "Jazz" Gillum 6. One Doggone Reason - St. Louis Jimmy 7. Chicago Breakdown - Big Maceo 8. Boogie - Snooky Pryor & Moody Jones 9. I Can't Be Satisfied - Muddy Waters 10. Mellow Chick Swing - Sonny Boy Williamson 11. Black Angel Blues - Robert Nighthawk 12. Let Me Ride Your Mule - Man Young 13. Fine And Brown - Roosevelt Sykes 14. Hard Times - Floyd Jones 15. Let's Roll - J.B. Lenoir 16. Crawlin' King Snake - Tony Hollins 17. Rollin' & Tumblin' (Part 1) - Leroy Foster 18. I Just Keep Lovin' Her - Little Walter 19. Rollin' & Tumblin' (Part 2) - Leroy Foster 20. She's Dynamite - Tampa Red 21. Saddle My Pony - Howlin' Wolf 22. Roll, Tumble And Slip (Train Time) - Delta Joe 23. Nobody Loves Me - Memphis Slim 24. Chance To Love - Jimmy Rogers 25. I'm Gonna Dig Myself A Hole - Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup
trax CD 3:
1. She's Nineteen Years Old - Muddy Waters 2. Big Katie Allen - David "Honeyboy" Edwards 3. My Baby's Coming Home - Hound Dog Taylor 4. Hard Walking Hannah - Jimmy Reed 5. The Blues Is Here To Stay - Eddie Boyd 6. Spoonful - Willie Dixon 7. First Time I Met The Blues - Buddy Guy 8. My Baby's Gone - Homesick James 9. Hoodoo Man - Junior Wells 10. Wang Dang Doodle - Koko Taylor 11. Somebody Please Loan Me A Dime - Fenton Robinson 12. Look What You Done - Eddie C. Campbell 13. I Don't Know Why - Eddy "The Chief" Clearwater 14. One More Mile - James Cotton 15. You're Gonna Need Me - Luther Allison 16. Times Are Gettin' Tougher - Little Mac 17. Too Late To Pray - Sunnyland Slim 18. You Went Away Baby Carey Bell 19. Tell Me How You Like It - Byther Smith 20. Sweet Home Chicago - Joe Carter
...served by Gyro1966...

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

James Luther Dickinson "Free Beer Tomorrow" 2002

Yes indeed folks JLD gives new meaning to the definition "Legendary" setting the standards far above the clouds and restacking the deck for anyone who cares to take a peek at what's inside.
It's taken Memphis legend James Luther Dickinson 30 years to follow his solo debut, Dixie Fried, with this CD, which he describes as "the sound of a drunken circus band staggering down the road." Perhaps that's how long it took Dickinson to perfect the art of making his music collapse and weave in all the right places. Or maybe he was just absorbed in producing brilliant albums for other musicians--Ry Cooder, Big Star, the Replacements--and playing soul-fired piano for everyone from Petula Clark to the Stones and Dylan. Despite the shambling undercurrent of this disc, it's a wise and subtle-but-raw blend of roots styles, from soul ballads to folk songs to string-band blues, all colored by Dickinson's beef-jerky vocal cords, silken saloon piano, and brilliant orchestrations. Try as he might to sound like a friendly tough guy with numbers like the swinging, hilarious dis "A**hole" and the jug-band tune "Bound to Lose," where he howls about bad-luck riverboat gamblers like a bull mastiff, Dickinson's a softie. His aching cover of Charles Brown's "It's Rainin'" and the lovely honky-tonker "If I Could Only Fly" sound plucked straight from his heart. - Ted Drozdowski

trax:
01 Jc's New York City Blues 02 Bound To Lose 03 Hungry Town 04 It's Rainin' 05 Asshole 06 Last Night I Gave Up Smoking 07 If I Could Only Fly 08 Ballad Of Billy And Oscar 09 Well Of Love 10 Home Sweet Home

"LEGENDS OF GUITAR" - Rock: The 50's, Vol. 2

Guitar Player Presents Legends of Guitar -- Rock: The '50s, Vol. 2 gathers more innovative, guitar-driven songs from rock's first decade, as chosen by Guitar Player magazine. Along with some expected (and well-deserved) picks such as Santo & Johnny's classic "Sleep Walk," Chuck Berry's "Carol" and Duane Eddy's "Three-30-Blues," the collection also celebrates singles and artists not necessarily thought of when it comes to guitar prowess, such as Ricky Nelson's "Waitin' in School," which, as one of his most rockabilly-influenced singles, features some appropriately sharp and fiery licks and rhythm playing. Billy Riley & His Little Green Men's "Flying Saucer Rock & Roll," meanwhile, takes the rockabilly sound to the extreme with a bright, almost distorted tone and jumpy rhythms. The guitar hooks on Mickey & Sylvia's "Love Is Strange" are strange indeed, but complement the duo's playfully romantic banter perfectly. Not surprisingly, though, many of the album's high points come from instrumental tracks, like the Scotty Moore Trio's "Have Guitar, Will Travel," René Hall's Orchestra's "Twitchy," and Icky Renrut (aka Ike Turner)'s "Prancing," a bluesy stomp with some of the most outlandish guitar playing on this album. Buddy Holly's "Blue Days, Black Nights," Johnny Burnette's "Train Kept a Rollin'," and Arvee Allens' "Fast Freight" are some of the other standouts on this collection, which guitar and '50s rock fans alike should investigate. (Allmusic)

trax:
1. Waitin' In School (Joe Maphis) - Ricky Nelson 2. Flying Saucers Rock & Roll (Roland Janes) - Billy Riley & His Little Green Men 3. Prancing (Ike Turner) - Icky Renrut 4. Love Is Strange (Mickey Baker) - Mickey & Sylvia 5. Blue Days, Black Nights (Sonny Curtis) - Buddy Holly 6. Have Guitar Will Travel - Scotty Moore Trio 7. Twitchy (Willie Joe Duncan) - Rene Hall Orchestra Feat. Willie Joe 8. The Train Kept A-Rollin' (Paul Burlison) - Johnny Burnette Trio 9. Cruisin' (Cliff Gallup) - Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps 10. Sleep Walk (Santo & Johnny Farina) - Santo & Johnny 11. Rock-A-Beatin' Boogie (Frannie Beecher) - Bill Haley & The Comets 12. Am I Blue - Eddie Cochran 13. Carol - Chuck Berry 14. Three-30-Blues - Duane Eddy 15. Fireball (George Tomsco & Dan Trammell) - The Fireballs 16. Believe What You Say (James Burton) - Ricky Nelson 17. Just Because (Larry Collins) - The Collins Kids 18. Fast Freight - Ritchie Valens
...served by Gyro1966...

"ULTRA RARE WESTERN SWING" Vol 1

Great collection of classic western swing!
trax:
1. I Don't Lov' A Nobody - Hoyle Hix & His West Texas Cowboys 2. Excuse Me - Wade Ray 3. Bees In My Bonnet - Johnny Lee Wills (Voc. Curley Lewis) 4. Shame On You - Tex Williams 5. I Guess You Were Right - Tommy Duncan & The Miller Bros. 6. Airmail Special - Tex Williams 7. Oklahoma Hills - Jimmy Wakely 8. It's All Your Fault - Gene Duncan w/Jimmy Rivers 9. Cadillac In Model "A" - Billy Jack Wills 10. Did The Man In The Moon Came From Texas? - Ole Rasmussen & His Cornhuskers 11. I've Got A New Road Under My Wheels - Bob Wills w/Curley Lewis 12. Steelin' Home - Noel Boggs & His Day Sleepers 13. I May Be Sorry Tomorrow - Harry Houston 14. Cheaters Never Prosper - Tex Williams & His Western Caravan 15. The Bandera Shuffle - Billy Gray & His Western Okies 16. Fireball Mail - Red Foley 17. Nancy Jane - Tommy Duncan 18. Sleepy-Eyed-John - Ole Rasmussen & His Cornhuskers 19. I Know About The Bees - Tommy Sands 20. Never Turn Your Back To A Woman - Johnny Tyler w/Luke Wills 21. My Mary - Ole Rasmussen & His Cornhuskers 22. Steel Wool - Chuck Hatfield 23. Further On Down The Road - Billy Gray & His Western Okies 24. Please Don't Bother Me - Hoyle Nix & His West Texas Cowboys 25. Catch' em Young, Treat 'em Rough, Tell 'em Nothing - Hank Penny & His California Cowhands 26. We Don't See Things Alike (Anymore) - Billy Gray & His Western Okies 27. Cherokee Boogie - Uncle Harve's Ragtime Wranglers 28. Too Long - Johnny Lee Wills & His Boys
...served by Gyro1966...

Monday, November 26, 2012

Ron Franklin Entertainers "50,000 Watts of Heavenly Joy" 2004

One of my favorite bands of the past decade is Cornershop, a multicultural English outfit whose finest album, When I Was Born for the 7th Time, was named the best record of 1997 by Spin magazine and may have even deserved it.
I mention this only because whenever I listen to the Ron Franklin Entertainers, Cornershop immediately comes to mind. And not because the band necessarily sounds like Cornershop (for all I know, Franklin may be unfamiliar with them), but because the two bands are so similar in spirit. Both bands seem to be steeped in a foundation of '60s pop and rock that extends from bubblegum to the Velvet Underground. And from there, both bands genre-hop in a manner that is always catchy and warm and friendly --simply a pleasure to listen to. The difference is that Franklin & Co. replace Cornershop's Brit-pop-meets-Bollywood identity with a culture clash steeped in Bluff City blues and soul.
And Franklin's blues-and-soul roots are all over 50,000 Watts of Heavenly Joy (which was recorded at Willie Mitchell's Royal studio), from the WDIA homage of the opening "Radio (1070 AM)" to the closing Blind Willie McTell interpretation "East St. Louis." In between there's Franklin's theme song, "RFE Stomp," a juke-joint rave-up so deliciously sugary that it could double as the soundtrack for a '50s teen dance show, a surging take on the spiritual "Let It Shine on Me," and a song called "Memphis Minnie's Hornpipe," where ex-Reigning Sound sideman Alex Greene goes nuts on piano.
Franklin also engages in more recent Memphis marginalia: "Jim Cole's Got a Girlfren Now" pays homage to a real live Memphian last the subject of an Oblivians song, and on "You Talk I Listen (Goin' to the Get High Shack)," sometime Entertainers drummer (and Flyer contributor) Ross Johnson delivers a fevered, funny monologue to rival his infamous babbling on Alex Chilton's Like Flies on Sherbert. All in all, 50,000 Watts of Heavenly Joy marks a very welcome return for Franklin. - by CHRIS HERRINGTON (Memphis Flyer)

trax:
01 Radio (1070 AM) 02 RFE Stomp 03 That's Just The Love I Have For You 04 Do Not Wait 'Til I'm Laid 'Neath the Clay No. 2 05 Let It Shine On Me 06 Call It A Night 07 You Talk I Listen (Goin' To The Get High Shack) 08 Memphis Minnie's Hornpipe 09 Misterioso 10 Western Movies 11 Jim Cole's Got A Girlfren Now 12 East St. Louis

"LEGENDS OF GUITAR" - Rock: The 50's, Vol. 1

Nice collection of tracks featuring dazzling guitar work and classic sides from Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Les Paul, James Burton, Carl Perkins and 12 others. (Cub Koda, Allmusic)
trax:
1. Maybellene - Chuck Berry 2. Mona - Bo Diddley 3. Rock The Joint - Bill Haley & The Saddlemen 4. Rebel-'Rouser - Duane Eddy 5. Susie Q - Dale Hawkins 6. Get Rythym - Johnny Cash & The Tennessee Two 7. The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise - Les Paul & Mary Ford 8. Tiger Guitars - Billy Mure's Supersonic Guitars 9. Guitar Boogie Shuffle - The Virtues 10. Eddie's Blues - Eddie Cochran 11. Rumble - Link Wray 12. Race With The Devil - Gene Vincent & His Blue Caps 13. I'm Looking For Someone To Love - Buddy Holly 14. Put Your Cat Clothes On - Carl Perkins 15. Mammer-Jammer - Don & Dewey 16. Willie And The Hand Jive - Johnny Otis Show 17. Kansas City - Wilbert Harrison
...served by Gyro1966...

DOWN HOME BLUES CLASSICS - Memphis & The Deep South 1949-1954

Awesome 54 track collection on 2 CDs of some of the greatest Mid-south, Mississippi, and Memphis down home blues recorded during the 'golden years' of 1949 to 1954. Vintage collectors will already have much of this material scattered about on various CDs and well-worn LPs, but worth it just to have this many great cuts in one convenient package. This set is designed to compliment the other volumes in the series ... no duplication of titles so far. Highly recommended for beginners as well as long-time devotees alike. (Allmusic)

trax CD 1:
1. Don't Trust Your Best Friend - Joe Hill Louis 2. Bugger Bugger Boy - Lightnin' Slim 3. She's Gone - Schoolboy Cleve 4. Stay Out Of Automobiles - Jerry McCain 5. Why Don't You Let Me Be - J D Horton 6. Going Home To Mother - Little Sam Davis 7. She's A Jiving Woman - Big Joe Williams 8. Y M & V Blues - Lost John Hunter 9. Phillipine Blues - Country Jim 10. Bad Luck - Lightnin' Slim 11. A Call On The Phone - Louis Campbell 12. Truckin' Little Woman - Willie Nix 13. Country Clown - Doctor Ross 14. Open Your Book - Percy Lee Crudup 15. V-8 Ford Blues - Willie Love 16. Packin' Up My Blues - Tommy Lee (Aka Tommy Lee Thompson) 17. Rosalee - Luther Huff 18. 1958 Blues - Little Sam Davis 19. Shady Lane Blues - Willie Love 20. Jumpin' With Jarvis - Papa Lightfoot 21. Blind's Blues - John Lee 22. Wine O Wine - Jerry McCain 23. A Jumpin' And A Shufflin' - Joe Hill Louis 24. Bulldog Blues - Luther Huff 25. 21 Minutes To 9 - Willie Love 26. I'll Take You Back - Country Jim 27. Worried Blues - Hot Rod Happy (Country Jim)
trax CD 2:
1. Wine, Whiskey & Women - Papa Lightfoot 2. Love To Make Up - Jerry McCain 3. Joe's Jump - Joe Hill Louis 4. Ethel Mae - Lightnin' Slim 5. His Spirit Lives On - Big Joe Williams 6. Don't Want Anyone Hangin' Around - Louis Campbell 7. Rock Me Mamma - Lightnin' Slim 8. Strange Letter Blues - Schoolboy Cleve 9. Nelson Street Blues - Willie Love 10. I Ain't For It - Boogie Bill Webb 11. P. L. Blues - Papa Lightfoot 12. New Orleans Bound - Lightnin' Slim 13. She's So Good To Me - Little Sam Davis 14. Dirty Disposition - Luther Huff 15. Old River Blues - Country Jim 16. East Of The Sun - Jerry McCain 17. Alabama Boogie - John Lee 18. Tears In My Eyes - Percy Lee Crudup 19. Doctor Ross Boogie - Doctor Ross 20. Just One Mistake - Willie Nix 21. I Can't Live Happy - Lightnin' Slim 22. Married Woman Blues - Big Joe Williams 23. Sad And Lonely - Country Jim 24. Down At The Depot - John Lee 25. Railroad Blues - Joe Hill Louis 26. Bad Dog - Boogie Bill Webb 27. Baby's Blues - John Lee
...served by Gyro1966...

Sunday, November 25, 2012

"SURFIN' HITS"

Rhino's Surfin' Hits delivers exactly what its to-the-point title suggests, gathering 18 surf rock favorites like the Beach Boys' "Surfin' Safari" and "Surfin' U.S.A.," Dick Dale's "Miserlou," and the Surfaris' "Wipe Out." The collection gives equal time to both instrumental and vocal surf bands, featuring Jan & Dean's "Surf City" and "Ride the Wild Surf" alongside the Chantays' "Pipeline," the Marketts' "Surfer's Stomp," and the Bel Airs' "Mr. Moto." Though it's not a comprehensive overview of either kind of surf rock, Surfin' Hits does collect some of the best examples of both styles, and while it doesn't offer many surprises, it's consistently entertaining. (Allmusic)

trax:
1. Surfin' Safari - The Beach Boys 2. Ride The Wild Surf - Jan & Dean 3. Wipe Out - The Surfaris 4. Pipeline - The Chantays 5. Misirlou - Dick Dale & The Del-Tones 6. Surfin' Bird - The Trashmen 7. Out Of Limits - The Marketts 8. Surf Rider - The Lively Ones 9. Surf City - Jan & Dean 10. Surfin' USA - The Beach Boys 11. Penetration - The Pyramids 12. Let's Go Trippin' - Dick Dale & The Del-Tones 13. Surfer Joe - The Surfaris 14. Mr. Moto - The Belairs 15. Boss - The Rumblers 16. Surfer's Stomp! - The Marketts 17. The Lonely Surfer - Jack Nitzsche 18. New York's A Lonely Town - The Trade Winds
...served by Gyro1966...

"NEW YORK & THE EAST COAST STATES 1943-1953" - Down Home Blues Classics

In the immediate post-war era the music was rapidly changing, R&B was on the rise and and older blues styles were falling out of fashion. Yet for awhile at least, there was still a market for rural down home blues as evidenced by the popularity of artists like Lightnin' Hopkins, John Lee Hooker and Smokey Hogg. Between 1944 and 1964, more than 600 record companies tried their hands at recording blues. Many failed or had limited success while others grew and became major players. This was “the last grand hurrah of local blues recorded for, and often by, local entrepreneurs, neither folkloric nor college oriented, but music for the culture from which it grew." This is the music the Boulevard Vintage label has been tapping into for the last few years with a series of well conceived multi-CD sets each based on a specific geographic region.
Down Home Blues Classics – New York & The East Coast 1948-1954, as the notes state, "emphasizes the contribution to post-war blues made by singers from the Southeast and the Mid Atlantic states where many gravitated to New York. These performers tended to prefer a lighter and more melodic style than those from the Mississippi Delta who subsequently brought the blues to Chicago and Detroit." The bulk of these recordings, in fact, were recorded in New York.
Many of the names here will be familiar to collectors including pre-war heavyweights like Blind Willie McTell, Curley Weaver and Brownie McGhee. McTell is still magnificent on these 1949 sides for Regal and Atlantic revisiting one of his finest numbers,"Love Changing Blues", plus the ragtime flavored "Kill It Kid" and "Talkin' To You Mama." McTell's long time partner Curley Weaver also transitioned into the post-war era in fine form as he demonstrates on a remake of the lovely "Some Rainy Day" and displays some deft ragtime guitar on "Trixie." We're also treated to a half dozen well chosen sides by Brownie McGhee with partner Sonny Terry sounding more spontaneous and livley then some of their later recordings which were geared to the white folk crowd. Indeed it's important again note that the music here was recorded before the folk blues boom; it was music created by and for African-Americans.
One of the pleasures of this series has been the spotlight on lesser known artists and this collection is chock full of fine long forgotten performers who are little known outside of the serious blues collector. We get generous helpings by artists such as Ralph Willis, Leroy Dallas, Carolina Slim, Gabriel Brown, Alex Seward, Dan Pickett among many others. Husky voiced Leroy Dallas cut only eight sides, four of which are included, and sounds exuberant in a jumping small band combo with Brownie McGhee and pianist Wilbert "Big Chief" Ellis on "Jump Little Children" and "I'm Goin Away." Ellis is one of the few piano players included and sounds marvelous on "Dices Dices" sporting his pounding barrelhouse piano. Ellis waxed seven sides between 1945-1947 and it's a shame none of his other numbers are included. He did cut a fine self titled record for Trix in 1977 that's well worth tracking down.
As Paul Garon notes, the influence of the popular Blind Boy Fuller looms large on many of these recordings. There's many raggy, Fuller influenced guitar players such as the wonderful Julius King who's entire four song output is here including the jaunty "I Want A Slice Of Your Pudding" replete with kazoo. The mysterious Boy Green cut only two sides in 1944, both included, and bears a strong Fuller influence particularly on the infectious rag "Play My Juke Box." Carolina Slim seems to draw influence from Fuller and Lightnin' Hopkins while rough voiced singer Robert Lee Westmoreland plays a National Resonator like Fuller on his two recorded sides, covering Hopkins on a slide driven version of "Hello Central, Give Me 209." Other fine guitar players include the shadowy Dennis McMillon who's deft finger picking on "Paper Wooden Daddy" is a standout and the remarkable Dan Pickett, a long time favorite of collectors, who synthesized a number of early guitar styles to create his own, and had an exciting, rapid fire vocal delivery showcased on an update of Buddy Moss' "Ride To A Funeral In A V-8."
As usual with Boulevard Vintage sound is quite good and the notes very informative. It should also be noted that last year JSP issued the 4-CD box Shake That Thing!: East Coast Blues 1935-1953, which can be seen as a companion set, and has the complete recordings of Gabriel Brown, Dan Pickett and Ralph Willis. Boulevard Vintage also has 4-CD sets of Chicago and Texas blues and most recently 2-CD sets focusing on Memphis & The South and California & The West Coast that are equally good. (Sunday Blues) http://sundayblues.org/archives/62

trax CD 1:
1. Tell Me Pretty Baby - Ralph Willis 2. Bad Hangover - Square Walton 3. Woke Up One Morning - Dennis McMillon 4. That's The Stuff (Watch Out) - Brownie McGhee 5. My Baby's Gone - Curley Weaver 6. Number Nine Blues - Champion Jack Dupree 7. Georgia Woman - Carolina Slim 8. Jump Little Children - Leroy Dallas 9. Me And My Baby - Alex Seward 10. One O'Clock Boogie - Julius King 11. Harlem Women - Hank Kilroy 12. Knockout Blues (Carolina Blues) - Brownie McGhee 13. Church Bell Blues - Ralph Willis 14. A & B Blues - Boy Green 15. Love Changing Blues - Blind Willie McTell 16. Hello Central, Give Me 209 - Robert Lee Westmoreland 17. Paper Wooden Daddy - Dennis McMillon 18. Good Boy - Alex Seward 19. Ride To A Funeral In A V-8 - Dan Pickett 20. Some Rainy Day - Curley Weaver 21. Side Walk Boogie - Carolina Slim 22. Greyhound Bus - Brownie McGhee 23. Stick With Me - Gabriel Brown 24. Talkin' To You Mama - Blind Willie McTell 25. Mississippi Boogie - Julius King 26. I'm Down Now, But I Won't Be Down Always - Leroy Dallas 27. Stumbling Block Blues - Champion Jack Dupree
trax CD 2:
1. Highway Blues (Walkin Down The Highway) - Champion Jack Dupree 2. Lazy Woman Blues - Ralph Willis 3. Tell Me Baby - Brownie McGhee 4. Don't Be Funny Baby - Doug Quattlebaum 5. In Love Blues - Alex Seward & Louis Hayes 6. You're Gonna Weep And Moan - Little David 7. Good Morning Blues - Leroy Dallas 8. West Kinney Street Blues - Skoodle-Dum-Doo & Sheffield 9. Goin' Back Home - Dennis McMillon 10. Kill It Kid - Blind Willie McTell 11. Good Looking Woman - Robert Lee Westmoreland 12. Cold Love - Gabriel Brown 13. Let's Do The Boogie Woogie - Marylin Scott 14. If You See My Lover - Julius King 15. Confusin' Blues - Brownie McGhee 16. Goodbye Blues - Ralph Willis 17. One More Drink - Carolina Slim 18. Trixie - Curley Weaver 19. You Got To Do Better - Dan Pickett 20. Drunk Again - Champion Jack Dupree 21. I'm Goin Away - Leroy Dallas 22. I Want A Slice Of Your Pudding - Julius King 23. Play My Juke Box - Boy Green 24. Dices Dices - Big Boy Ellis 25. Bottom Blues - Brownie McGhee 26. Crooked Wife Blues - Alex Seward & Louis Hayes 27. Shim Sham Shimmy - Champion Jack Dupree
...served by Gyro1966...

Saturday, November 24, 2012

"LEGENDS OF GUITAR" - Surf, Vol. 1

Simply the best instrumental surf music compilation ever produced. John Blair (author of The Illustrated Discography of Surf Music) has collected a CD full of pure gems. Excellent reverberated surf: Dick Dale, The Surfaris, The Chantays, The Lively Ones, The Ventures and many many more! A reverberated-guitar masterpiece...if you ever see one used, BUY IMMEDIATELY! (Amazon)
Presented by Guitar Player magazine, the Legends of Guitar series is doing a pretty good job at documenting some of the most important and exciting guitar work of the past few decades... None of the 18 tracks, all released from 1962-65, were sizable hits; most, in fact, are rare regional singles known only to dedicated surf collectors. There are a few recognizable names: Dick Dale, the Chantays ("Pipeline"), The Ventures, the Surfaris, and Bobby Fuller, but even these selections steer clear of those acts' hits in favor of overlooked cuts. There are also some surprising lead guitarists: future Turtle Al Nichol (as part of The Crossfires), Randy Holden (one of the best obscure U.S. '60s guitarists) ...and, most amazingly, Jim Messina playing on discs by early surf combos... (Allmusic)
A quintessential must-have for any surf music fan, this collection is the best representation, so far, of the broad spectrum of styles that made up this genre of music!! Everyone from Dick Dale, The Ventures, The Chantays to lesser known acts such as The Crossfires, The Astronauts, and more are laid out in this beautiful eighteen song album. It features some of the greatest early guitar work as well as some hard to find surf instrumental gems! (Surf Digest)

trax:
1. A Run For Life - Dick Dale 2. Surf Rider - The Lively Ones 3. Beyond - The Chantays 4. Latin'ia - The Sentinals 5. Baja - The Astronauts 6. Squad Car - Eddie & The Showmen 7. Tidal Wave - The Challengers 8. Tally Ho! - PJ & The Galaxies 9. Diamond Head - The Ventures 10. Soul Surfer - Johnny Fortune 11. Bombora - The (Original) Safaris 12. The Jester - Jim Messina & His Jesters 13. Gypsy Surfer - The Avantis 14. Our Favorite Martian - Bobby Fuller & The Fanatics 15. Bustin' Surfboards - The Tornadoes 16. Point Panic - The Surfaris 17. Mar Gaya - The Fender IV 18. Fiberglass Jungle - The Crossfires
...served by Gyro1966...

"As Good As It Gets ROCKABILLY"

This is a perfect introductory cd, for the novice rockabilly collector, all the big names are here, and most of their essential performances are present. Also those who already have a large collection of rockabilly should pick this cd up, just to have all these great songs handy on a convenient 2 cd set, heck I've got one set in my house and one in my 55 Chevy coupe. I listen to these all the time, even though I have hundreds of other r-billy cd's, this is affordable and essential. (The Rockabilly Digest)
If you already own "LOUD, FAST, AND OUT OF CONTROL" and "ROCKIN' BONES", the two essential and amazing box sets from Rhino, you still need this. There is some duplication of tracks (Especially obvious stuff by Carl Perkins, Elvis,Roy Orbison,etc.), but this excellent collection has 64 tracks and you don't own about 40 of them! There are top notch songs here that Rhino should be kicking themselves for leaving off their boxes. Out of control rockers like "Red-headed Mama" and "Sixteen Chicks"! Jewels like "Where the Rio de Rosa Flows" and "Okie's in the Pokie" and Janis Martin's "Drugstore Rock n Roll"! If you've been trying to track down Mickey Hawk's explosive "Bip Bop Boom", it's right here and worth the price of the CD. All the songs have cool guitar breaks, get this. (Amazon)

trax CD 1:
1. Blue Suede Shoes - Carl Perkins 2. That's All Right Mama (Live) - Elvis Presley 3. Be-Bop-A-Lula - Gene Vincent 4. Red Hot - Bob Luman 5. Let's Have A Party - Wanda Jackson 6. Hot Dog - Buck Owens 7. Ooby Dooby - Roy Orbison 8. Shirley Lee - Ricky Nelson 9. Twenty Flight Rock - Eddie Cochran 10. Party Doll - Buddy Knox 11. Move It On Over - Hank Williams 12. Sixteen Chicks - Joe Clay 13. Peepin' Eyes - Charlie Feathers 14. Flying Saucer Rock 'n' Roll Billy - Lee Riley 15. Rock 'n' Roll Ruby - Warren Smith 16. Get Rhythm - Johnny Cash 17. Baby Let's Play House (Live) - Elvis Presley 18. Boppin' The Blues - Carl Perkins 19. Woman Love - Gene Vincent 20. Hula Love - Buddy Knox 21. Mona Lisa - Carl Mann 22. Just A Little Too Much - Ricky Nelson 23. Rock Baby Rock It - Johnny Carroll 24. Domino - Roy Orbison 25. Rock Your Baby - Wanda Jackson 26. Ubangi Stomp - Warren Smith 27. I'm A Long Gone Daddy - Hank Williams 28. You Oughta See Grandma Rock - Skeets McDonald 29. Gonna Rock My Baby Tonight - Laura Lee Perkins 30. Slow Down Brother - Ferlin Husky 31. I'm Stickin' With You - Jimmy Bowen 32. Where The Rio De Rosa Flows - Jimmy Lloyd
trax CD 2:
1. Ducktail - Joe Clay 2. Boppin' High School Baby - Don Willis 3. Honey Bun - Larry Donn 4. Okie's In The Pokie - Jimmy Patton 5. Down On The Farm - Big Al Downiing 6. Black Cadillac - Joyce Green 7. You're The One That Done It - Thomas Wayne With The DeLons 8. Drinkin' Wine - Jumpin' Gene Simmons 9. Rock All Night - Glenn Honeycutt 10. Come On Little Mama - Ray Harris 11. Red Headed Woman - Sonny Burgess 12. Mad Man - Jimmy Wages 13. Slow Down - Jack Earls 14. You Drive Me Crazy - Ray Scott 15. Here Comes That Train - Eddie Bond 16. One Cup Of Coffee - Glen Glenn 17. Hip Shakin' Mama - Jackie Lee Cochran 18. Let's Elope Baby - Janis Martin 19. Gonna Rock 'n' Roll - Carl Mann 20. Fairlane Rock - Hayden Thompson 21. Bip Bop Boom - Mickey Hawks 22. Wild Wild Party - Charlie Feathers 23. Switchblade Sam - Jeff Daniels 24. Sunglasses After Dark - Dwight Pullen 25. Ain't That A Dilly - Marlon Grisham 26. Drugstore Rock 'n' Roll - Janis Martin 27. Johnny Valentine - Andy Anderson 28. Monkey And The Baboon - Eddie Bond 29. Let's Get Acquainted - Ray Stanley 30. Pink And Black Days - Narvel Felts 31. She's Mine - Johnnie Strickland 32. You're Gone Baby - Jimmy Lloyd
...served by Gyro1966...

Friday, November 23, 2012

The Natural Kicks "Natural Kicks" 2005

From Memphis, TN, United States
Jack Yarber, also known by his stage name, 'Jack Oblivian', is an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist based in Memphis, Tennessee. He was a founding member of the garage-bands The Compulsive Gamblers, and The Oblivans and currently fronts Jack O & the Tennessee Tearjerkers. Yarber has also been a member, or contributed to: The End, Johnny Vomit & The Dry Heaves, Andre Williams, The Knaughty Knights, South Filthy, The Cool Jerks, The Limes, '68 Comeback, King Louie & His Loose Diamonds, Greg Oblivian & the Tip Tops, Jack Oblivian & The Cigarillos, The Natural Kicks and Tav Falco's Panther Burns. - wiki

Credits:
Bass, Vocals – Ilene Markell / Drums, Tambourine, Vocals – Jack Yarber / Guitar, Harmonica, Vocals – Ron Franklin

trax:
01 Leiden Girl 02 Leavin' Here 03 Pontiac 04 C'mon Sarah (Let's Shack Up Again) 05 Killing Floor 06 I Thought You Were Somebody Else 07 Spankcity, Tennessee 08 I'm Not Like Everybody Else 09 Talk To Me 10 Dark Night, Cold Ground

"LEGENDS OF GUITAR" - Electric Blues, Vol. 2

Companion volume to Vol. 1 with excellent selections from B.B. King, Albert Collins, Eric Clapton, Michael Bloomfield, Magic Sam, Buddy Guy and a dozen others. (Cub Koda, Allmusic)
trax:
1. Bear Cat (The Answer to "Hound Dog") ( Joe Hill Louis, gtr.) - Rufus "Hound Dog" Thomas, Jr. 2. Just Like A Woman (Rockin' Twist) - B.B. King 3. Texas (Mike Bloomfield, gtr.) - The Electric Flag 4. Another Kinda Love (Peter Green, gtr.) - John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers 5. Boogie Chillen - John Lee Hooker 6. Lookin' Good - Magic Sam 7. Carry My Business On (Little Milton Cambell, gtr.) - Houston Boines 8. Going Down - Freddie King 9. Double Crossing Time (Eric Clapton, gtr.) - John Mayall w/Eric Clapton 10. Long Distance Call - Muddy Waters 11. Reconsider Baby - Lowell Fulson 12. Okie Dokie Stomp - Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown 13. Lucy Mae Blues - Frankie Lee Sims 14. Playgirl - Snooks Eaglin 15. Fallin' Rain (Luther Tucker, Gtr.) - James Cotton Blues Band 16. Worried About My Baby (Willie Johnson, Gtr.) - Howlin' Wolf 17. Vietcong Blues (Buddy Guy, Gtr.) - Junior Wells Chicago Blues Band 18. Frosty - Albert Collins
...served by Gyro1966...

"ULTRA RARE HILLBILLY BOOGIE" Vol 2

Howdy Gyro1966! Here is the volume 2 as it was downloaded at RockHall few years ago... Little scans and .ogg files... All the best - Uncle Gil
trax:
01. Bad Luck Comes My Way - Eddy Dugosh 02. That's My Baby's Kisses - Kenny Lee 03. Checkbook Baby - Milt Dickey 04. Rompin' Stompin' Good Time - Bob Blum 05. Cold Cold Cornbread - Rod Morris 06. Trifflin' Heart - Shorty Ashburn 07. Ole Jackhammer Blues - Jimmy Lawson 08. Louisiana Swing - Bud Hobbs 09. Gettin' Even - Cliff Sheppard 10. Hire A Mockingbird - Harold Crosby 11. Play My Boogie - Bill Mack 12. Rockin' Baby - Gene Henslee 13. I'm Not Free - The Country Playboys 14. Lie To Me Baby - Johnny Tyler 15. Real Gone Jive - The Nettles Sisters 16. I Wish I Had A Penny - Singing Cherokee 17. Mr. Cupid - Jack Hammons 18. Bounce Baby Bounce - Stoney Calhoun 19. Honest To Goodness Baby - Bill & Carroll 20. Perfect Woman - Hardrock Gunther 21. I Love Blue Eyes - Glenn Kirby 22. Thank's To You - Bob Blum 23. You Can't Play In My Playhouse - Patsy Elshire 24. That'll Be Love - Glenn Reeves 25. Be On The Lookout - Billy Luke 26. Birthday Cake - Randy Hughes 27. Hi-Pardner - Hi-Wayne & Hall 28. Hi-Geared Daddy - Jimmy Walker 29. I Learned A Lot From You - Herb Tucker
...served by Uncle Gil and Niall...

Thursday, November 22, 2012

"LEGENDS OF GUITAR" - Electric Blues, Vol. 1

Excellent 17 track CD compilation featuring definitive sides by Muddy Waters, Otis Rush, Hound Dog Taylor, Albert King, Eddie Taylor and many more. (Cub Koda, Allmusic)
trax:
1. Rollin' and Tumblin' Pt 1 - Muddy Waters 2. All Your Love (I Miss Loving) - Otis Rush 3. You Done Lost Your Good Thing Now - B.B. King 4. Strollin' with Bones - T-Bone Walker 5. Stormy Monday Blues (Wayne Bennett) - Bobby "Blue" Bland 6. 300 Pounds Of Joy (Hubert Sumlin) - Howlin' Wolf 7. Find My Baby - Eddie Taylor 8. Texas Hop - Pee Wee Crayton 9. Love My Baby (Floyd Murphy) - Little Junior's Blue Flames 10. Personal Manager - Albert King 11. Dust My Blues - Elmore James 12. The Story Of My Life - Guitar Slim 13. Help Me (Harvey Mandel) - Charlie Musselwhite 14. Mean Town Blues - Johnny Winter 15. Telll Me Pretty Mama - Lightnin' Hopkins 16. The Hucklebuck - Earl Hooker 17. See Me In The Evening - Hound Dog Taylor
...served by Gyro1966...

"ULTRA RARE HILLBILLY BOOGIE" Vol 1

Fantastic collection of hillbilly boogie!
trax:
1. Hot Shot - Bob Luce & The Stardusters 2. Baby, I'm ready - Carl Smith & The Tunesmiths 3. I'm gonna anchor my heart - Gayle Griffith w/The L.M.C Trio 4. Hep Cat Baby - Eddy Arnold 5. Ambridge Boogie - Dale Brooks & The Country Caravans 6. It Took An Older woman - Jimmy Dawson 7. My Baby doll - Cliff Waldon & The Westernaires 8. Mean Mean Man - Bud Hobbs & His Trail Herders 9. Oklahoma Boogie - Louie Bashell & His Silk Umbrella Orchestra 10. Little Boy Blue - Sonny Defreest & His Western Rythm Boys 11. Go Boy Go - Wade Holmes 12. Passing Fancy - Kenny Brown & The Arkansas Ramblers 13. Beaten Out The Boogie - Lee Bell 14. Back Up Buddy - Carl Smith 15. It's Music She Says - Lucky Wray 16. Idaho Red - Wade Ray 17. You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet - Curtis Gordon 18. Sugar Plum Boogie - Frank Simon "The West Virginia Country Boy" 19. It Must Be Love - Margie Martin 20. Just Can't Live That Fast (Anymore) - Lefty Frizzel 21. Carroll Country Boogie - The Carroll Country Boys 22. I'm A Little Red Caboose - Rose Maddox 23. It's More Fun That Way - Roy Hogsed 24. Now Ain't That Love - Eddie Dean 25. Honey Honey Mine - Hal Lone Pine & His Mountaineers 26. No More Nothing - Zeb Turner 27. Burn That Candle - Charline Arthur 28. I Wish I Wuz - Roy Hogsed 29. Jukebox Play for Me - The Cook Brothers 30. One Step Ahead - Bob Hepler
...served by Gyro1966...

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

The Le Roi Brothers - Rex Club, Paris, France Nov 12th 1985

This Austin, TX, rock & roll band was formed in 1981. One of the longest-lasting bands on the eclectic Austin scene, the original lineup consisted of drummer Mike Buck (founding member of The Fabulous Thunderbirds), guitarist Don Leady (later forming Tail Gators), guitarist Steve Doerr, and bassist Alex Napier (now a member of The Mystic Knights). Over the years, various members have included Joe Doerr (Hand of Glory), Jackie Newhouse, Sarah Brown, Evan Johns (see separate entry), and current members guitarist Rick "Caspar" Rawls and bassist Pat Collins. The core of the band has always centered around Buck's solid drumming (probably the finest drummer Texas has to offer) and Steve Doerr's rocking vocals and songwriting, while the band as a whole can capably take on anything from blues to rockabilly to cajun to country to the grungiest of garage rock & roll. Consistent winners of the Best Roots Rock Band award in the Austin Chronicle's reader's poll, the band has retained a loyal following both here and abroad. - Cub Koda, Rovi

trax:
01 I Am A Roadrunner 02 Alligator Man 03 ??? 04 ??? 05 Wicked Prayer 06 I Can't Be Satisfied 07 Scratch You 08 Hey Baby 09 Dance With Me Tonight 10 Check This Action 11 Ain't I'm a Dog 12 Pretty Lights of Town 13 Instrumental 14 The Back Door 15 ??? 16 Lucky Lucke Me 17 Maybe The Little Baby 18 Are You With Me Baby (Say Yeah) 19 -Crowd- 20 Hideaway 21 Elvis In The Army 22 Travelin'Band
...served by Feelgood... Thanks to "shepherd" for sharing.

THE PERSUASIONS "Right Around The Corner" (1994)

With Right Around the Corner, the Persuasions continue their trademark a cappella vocal stylings reminiscent of a 1950s New York street corner. Yet, through their choice of material and interpretation, the group retains a sense of freshness and vitality absent in many other revivalist groups. Though a song such as "Oh, Heavenly Salvation" is an enjoyable, yet standard, choice, covering Frank Zappa's "Lucille Has Messed My Mind Up" or reworking the overt sexuality of "Little Red Rooster" until it is almost a spiritual, shows just how modern and irreverent the Persuasions can be. (Allmusic)
This is honest, no-frills, straight-ahead a cappella. The Persuasions shunned excess studio production and overdubbing on "Right Around The Corner," and just hit the tunes live in studio. The results: sounds like you're standing on a streetcorner with them. I confess: I'm a big fan of the group. I'm prejudiced. I like everything they do, for one reason or another. But I have a real soft spot for this record, not only for the great material (The Five Royales, Sam Cooke, Kurt Weill, Frank Zappa), but for the simplicity of the production. The Persuasions here rely only on their voices, and it's enough. No vocal acrobatics or pyrotechnics, or studio mix tricks---just great, pedal-to-the-metal singing. Jerry Lawson and Joe Russell really shine on this record, as does the five-fathoms-deep tone of Jimmy Hayes on "My Jug and I." They've never done another album quite like "Right Around The Corner." Highly recommended. (Amazon)
trax:
01 Don't Leave Me Here To Cry 02 Little Red Rooster 03 The Good Ol' Days 04 That's Heaven To Me 05 Right Around The Corner 06 I'm With You 07 I Could Love You If You Let Me 08 Come On And Save Me 09 My Jug And I 10 Oh, Heavenly Salvation 11 Lucille Has Messed My Mind Up 12 I Want To (Do Everything For You) 13 Love Is All Around
...served by Gyro1966...

"LEGENDS OF GUITAR" - Country, Vol. 2

This second volume in the country part of this series rounds up 18 hot examples of hot hillbilly pickin'. Kicking off with Jimmy Bryant amazing take on "Little Rock Getaway," the set also includes legendary moments from Chet Atkins, Jerry Byrd, James Burton and Ralph Mooney, Clarence White, Merle Travis, Roy Clark, and Jerry Reed. Heading up the old school entries are Johnny Bush, Junior Barnard with Bob Wills, Hank Garland, Grady Martin, and a delightful duet between Chet Atkins and Les Paul. Like its preceding volume, this is one fine set of classic moments on guitar. (Cub Koda, Allmusic)
Legends Of Guitar is no misnomer. This is a desperately fine compilation that must rank as one of the best for its genre. Roy Clark, Albert Lee, James Bryant, et al, and the always amazing Jerry Reed on "Claw" round out a spirited, fun and plucky rock and roll, country/blues set that will have you tappin' and a snappin' in no time. Chet Atkins' vocal duet with Les Paul on "Give My Love to Nell" lulls, though perhaps merely serves as the valley next to so many towering tunes. "Six Days on the Road" (D. Dudley) makes you wish this cd didn't end, or otherwise pine for a Peterbilt! These guys are serious professionals. A must-have for music afficionados. (Amazon)

trax:
1. Little Rock Getaway - Jimmy Bryant 2. Wildwood Flower - The Carter Family 3. Chinatown, My Chinatown - Chet Atkins & His Galloping Guitar 4. Steelin' the Blues - Jerry Byrd & The String Dusters 5. Corn Pickin' - James Burton & Ralph Mooney 6. Farewell Blues - Clarence White & The Kentucky Colonels 7. Blue Smoke - Merle Travis 8. Dented Fender - Roy Clark 9. The Claw - Jerry Reed 10. Home in San Antone - Johnny Bush 11. Me and My Guitar - Tony Rice 12. Country Boy - Albert Lee 13. Barnard Blues - Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys 14. Seventh and Union - Hank Garland 15. Give My Love to Nell - Chet Atkins & Les Paul 16. Out Of Business - "Little" Jimmy Dickens 17. Six Days On The Road - Dave Dudley 18. Pork Chop Stomp - Grady Martin & His Winging Strings
...served by Gyro1966...

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

PROFESSOR LONGHAIR "Crawfish Fiesta" (1980)

Probably the best of all the many albums Longhair waxed during his comeback. A tremendously tight combo featuring three horns and Dr. John on guitar delightfully back the Professor every step of the way as he recasts Solomon Burke's "Cry to Me" and Fats Domino's "Whole Lotta Loving" in his own indelible image and roars, yodels, and whistles out wonderful remakes of his own oldies "Big Chief" and "Bald Head." (Bill Dahl, Allmusic)
trax:
01 Big Chief 02 Her Mind Is Gone 03 Something On Your Mind 04 You're Driving Me Crazy 05 Red Beans 06 Willie Fugal's Blues 07 It's My Fault, Darling 08 In The Wee Wee Hours 09 Cry To Me 10 Bald Head 11 Whole Lotta Loving 12 Crawfish Fiesta
...served by Gyro1966...

"LEGENDS OF GUITAR" - Country, Vol. 1

The guitar’s evolution from rhythm to lead was paralleled by the increasing renown of its country players. But even with the guitar’s lead role, Nashville’s system often subordinated the stardom of pickers to the vocalists (or band leaders) on whose records they performed. Guitar Player’s 1990 collection highlights seventeen stellar guitar performances, ranging from hotshot slingers like Joe Maphis whose instrumentals serve up his flying fingers front-and-center, to brilliant players like Grady Martin, whose Mexicali-flavored picking serves as a duet to Marty Robbins’ vocal on "El Paso."
The range of musical and guitar playing styles presented here is astonishing. Maphis and his disciple Larry Collins flat pick up a storm in "Hurricane." Jimmy Bryant & Speedy West duel with guitar and steel on "The Night Rider." Earl "Joaquin" Murphey provides swinging steel in Spade Cooley’s big-band. Merle Travis shows off his acoustic fingerpicking talents (as opposed to the honky-tonk he’s more commonly known for) on "Cannon Ball Stomp," and Chet Atkins (backed by Homer and Jethro) shows off his variation of Travis’ style on "Galloping on the Guitar." Leon McAuliffe (of Bob Wills’ Texas Playboys) and Leon Rhodes (of Ernest Tubb’s Texas Troubadours) shine on a pair of instrumentals.
Carl Perkins, remembered today mostly for his rockabilly sides demonstrates his exceptional country skills on "Tennessee," an early side waxed for Sun. Later samplings include the chiming 12-string of Roger McGuinn supporting the picking of Clarence White on the Byrds’ "Nashville West," and Reggie Young’s 1981 work on Merle Haggard’s loping "I Think I’ll Just Stay Here and Drink." Additional highlights include Bud Isaacs watershed pedal steel appearance on Webb Pierce’s "Slowly" and Doc Watson’s folk-country fingerpicked cover of John D. Loudermilk’s "Windy and Warm." The inclusion of longtime Sons of the Pioneers guitarist Roy Lanham’s bebop playing on "Lost Weekend," is a fine, though not particularly relevant to the theme of the collection - too bad a Pioneer’s side couldn’t be included. The disc’s lack of chronological sequencing is a bit puzzling. Audio quality is generally excellent (with a few pops and crackles on some of the earlier transcription work), and Rich Kienzle’s extensive liner notes are thorough and engaging. (Amazon)

trax:
1. Hurricane - Joe Maphis & Larry Collins 2. The Night Rider - Speedy West & Jimmy Bryant 3. El Paso - Marty Robbins 4. Oklahoma Stomp - Spade Cooley & His Orchestra 5. Cannon Ball Stomp - Merle Travis 6. Lost Weekend - Roy Lanham 7. Cheesy Breeze - Milton Brown & His Musical Brownies 8. Galloping On The Guitar - Chet Atkins 9. Twin Guitar Special - Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys 10. Honey Fingers - Texas Troubadours Featuring Leon Rhodes 11. Guitar Boogie - Arthur Smith & His Crackerjacks 12. Sugarfoot Rag - Hank "Sugarfoot" Garland 13. Tennessee - Carl Perkins 14. I Think I'll Just Stay Here And Drink - Merle Haggard 15. Slowly - Webb Pierce 16. Windy And Warm - Doc Watson 17. Nashville West - The Byrds
...served by Gyro1966...

Monday, November 19, 2012

"BOOGIE WOOGIE GOODIES" - Rhythm 'N' Blues

Fine box set collection of 100 rhythm 'n' blues classics!
trax CD 1:
1. Good Boogie Googie - Johnny Otis 2. Little Joe's Boogie - Milton Willis 3. All States Boogie - Ivory Joe Hunter 4. Bump's Boogie - Bumps Myers & The King Porter Orchestra 5. Elevator Boogie - Bill Johnson 6. Moving On Out - Lightnin' Hopkins 7. Caldonia Boogie - Louis Jordan 8. Cherokee Boogie - Bullmoose Jackson 9. Save Me A Boogie - Marvin Johnson 10. Big Bob's Boogie - Big Bob Dougherty & the Kampus Cats 11. Good Jax Boogie - Dave Bartholomew 12. B.B. Boogie - B.B. King 13. Mardi Gras Boogie - Big Joe Turner 14. Bride And Groom Boogie - Tiny Bradshaw 15. Shufflin' Boogie - George Jenkins 16. Disc Jockey Boogie - Hal Singer 17. Got The Boogie Woogie Blues - Willie Johnson 18. Boogie Woogie - Professor Longhair 19. Way Down Boogie - Harold Burrage 20. Wynonie's Boogie - Wynonie Harris 21. Little Girl's Boogie - Bob Gaddy 22. Married Woman's Boogie - Billy Wright 23. Boogie Woogie Mama - Tommy Ridgley 24. Roomin' House Boogie - Amos Milburn 25. Too Much Boogie - Doc Pomus
trax CD 2:
1. Mr.Freddie's Boogie - Freddie Mitchell 2. Boogie's The Thing - George Miller & His Mid-Driffs 3. Walkin' The Boogie - Roosevelt Sykes 4. Strange Woman's Boogie - Crown Prince Waterford 5. Barnyard Boogie - Louis Jordan 6. M.F.T. Boogie - Ace Harris 7. Cadillac Boogie - Jimmy Liggins 8. Boogie Woogie Santa Claus - Mabel Scott 9. Boogie Woogie Woman - B.B. King 10. Milton's Boogie - Roy Millton 11. Rock Boogie - Jim Wynn 12. Bradshaw Boogie - Tiny Bradshaw 13. Bee's Boogie - Smiley Lewis 14. Bobbie Town Boogie - Lee Brown 15. T.J. Boogie - T.J. Fowler 16. Crown Prince Boogie - Jay McShann 17. Early Dawn Boogie - Tommy Ridgley 18. Chuck-A-Boogie - Johnny Griffin 19. Alimony Boogie - Johnny Otis 20. Roomin' House Boogie - Cab Calloway 21. Rock Bertha, Rock - Big Bertha Henderson 22. Numbers Boogie - Sugar Chile Robinson 23. Boogie Woogie Baby - Big Joe Turner 24. Rockin' Boogie - Joe Lutcher 25. Square Dance Boogie - Amos Milburn
trax CD 3:
1. Rub-A-Little Boogie - Champion Jack Dupree 2. Boogin' In The Rain - Ivory Joe Hunter 3. T-Bone Boogie - T-Bone Walker 4. Douglas Boogie - Tommy Douglas 5. Mischievous Boogie - Big Mama Thornton 6. Roadhouse Boogie - Big Jay McNeely 7. Jukebox Boogie Woogie Chick - Spookum Russell 8. My Baby's Booging - Amos Milburn 9. Little Richard's Boogie - Little Richard 10. Cherokee Boogie - Joe Thomas 11. Shotgun Boogie - Cecil Gant 12. Choo Choo Ch' Boogie - Louis Jordan 13. Lover's Lane Boogie - Johnny Otis 14. Bobby's Boogie - Morris Lane 15. Boogie At Midnight - Roy Brown 16. Doby's Boogie - Freddie Mitchell 17. Cold Blooded Boogie - Jim Wynn 18. Blue Light Boogie - Louis Jordan 19. Marihuana Boogie - Lalo Guerrero 20. Manneken Piss Boogie - Taps Miller 21. Round House Boogie - Pep Brown Orch w/Elmore James 22. Boogie Boo - Jimmy Maddin 23. Frantic Boogie - Jack McVea 24. Kissin' Bug Boogie - Crown Prince Waterford 25. Lucky Lindy Boogie - Joe Lutcher
trax CD 4:
1. Dig This Boogie - Wynonie Harris 2. Screamin' Boogie - Dick Davis 3. Leona's Boogie - Duke Henderson 4. Parrot Bar Boogie - Tina Dixon 5. Roy Brown Boogie - Roy Brown 6. Chicken Shack Boogie - Amos Milburn 7. Nite Life Boogie - Jimmy Liggins 8. Fishtruck Boogie - Kitty Kaye & The Cats 9. Fowler's Boogie - T.J. Fowler 10. Pine Top's Boogie - Louis Jordan 11. Blues'n' Boogie - Roosevelt Sykes 12. Boogie Woogie Choo Choo Train - Mabel Scott 13. Boogie Woogie Blues - Clarence Samuels 14. Slim Gaillard's Boogie - Slim Gaillard 15. Housewarmin' Boogie - Sticks McGhee 16. Jockey Jack Boogie - Johnny Wicks 17. I Got Your Boogie - Sarah "Fatwoman" Dean 18. Billy's Boogie Blues - Billy Wright 19. Boogie Woogie On A Saturday Night - Steve Gibson & The Red Caps 20. Dripper's Boogie - Joe Liggins 21. Pale Dry Boogie - Part 1 - Clarence Brown 22. Pale Dry Boogie - Part 2 - Clarence Brown 23. Bouncing Ball Boogie - Sugar Chile Robinson 24. Sax-Ony Boogie - Sax Man Brown Feat. Elmore James 25. Shotgun Boogie - Eddie Mack
...served by Gyro1966...

Sunday, November 18, 2012

"Make it Stop!" - The Most of Ross Johnson 2007

A career retrospective from committed anti-careerist ROSS JOHNSON! Legendary nutsoid drummer for TAV FALCO's PANTHER BURNS notably heard ranting on ALEX CHILTON's Like Flies On Sherbert album (that's him on Baron Of Love Pt 2!). Includes his Sugar Ditch recordings Adolescent Music Fantasy stuff with JEFF EVANS tracks with REM's PETER BUCK in OUR FAVORITE BAND (dig My Slobbering Decline and Rockabilly Monkey-Faced Girl!) tracks with the YOUNG SENIORS RON FRANKLIN and more more more! Packaged with an illustrated 16-page booklet as well with essays from Ross It Came From Memphis' ROBERT GORDON JOHN FLOYD and ANDRIA LISLE. - amazon
As you might expect from someone who's played drums with Panther Burns and on Alex Chilton's Like Flies on Sherbert album, Ross Johnson offers the kind of trashy, swampy, nearly amateurish roots rock that seems indigenous to this segment of the Memphis underground. Make It Stop! The Most of Ross Johnson is a sort of career overview of a maverick who's eccentric even by the standards of this subterranean scene. Drawing from about three decades' worth of recordings preceding this 2008 release, it includes solo outings; tracks which he recorded as part of the bands Adolescent Music Fantasy, Our Favorite Band, and Young Seniors, and other miscellaneous collaborations, including a cut from the aforementioned Like Flies on Sherbert. This kind of stuff has its charm when done just right. But as essayed by Johnson's atonal sing-speak, often matching unpleasant stream of consciousness rants to a vague bluesy rock rumble, it verges on outsider music. He's hardly unaware of his shortcomings, describing his vocals as "some sort of spoken word yelp" in his own liner notes for this CD, as well as calling some of the tracks "unlistenable pieces" and adding, "The main feeling I have when I listen back to these pieces (I won't call them songs) is discomfort. I loved recording them, but can't listen to them without cringing and feeling ashamed." If nothing else, those confessions are certainly a relief to reviewers who feel reluctant to trash a record for fear of hurting the artist's feelings. And there will indeed be some such reviews of this particular platter, which, to be brutal -- and Johnson doesn't seem to expect anything less -- lives up to his anti-buildup in every way. Fitfully amusing, at times referencing old '60s pop and rock hits, it's still for the most part a tough, unamusing listen, better experienced live by understanding friends than promoted to the world at large as some sort of piece of art. Which this isn't, though it might have some folkloric value to future generations as a document of just what sort of foolishness the Memphis underground was capable of at its most unfiltered and self-indulgent. - by Richie Unterberger

trax:
1. Baron of Love, Pt. 2 - Alex Chilton 2. Wet Bar - Ross Johnson 3. Wetter and Hotter - Ross Johnson 4. My Slobbering Decline - OFB 5. Last Date - OFB 6. Rockabilly Monkey-Faced Girl - OFB 7. Naked Party - Gibson Bros. 8. It Never Happened - Ross Johnson 9. Nudist Camp - Ross Johnson 10. Mr. Blue (Cut your Head on X-Mas) - AMF 11. A Southern Sissy - AMF 12. Theme From 'a Summer Place' - Ross Johnson 13. Don't Let the Sun Catch you Crying - AMF 14. When the Saints Go Marchin' in Dixie - Ross Johnson 15. Keep on Dancing - Young Seniors 16. If you Ever Get it Once - Young Seniors 17. Senior Stroll - Young Seniors 18. Pretty Flamingo - Young Seniors 19. Shall We Pop-A-Top? - Ross Johnson 20. You Talk I Listen (Goin' to the Get High Shack) - Ron Franklin 21. Hash House Pallor - Young Seniors 22. Farmer John Monsieur - Jeffrey Evans 23. My Mission23 - Ross Johnson 24. Signify - Ross Johnson

"NASTY RHYTHM 'N' BLUES" (1945-1954)

Great 100 song collection of risqué and double-entendre rhythm and blues from 1945-1954. Wild stuff!
trax CD 1:
1. Butcher Pete, part I - Roy Brown 2. Butcher Pete, part II - Roy Brown 3. Sexy Ways - Hank Ballard & The Midnighters 4. Daddy Rollin' Stone - Otis Blackwell 5. My Baby Keeps Rollin' - Annisteen Allen 6. Let's Turn'em On Tonight - Shep Tingle 7. Sittin' On It All The Time - Wynonie Harris 8. Butter For My Roll - Jim Wynn 9. So Good To My Baby - Big Maybelle 10. Sure Cure For The Blues - The Four Jacks 11. My Baby Takes All Of Me - The Five Royales 12. I Wanna Make Love ToYou - Jimmy McCracklin 13. Ain't Nothin' Shakin' - Johnny Otis 14. Your Daddy's Doggin' Around - Todd Rhodes 15. I Know How To Do It - Dinah Washington 16. Vooey, Vooey Vay - Sugar Chile Robinson 17. Move Your Hand, Baby - Crown Prince Waterford 18. Wailin' Daddy - Mabel Scott 19. Squeeze Me - Milt Trenier 20. Real Gone Lover - Smiley Lewis 21. Oh John - Bull Moose Jackson 22. Mr. Low Love - Terry Timmons 23. How About Rocking With Me - Piney Brown 24. Sausage Rock - Doc Sausage 25. My Ding-A-Ling - Dave Bartholomew
trax CD 2:
1. Work With Me Annie - Hank Ballard & The Midnighters 2. Annie Had A Baby - Hank Ballard & The Midnighters 3. Annie's Aunt Fannie - Hank Ballard & The Midnighters 4. So Many Ways - Varetta Dillard 5. Fat Meat - Jim Wynn 6. Mercenary Papa - Cootie Williams 7. Lollypop Mama - Wynonie Harris 8. Ridin' In The Moonlight - Howlin' Wolf 9. Ride, Daddy, Ride - Fats Noel 10. My Baby Likes To Shuffle - Alonzo Scales 11. Daddy Daddy - Ruth Brown 12. Mighty Mighty Man - Roy Brown 13. My Gal's A Jockey - Big Joe Turner 14. We're Gonna Rock - Cecil Gant 15. Mr. Fine - Mabel Scott 16. Lemon Squeezer - Jimmy Wilson 17. The Deacon Moves In - Little Esther 18. We're Gonna Ball This Mornin' - Sammy Cotton 19. I Can't Stop It - Jimmy Liggins 20. Ooh Rockin' Daddy - The Moonglows 21. You're So Fine - Little Walter 22. Long Lean Daddy - Sarah Dean 23. Kissin' Bug Boogie - Crown Prince Waterford 24. Playful Baby - Wynonie Harris 25. Louisiana Women - Joe Liggins
trax CD 3:
1. Sixty Minute Man - Billy Ward & The Dominoes 2. Can't Do Sixty No More - Billy Ward & The Dominoes 3. Daddy On My Mind - Candy Rivers 4. Hey Miss Bertha - Ed Baron 5. Rock Me, Daddy - Laurie Tate 6. Working With My Baby - Calvin Boze 7. Lotsa Poppa - Jimmy Rushing 8. Ride Jockey, Ride - The Lamplighters 9. My Country Man - Big Maybelle 10. Slow Down, Baby - Bob Gaddy 11. Chee Koo Baby - Lloyd Price 12. I Got Your Boogie - Sarah Dean 13. Lovin' Machine - Wynonie Harris 14. She Sets My Soul On Fire - Sonny Parker 15. That's What The Good Book Says - Bobby Nunn 16. Why Don't You Hall Off And Love Me - Bull Moose Jackson 17. Hidin' In The Sticks - Paula Watson 18. Big Fat Mama - Roy Milton 19. The Walkin' Blues - Fluffy Hunter 20. New Way Of Lovin' - Billy Wright 21. I Got Love For Sale - Big Joe Turner 22. Big 10-Inch Record - Bull Moose Jackson 23. Mercy Mr. Percy - Varetta Dillard 24. All Shook Out - Mooah 25. Wasn't That Good - Wynonie Harris
trax CD 4:
1. Kissin' Boogie - Beverly Wright 2. I Ain't Mad At You - Bobby "Mr. Blues" Merrell 3. Lollypop Mama - Roy Brown 4. She Lost Her Re-Bop - Annisteen Allen 5. Natural Born Lover - King Perry & His Pied Pipers 6. Fine Brown Frame - Nellie Lutcher 7. Shake It Up And Go - B.B. King 8. I Got A Secret - Buddy & Claudia Griffin 9. It Ain't The Meat - The Swallows 10. Rockin' All Day - Jimmy McCracklin 11. Keep On Churnin' (Till The Butter Comes) - Wynonie Harris 12. Daddy Daddy - Ruth Brown 13. When A Woman Loves Her Juice - Eddie Vinson 14. hey Little Girl - The Treniers 15. He's The Best In The Business - Terry Timmons 16. I Like It Like That - The Five Royales 17. I Want A Bowlegged Woman - Bull Moose Jackson 18. I Love My Baby - H-Bomb Ferguson 19. Mountain Oysters - Eddie Harris 20. Little Girl Sing Ding - Dave Bartholomew 21. I Love To Ride - Paula Watson 22. Rock With It, Baby - Jimmy Preston & Burnetta Evans 23. Good Rockin' Man - Roy Brown 24. All She Wants To Do Is Rock - Wynonie Harris 25. The Last Of The Good Rocking Men - The Four Jacks
...served by Gyro1966...

Saturday, November 17, 2012

The Iguanas "Plastic Silver 9 Volt Heart" 2003

"I have been an iguanas fan since 1993. I have all of their albums, and I believe this might be their best album yet! I was very excited see that the new record was coming out. Although, as said in the reviews, this is a departure from previous albums, but certainly not a radical departure. It still has that signiture tex-mex sound. This is an absolutly delightful listen from start to finish. I highly reccomend this album." - amazon
Easy comparisons to Los Lobos have long dogged New Orleans' own cross-cultural pot-stirrers, the Iguanas. But the band's return from a four-year recording respite here cuts a subtle, distinctive musical swath all its own, culminating in what's arguably the most rewarding album of their career. While informed on "Machete y Maiz," the evocative "Un Avion," and the haunting slinkiness of "Abandonado" by the same rich conjunto / Tex-Mex / Chicano R&B influences as their East L.A. soulmates, the band's creative axis of vocalists Rod Hodges and Joe Cabral and bassist Rene Coman (powered by drummer Doug Garrison and Derek Huston on sax) has inspired anything but a predictable artistic orbit here. Anchored by the loping, sunny pop daydream "Yesterday" and the title track's gently optimistic radio paean (a collaboration between Hodges and Dave Alvin), the band simmers zydeco, blues, and smart pop hooks into a mix that veers from the sly playfulness of "Sugarcane," "Mexican Candy," and the tragi-comic squalor of "The Liquor Dance" to more traditional party-hearty rhythms of "Flame On" and "Zacatecas." Its production is as subtle and spacious as its evocative songs, a languorous hour of music that evokes the dappled sunlight and fevered grooves of a half-dozen cultures. - Jerry McCulley
trax:
01 Yesterday 02 Machete Y Maiz 03 Mexican Candy 04 Flame On 05 9 Volt Heart 06 Sugar Cane 07 Zacatecas 08 The First Kiss Is Free 09 I Dig You 10 The Liquor Dance 11 Abandonado 12 Un Avion 13 Goodbye Again 14 bonus track

"ROCK THE JOINT" The Roots & Branches Of Rock 'n' Roll

Cool 54 song collection of rockin' R&B, Rockabilly and Blues.
trax CD 1:
1. Rock The Joint - Bill Haley & The Comets 2. House Of Blue Lights - Ella Mae Morse & Freddie Slack 3. Bim Bam Boom - The El Dorados 4. No.9 Train - Tarheel Slim 5. Leroy - Jack Scott 6. Stranded In The Jungle - The Cadets 7. Jump Children (Vooit Vooit) - The Flamingos 8. Mudd - Roy Montrell 9. Feelin' Bad - Little Junior's Blue Flames 10. Lewis Boogie - Jerry Lee Lewis 11. Break Up - Charlie Rich 12. Baby (You've Got What It Takes) - Brook Benton & Dinah Washington 13. Glad All Over - Carl Perkins 14. The Owl Sees You - The Humdingers aka The Showmen 15. Flip, Flop And Bop - Bill Justis 16. I'm So Happy (Tra-La-La-La-La-La) - Lewis Lymon & The Teenchords 17. Church Bells May Ring - The Willows 18. Lovey Dovey, Baby Be Mine - The Spaniels
trax CD 2:
1. Shake Baby Shake - Champion Jack Dupree 2. Rocket 88 - Bill Haley & The Comets 3. Ugly Woman - Johhny O`Neal 4. Always Naggin' - The Del Royals 5. I Feel So Worried - Sammy Lewis With The Willie Johnson Combo 6. Jack The Ripper - Link Wray 7. Tiger Man (King Of The Jungle) - Joe Hill Louis With Mose Vinson 8. Ten Long Fingers - Groovey Joe Poovey 9. School Of Rock 'n' Roll - Gene Summers 10. Something For Nothing - Billy Emerson 11. Crazy Over You - The Kool Gents 12. Jo-Jo - The Dells 13. Willing And Ready - Ray Smith 14. Sentimental Fool - Barbara Pittman 15. Wildcat Tamer - Tarheel Slim 16. Kansas City March - Wild Jimmy Spruill 17. Hands Off - Jay McShann With Priscilla Bowman 18. Real Gone Mama - The Moonglows
trax CD 3:
1. Voo Vee Ah Vee - The Platters 2. Birmingham Bounce - Hardrock Gunter 3. Get Rhythm - Johnny Cash 4. Gone, Gone, Gone - Carl Perkins 5. Jukebox Help Me Find My Baby - Hardrock Gunter 6. Cool Down Mama - Lost John Hunter 7. Juiced - Billy Love 8. Drinkin' Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee - Jerry Lee Lewis 9. Let's Get High - Rosco Gordon 10. The Sun Is Shining - Jimmy Reed 11. Lottie Moe - Lee Dorsey 12. In The Night - Chick Carbo 13. Seven Nights - Dee Clark 14. I Wanna Rock - Patsy Holcomb 15. Swing Bop Boogie - Alvis Wayne 16. Buckeye - Johnny & The Hurricanes 17. Zoom Zoom Zoom - The Collegians 18. Can't Do Sixty No More - The Du Droppers
...served by Gyro1966...

Friday, November 16, 2012

The Iguanas "Nuevo Boogaloo" 1994

We purchased this at an Iguanas concert many years ago, and while we liked it a lot at first, it has grown and grown on us, to the point that it stays in the car player and cycles over and over. It's fun, catchy and at times poignant. The bass player -- Rene Coman (ex Tav Falco & Panther Burns), I believe -- is superb, and the dual saxes make for a wonderfully distinct sound. I love the heavy use of accordian on this CD and was disappointed to read that they moved away from it in the new album. - amazon
The word “Americana” gets tossed around rather loosely these days; it can mean anything from a hipster with a recently-discovered acoustic guitar to a decades-long denizen of the Grand Ole Opry. But when you set aside the Johnny-come-rootly types from the real deal, it’s a sure bet that you’re going to stray into Iguana territory. Based out of New Orleans for the past couple of decades – save for a short, Katrina-imposed exile in Austin – the Iguanas define a sound of Americana that crosses cultures, styles, eras… and even languages.
Their latest album, Sin to Sin, is their first studio recording since 2008’s If You Should Ever Fall on Hard Times, and its release coincides with their appearance at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.
“The title for the new album,” says sax player/vocalist Joe Cabral, “comes from one of the tracks we cut during the sessions that didn’t make it onto the record.” At this point, the band’s guitarist and vocalist Rod Hodges picks up the trail. “It’s a line from a tune called ‘Blues for Juarez,’” he says, “that goes, ‘We rode the back roads from sin to sin.’”
The Iguanas’ two-decade road may not exactly have driven them from sin to sin, but it’s taken them all over the map, both figuratively and literally. While bassist RenĂ© Coman is the only member of the band who is a native of the Crescent City, a languid swampiness so deeply suffuses their sound that you can almost smell the peanut shells on the floor. But there’s far more depth to it than the N’Awlins patina that rests, sometimes lightly, sometimes heavily, on anything the city touches. It’s almost as if the Iguanas dragged sand up from Juarez and mud from the Mississippi Delta, threw them both into the white-hot crucible of rock, and built their foundation from there, with drummer Doug Garrison anchoring their sound deep in the groove.
“Spanish was spoken around the house when I was growing up,” says Cabral, “but I was listening to all kinds of stuff: Herb Alpert, Boots Randolph, country music, rock, polkas… The area of south Omaha where I grew up was the classic American blue collar ethnic melting pot of Irish, Italians, Poles, Mexican-Americans, who all sort of brought these pieces into the mix.”
“How could we not wind up in New Orleans?” asks Rod Hodges, a little rhetorically. “I mean, at Tipitina’s they might have Doug Sahm one night and Fela Kuti the next.” And sure enough, even on their first album (The Iguanas, Margaritaville/MCA 1993), the band was comfortable planting Allen Toussaint’s oft-covered “Fortune Teller” cheek-by-jowl with cumbia master Celso Piña’s “Por Mi Camino (Along My Way),” leading Entertainment Weekly to conclude, “never have accordions and saxophones been so much in love.” People echoed that sentiment in their review of Nuevo Boogaloo (Margaritaville/MCA 1994), saying “any group that can turn on a dime from a gorgeous R&B ballad like "Somebody Help Me" to the steamy tropical funk of "La TentaciĂłn" is clearly here to stay. And stay they have, through half a dozen studio albums, countless tours and JazzFest appearances, and a flood that did its best to take their adopted city with it. It’s a testament to the band’s longevity and endurance that they’re still configured pretty much the way they were 20 years ago, while their onetime label, MCA, has gone the way of mousse-abused coiffures and Hammer pants. Joe Cabral is pretty philosophical about the band’s persistence in the face of challenges that would have felled – indeed, have felled – lesser bands. “First of all, this is all we know how to do; we’re musicians. But more than that,” he continues, “we respect the power of the band as an entity, and each individual in the band steps up to play his part. When it’s good, that’s really what it’s all about.
Rod Hodges agrees. “I don’t want to get all heady and mystical about this, but it’s not really an outward reward we’re looking for. We still all enjoy playing music, we all get along, and finding a group of people who can say that after all this time is a pretty rare thing.” - This biography was provided by the artist or their representative.

trax:
01 oye isabel 02 boom boom boom 03 nuevo boogaloo 04 loco 05 el orangutan 06 la vanidosa 07 angel 08 my girlfriend is a waitress 09 la tentacio'n 10 somebody help me 11 ven a bailar 12 as we kiss goodnight 13 hey, sweet darling

"ROCK 'N' ROLL ROOTS" The First Recordings

It is generally accepted that Rock 'n' Roll only really came into being with the arrival on the scene of Elvis Presley in about 1954. However, many of the tracks in this collection give the lie to that assumption and prove that not only had the music been around for several years, but some of the greatest recordings in the genre were made some time before 'The King' began to weave his history-changing magic.

trax:
1. Sixty Minute Man - Billy Ward & The Dominoes 2. Every Night About This Time - Fats Domino 3. Rocket 88 - Jackie Brenston & his Delta Cats ft. Ike Turner 4. Get Rich Quick - Little Richard 5. The Glory Of Love - The Five Keys 6. KC Loving - Little Willie Littlefield 7. Just Walkin’ In The Rain - The Prisonaires 8. Gee - The Crows 9. Money Honey - Clyde McPhatter & The Drifters 10. Honey Hush - Big Joe Turner and His Band 11. Crying in The Chapel - The Orioles 12. Mystery Train - Little Junior Parker & His Blue Flames 13. Rockin’ Is Our Bizness - The Treniers 14. Bambalam - The Du Droppers 15. Good Rockin' Tonight - Elvis Presley 16. (We're Gonna) Rock Around The Clock - Bill Haley & The Comets 17. Shake, Rattle And Roll - Big Joe Turner & His Blues Kings 18. That's All Right - Elvis Presley 19. Only You - The Platters 20. Sh-Boom (Life Could Be A Dream) - The Chords 21. Work With Me Annie - Hank Ballard & The Midnighters 22. Space Guitar - Johnny ‘Guitar’ Watson (Young John Watson) 23. The Clock - Johnny Ace 24. Hearts Of Stone - The Charms 25. Going To The River - Fats Domino 26. Mess Around - Ray Charles 27. Blue Moon Of Kentucky - Elvis Presley 28. I Don't Care If The Sun Don't Shine - Elvis Presley
...served by Gyro1966...

"THE HANK WILLIAMS SONGBOOK"

Everyone knows Hank was a very prolific songwriter and this set makes an even better case for it. "A Stranger In The Night" ranks with the best of Hank's music he ever wrote. This is an essential purchase for anyone who likes 50's style country or Hank, Sr. (Amazon)
If one sidebar to Hank's career remains murky, it's his prolificacy as a custom songwriter. This collection goes a great distance toward addressing that shortfall. The first fourteen songs were mostly written by him for other artists while he was still alive; the remainder are among the first attempts to reinterpret his legacy after his death. (Colin Escott)

trax:
1. When God Comes And Gathers His Jewels - Molly O'Day & The Cumberland Mountain Folk 2. On The Evening Train - Molly O'Day & The Cumberland Mountain Folk 3. I Saw The Light - Roy Acuff & His Smoky Mountain Boys 4. I Don't Care (If Tomorrow Never Comes) - Molly O'Day & The Cumberland Mountain Folk 5. No, Not Now - Curley Williams & His Georgia Peach Pickers 6. There's Nothing as Sweet as My Baby - Carl Smith 7. Honey, Do You Love Me, Huh? - Curley Williams & His Georgia Peach Pickers 8. A Stranger in the Night - George Morgan 9. Me And My Broken Heart - Carl Smith 10. Weary Blues From Waiting - Ray Price 11. I Wish You Didn't Love Me So Much - Little Jimmy Dickens 12. I Lost The Only Love I Knew - Ray Price 13. When You're Tired Of Breaking Other Hearts - Curley Williams & His Georgia Peach Pickers 14. I Can't Escape From You - Ray Price 15. There'll Be No Teardrops Tonight - Anita Carter 16. Long Gone Lonesome Blues - Marty Robbins 17. I Can't Help it (if I'm Still in Love With You) - Little Jimmy Dickens 18. Moanin' The Blues - Marty Robbins 19. Cold Cold Heart - Marijohn Wilkin & The Jacks 20. I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry - Johnny Cash
...served by Gyro1966...