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"The Definitive Collection [Remaster]" (05/23/2006) Blues Waters, Muddy, Geffen Records (USA)Personnel: Muddy Waters (vocals, guitar); Johnny Winter, Buddy Guy (guitar); James Cotton (harmonica); Otis Spann (piano); Willie Dixon (upright bass). Liner Note Author: Mary Katherine Aldin. Outside of Robert Johnson, there are few blues musicians as iconic as Muddy Waters. Chess's superbly selected and compiled DEFINITIVE COLLECTION is as close to a perfect compilation as listeners are likely to find on one disc. Arranged chronologically, the 24 tracks start with 1948's slinky "I Can't Be Satisfied" and end with 1976's "Crosseyed Cat." In between are the immortal Waters classics "Rollin' & Tumblin'," "(I'm Your) Hoochie Coochie Man," "I Just Want To Make Love To You," among others that changed the sound of the blues and helped birth a genre called rock & roll.

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"Simply the Best" (05/18/1999) Blues Hooker, Earl, MCA Records (USA)Personnel includes: Earl Hooker (vocals, guitar); Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Brownie McGhee, Sonny Terry, Johnny "Big Moose" Walker, Andrew "Voice" Odom, Charles Brown. All tracks have been digitally remastered. Back in the late '50s and early '60s, Chicago blues was at its peak, and for the price of a drink or two one could hear the unbearably exciting guitar work of Buddy Guy, Freddie King, Otis Rush, Magic Sam, Elmore James, Muddy Waters, Robert Nighthawk, and Hubert Sumlin blasting out of small clubs along the south and west sides of the city. But if you were to ask any of these fretboard whizes who was the best guitar player in town, they would all direct you to wherever Earl Hooker was playing on that particular night. A cousin of John Lee Hooker and a major disciple of Robert Nighthawk, Hooker was the man to beat, the most technically advanced of all bluesmen. Adept at a multitude of styles ranging from hillbilly to jazz, Hooker worked as a sideman and leader in more configurations than any other modern bluesman, spending much of his time away from Chicago with his band, aptly named the Roadmasters. While his lead guitar work graced the recordings of Muddy Waters ("You Shook Me," the only time Waters gave up his slide guitar chair to anyone), Junior Wells (the original "Messin' With the Kid"), G.L. Crockett (the rockabilly classic "Look out Mabel"), and others, Hooker's solo career was sporadic; a baker's dozen of singles under his own name, along with an unreleased session for Sun, were spread out over a 15-year period before the late-'60s blues album market caught up with him, by which time the tuberculosis that dogged him throughout his life cut his career short. Perhaps the only traditional bluesman to successfully utilize electronic gimmicks like wah-wah pedals and distortion units without sounding ridiculous, Hooker's slide guitar work was the absolute creamiest, once reducing B.B. King to tears backstage as he told Buddy Guy that "no one can play a slide that clean." Unfortunately, Hooker wasn't much of a singer and would record with various vocalists, especially on his later work, thus reducing him to sideman status on his own albums. But with Hooker, you came for the guitar playing, and there's a carload of it on this 19-track collection of his best stuff left behind in the MCA-Universal vaults. Starting out with the calling card of Waters' "You Shook Me," the collection features two of his best Chess sides from the '50s, "Tanya" and "Frog Hop," the latter a showcase for Hooker's improvisational skills. From there, it's fast-forward to the late '60s, when Hooker was cranking out sessions left and right, both under his own name for Blue Thumb (co-produced by Ike Turner, who learned guitar playing from Hooker back in the '50s) and Blues Way, as well as backing sessions for everyone from Brownie McGhee and Sonny Terry to Andrew Odom, Big Moose Walker, and his cousin, John Lee Hooker. While many of these albums were uneven affairs, this compilation brings together the shining moments when the inspiration light and the record button were both on at the same time. Whether it was fleet-fingered single-note work or the smoothest of slide playing, nobody played the blues like Earl Hooker, and here's where you go to hear some of the best of it. ~ Cub Koda

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"The Heart of a Woman" (06/29/1999) Blues James, Etta, Private MusicPersonnel: Etta James (vocals); Josh Sklair (acoustic & electric guitar); Bobby Murray (guitar); Red Holloway, Jimmy Z (tenor saxophone); Lee Thornburg (trumpet, flugelhorn, trombone); Tom Poole (trumpet, flugelhorn); Pete Escovedo (horns, congas, percussion); Dave Matthews (acoustic & electric pianos); Mike Finegan (Hammond B-3 organ); Sametto James (bass, drum programming); Donto James (drums, drum programming). Recorded at Conway Recording Studios, Los Angeles, California on March 15-23, 1999. Includes liner notes by Etta James. HEART OF A WOMAN was nominated for the 2000 Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Performance. There's no denying that Etta James is a powerhouse, one of the finest blues singers of the 20th century. Perhaps that's what makes her latter-day records so frustrating: The talent is still apparent and abundant, but the albums themselves are unsatisfying. All the ingredients are in the right place, but something went slightly awry during the execution. After all, Heart of a Woman is a great idea for an album. James chose 11 love songs from her favorite female singers -- Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington, Sarah Vaughn, and Carmen McRae -- augmenting the album with a new version of her signature song, "At Last." She has recorded several of these songs before (including Alice Cooper's "Only Women Bleed," which inexplicably became a standard for both her and McRae), but the difference with Heart of a Woman is the context. Here, they're put in a smooth jazz setting, masterminded by James, who has producer credit. No matter how well she sings the songs here -- and she still possesses an exceptionally strong voice, robust and filled with passion -- the well-scrubbed, glossy surfaces on the record keeps it from being engaging. It's not bad listening, it just never has the emotional impact James intended it to have. At times, it's hard not to wish that she worked with a producer who brought her back to the organic sound of her classic '50s and '60s sessions, but James has been pursuing this smoothed-out style for a decade now. It's clear that this is what she wants to do. She still sounds good, and that means her latter-day albums are listenable -- but they don't resonate like the best of her records. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine Heart of a Woman is a great idea for an album. Etta James chose 11 love songs from her favorite female singers -- Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington, Sarah Vaughn, and Carmen McRae -- augmenting the album with a new version of her signature song, "At Last." She has recorded several of these songs before (including Alice Cooper's "Only Women Bleed," which inexplicably became a standard for both her and McRae), but the difference with Heart of a Woman is the context. Here, they're put in a smooth jazz setting, masterminded by James, who has producer credit. There's no denying that Etta James is a powerhouse, one of the finest blues singers of the 20th century, and she still possesses an exceptionally strong voice, robust and filled with passion. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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"His Best (Chess 50th Anniversary Collection)" (05/07/2005) Blues Walter, Little, MCA/ChessThis is part of Chess Records' 50 Anniversary series. Personnel: Little Walter (vocals, harmonica); Muddy Waters (guitar, slide guitar); Dave Myers, Fred Robinson , Jimmie Lee Robinson, Jimmy Rogers , Leonard Caston, Louis Myers, Luther Tucker, Robert Lockwood, Jr. (guitar); Otis Spann (piano); Fred Below, Billy Stepney, George Hunter (drums). Liner Note Author: Billy Altman. Recording information: Chicago, IL (05/12/1952-12/??/1960). Photographers: Ray Flerlage; Mary Katherine Aldin. Few would dispute that this collection is the Holy Grail of blues harmonica. Like the other entries in Chess Records' HIS BEST series, the Little Walter compilation is beautifully selected, sequenced, remastered, and packaged. At 20 tracks, HIS BEST gives a satisfying, economical summary of Walter's genius, and defends his title as the king of blues harp men. As a member of Muddy Waters's band, and on his own, Walter was one of the architects of the original Chicago sound. His propulsive chording, high-leaning notes, inventive use of amplification (he used a close-up hand-held microphone and effects like distortion and echo), and endless stream of ideas expanded the possibilities of the harmonica. With the help of such Chicago heavy-hitters as pianist Otis Spann, bassist Willie Dixon, and drummer Fred Below, Walter's own group displayed ferocious chemistry and instrumental prowess. Naturally, Walter's vocals and exceptional harp are at the fore here. Whether on signature tunes ("Juke"), slow burners ("Mean Old World"), or classic rockers ("Boom, Boom Out Goes the Light"), this is old-school electric blues at its absolute finest. In addition to its status as a textbook for harmonica players, HIS BEST is a ground-floor necessity for any blues library.

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"Born Under a Bad Sign [Stax]" (06/18/2002) Blues King, Albert, Stax (USA)Personnel includes: Albert King (vocals, guitar); Joe Arnold (horns); Isaac Hayes (piano). Booker T. & The MG's: Booker T. Jones (piano); Steve Cropper (guitar); Donald "Duck" Dunn (bass); Al Jackson, Jr. (drums). The Memphis Horns: Wayne Jackson, Andrew Love (horns). Recorded at Stax Recording Studio, Memphis, Tennessee between March 1966 and June 1967. Personnel: Albert King (vocals, guitar); Steve Cropper (guitar); Joe Arnold, Andrew Love, The Memphis Horns, Wayne Jackson (horns); Isaac Hayes, Booker T. Jones (piano); Al Jackson, Jr. (drums). Audio Remasterer: George Horn. Liner Note Authors: Deanie Parker; Michael Point. Recording information: Stax Recording Studio, Memphis, TN (03/03/1966-06/09/1967). Photographer: Jim Marshall . The giant left-handed guitarist was no stranger to the recording studio by 1966, but Albert King had still to make his mark with the record-buying public. When he linked up with the cream of Stax's Memphis musicians, including Booker T. And The MGs and the Memphis Horns, that connection was made. "Laundromat Blues", "Oh, Pretty Woman" and "Crosscut Saw" set the scene for "Born Under A Bad Sign" and "The Hunter", which quickly found their way into the repertoires of Cream and Free. The convolutions of his guitar style were perfectly complemented by the trademark Stax funk rhythms. The team went on to make many more singles and albums, none of which could surpass the achievements of their first meeting.

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"Martin Scorsese Presents the Blues: Feel Like Going Home" (09/09/2003) Blues Original Soundtrack, Columbia (USA)Compilation producers: Martin Scorsese, Peter Guralnick. Includes liner notes by Martin Scorsese and Peter Guralnick. Personnel: John Lee Hooker, Johnny Shines, Ali Farka Tour?, Muddy Waters, Robert Johnson, Salif Keita, Son House, Willie King, Charley Patton (vocals, guitar); Taj Mahal (vocals, slide guitar, harmonica); Othar Turner (vocals, fife, bass drum); Napoleon Strickland (vocals, fife); Fatoumata Traore (vocals); Corey Harris, Eddie Kirkland, Aaron Hodge, Percy Thomas (guitar); Fiddlin' Joe Martin, Louis Ford (mandolin); Leroy Williams (harmonica); Sunnyland Slim (piano); Frank Kirkland (drums); Aubrey Turner (bass drum); Otha Andre Evans, Rodney Evans (snare drum); Souleye Kane (djembe); Songhai (percussion). Audio Mixer: Martin Czembor. Liner Note Authors: Martin Scorsese; Peter Guralnick. Recording information: Bamako, Mali (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); Chicago, IL (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); Dallas, TX (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); Detroit, MI (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); Grafton, WI (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); Hollywood, CA (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); Klack's Store, Lake Cormorant, MS (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); London, England (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); New York, NY (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); Niafunke, Mali (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); Prairie Point, MS (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); Senatobia, MS (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); St. Ann's Warehouse, Brooklyn, NY (10/??/1929-04/19/2002); Stovall, MS (10/??/1929-04/19/2002). Photographers: David Gahr; Valerie Wilmer; Frank Driggs; John Work; James Fraher. Arranger: Taj Mahal. Drawn from the soundtrack to Martin Scorsese's seven-part television documentary on the blues, Feel Like Going Home documents the roots behind the roots, traveling from the American South to West Africa and back again, resulting in a remarkable collection that spotlights the past, present, and future of this historically important musical genre. From early 78s by seminal figures Charley Patton ("High Water Everywhere"), Son House (his early version of "Death Letter," here called "My Black Mama"), and Robert Johnson ("Hellhound on My Trail"), through field recordings collected by the venerable Alan Lomax (an early Muddy Waters tune called "Rosalie," which includes rough-hewn country fiddle from Henry "Son" Simms) and the restructured contemporary African blues of Ali Farka Toure and Salif Keita, this fine soundtrack knocks the dust off of the blues and exposes its vital and creative center. Highlights include the wild and eerie sound of Othar Turner and Napoleon Strickland's fife and drum ensembles and the up-to-the-minute trance-inducing blues of Willie King & the Liberators. On "Terrorized," King sings: "You talk about terror/I've been terrorized all my life. "That's the blues, circa 2003. Feel Like Going Home is a fine introduction to the long history and promising future of this impressive musical form. ~ Steve Leggett

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"Swing, Swing, Swing" (07/26/2004) Blues Smith, Keely, Concord JazzPersonnel: Keely Smith (vocals); Pat Tuzzolino (guitar, background vocals); Sal Lozano, Danny House (alto saxophone); Don Menza (tenor saxophone, clarinet); Pete Christlieb, Joel Peskin (tenor saxophone); Jack Nimitz (baritone saxophone); Frank Szabo, Pete Candoli, Rick Baptist, Carl Saunders (trumpet); Jim Self (trombone, tuba); Andy Martin, Charlie Loper, Charlie Morillas (trombone); Dennis Michaels (piano, background vocals); Chuck Berghofer, Richard Simon (acoustic bass); Kenny Wild (electric bass); Frankie Capp (drums); Don Williams (percussion); Toni Prima, Luanne Prima (background vocals). Recorded at Capitol Studio A, Hollywood, California in April 1999. Includes liner notes by Tony Bennett. Nearing the age of 70, without a recording session in more than 15 years, Keely Smith returned on the heels of the '90s rejuvenation of swing music. Recorded for the Concord label, Swing, Swing, Swing does just what the title promises. Smith rips through 16 songs with barely a pause for breath, including plenty of swing standards ("Kansas City," "Jump, Jive 'An Wail," "On the Sunny Side of the Street," "Yeah, Yeah, Yeah," and the title track) as well as a few obscure songs and at least one new one ("Keely's Boogie"). The backing -- by the Frank Capp Orchestra with arrangements by Dennis Michaels and Don Menza -- is big, brassy, and more than enough to contend with Smith's surprisingly strong voice. Walking a very fine line between nostalgia and real innovation, Swing, Swing, Swing throws enough chestnuts to the younger audience to qualify as generational crossover, but never compromises the high-class swing that Keely Smith has always championed. ~ John Bush

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"Two Sides of If" (09/27/2005) Blues Campbell, Vivian, Sanctuary (USA)Personnel: Vivian Campbell (vocals, guitar); Vivian Campbell; Bruce Cornett (guitar); Tor Hyams (piano, Hammond b-3 organ); Mark Browne (bass instrument); Joan Osborne (vocals); Billy Gibbons (guitar); Michael Fell (harmonica); Terry Bozzio (drums). Audio Mixer: Joe Hardy. Recording information: Coyote STudios, Brooklyn, NY (04/2005); Ocean Studios, Burbank, CA (04/2005). Photographer: Robert Knight . After his tenure in several of heavy metal's most legendary groups (most notably Whitesnake and Def Leppard), Vivian Campbell steps out into the spotlight for his first solo endeavor, and the results are nothing less than impressive. Taking his first vocal bows behind the microphone is a big step for someone who usually lets his fingers do the talking, but Campbell's vocal delivery is surprisingly inoffensive, especially in comparison to some axe slingers who think they have vocal cords. On this 12-song session of gritty, no-frills blues-rock, Campbell pays homage to blues gods like Willie Dixon and Robert Johnson alongside latter-day geniuses like Rory Gallagher. Fans of Campbell's shredding may be taken aback by the switch, but those with open minds and ears will be treated to a pleasant surprise. ~ Rob Theakston

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"A Country Legacy: 1930-1939 [Box]" (10/05/2004) Blues Carlisle, Cliff, JSP (UK)These recordings show Cliff Carlisle to be more or less a contemporary of the great Jimmie Rodgers, albeit a far more obscure one. There are definite comparisons musically, however: Carlisle also used the yodel as part of his vocal repertoire, as well as bringing in lap steel -- more often than Rodgers, on the evidence presented, and playing it himself (a custom-built National Resophonic, for those who like exactitude). With 83 tracks recorded over a period of nine years, Carlisle was certainly prolific, and you have to wonder why he wasn't better known -- the man could certainly play and sing, even if some of the material wasn't always up to scratch. However, it's a set that reveals its joys, however mad they can be (listen to the falsetto chorus on "Shanghai Rooster Blues," for example). Like many country artists from this formative period, his music and lyrics easily straddle the amorphous border between country and blues, with Hawaiian touches coming in quite often (not surprising, given the fad for Hawaiian music at the time). It's an insight into one of country music lesser-known pioneers -- and one who deserves more credit. ~ Chris Nickson

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"King of the Blues Guitar" (08/08/1989) Blues King, Albert, Atlantic (USA)Recorded 1966-68. Backed by Booker T & the MGs and the Memphis Horns, Albert King (confusingly, no relation to Freddie or BB--though he named himself after the latter) shows off his spare, elastic, fluid guitar style on this definitive compilation. Songs such as "Laundromat Blues", "Oh, Pretty Woman," and the immortal "Crosscut Saw" with its sinuous, interweaving rhythms are blues classics, while "Born Under a Bad Sign" and "The Hunter" were later covered by Cream and Bad Company respectively. The combination of King and the Memphis musicians makes for some thrilling moments--particularly the guitar's entry under the horns on "Sign" and the interplay between King's guitar and Al Jackson's samba-style drums in "Crosscut Saw." Though King never achieved the fame of the man whose name he took, he created his fair share of great blues recordings, and KING OF THE BLUES GUITAR is an excellent primer to his unique style.

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"Live '92/'93" (09/12/1995) Blues Collins, Albert, Point BlankAlbert Collins & The Icebreakers: Albert Collins (vocals, guitar); Pete Thoennes (guitar); The Legendary White Trash Horns, Jon Smith, Jeff Robbins (tenor saxophone); Steve Howard (trumpet); Bobby Alexis (organ); Johnny B. Gayden (bass); Marty Binder (drums). Engineers: David Richards, Justin Shirley-Smith, Timothy R. Powell. Recorded live at The Montreux Jazz Festival, Switzerland on July 10, 1992; On The Waterfront Festival, Rockford, Illinois on September 5, 1993; Riverfront Blues Festival, Peoria, Illinois on September 4, 1993. Includes liner notes by Dick Shurman, John Boncimino and John Wooler. LIVE '92 - '93 was nominated for a 1996 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Blues Album. Personnel: Albert Collins (vocals, guitar); Jeff Robbins, Jon Smith (tenor saxophone); Steve Howard (trumpet); Bobby Alexis (organ); Marty Binder (drums). Audio Mixer: David Axelbaum. Liner Note Authors: Dick Shurman; John Boncimino; John Wooler. Recording information: Montreux Jazz Festival, Switzerland (07/10/1992-09/04/1993); On The Waterfront Festival, Rockford, IL (07/10/1992-09/04/1993); Riverfront Blues Festival, Peoria (07/10/1992-09/04/1993). Editors: Chris Steinmetz; Rick "SL8" Cruz; David Axelbaum; Jason Wagner. Photographer: John Wooler. Compiling a number of performances recorded shortly before Albert Collins' death, Live '92/'93 offers definitive proof that the guitarist remained vital until his last days. ~ Thom Owens

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"Ultimate Collection" (01/13/2004) Blues Cocker, Joe, Hip-O RecordsPersonnel includes: Joe Cocker (vocals); Jimmy Page, Brenda Holloway, Leon Russell, Rita Coolidge, Bonnie Bramlett, Jimmy Cliff, Adrian Belew, Sly Dunbar, Robbie Shakespeare, Clarence Clemons, Billy Preston, Bryan Adams, Randy Newman. Producers include: Denny Cordell, Leon Russell, Jim Price, Wilton Felder, Chris Brackwell. Compilation producer: Bill Levenson. Recorded between 1974 & 2000. Includes liner notes by JP Bean. This anthology does as fine a job of covering the peaks of Joe Cocker's career as any single disc possibly could. Things kick off with Cocker's studio version of the Beatles' "With a Little Help From My Friends," which helped make him a star via his Woodstock performance. Thereafter, Cocker made his name as a gritty, soulful interpreter of material from the pop/rock world. With the guidance of then-bandleader Leon Russell, the Boxtops' "The Letter," the Fab Four's "She Came in Through the Bathroom Window," and others were transformed into sweaty, soul-drenched wonders. In the 1980s, hard-living Cocker cleaned up his act both personally and musically, scoring a hit with the romantic pop ballad "Up Where We Belong," a duet with Jennifer Warnes that was the theme for the film AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN. He hadn't lost his tawdry touch, though, as proven by his popular '86 version of the randy Randy Newman tune "You Can Leave Your Hat On," also featured in another successful '80s film (9 1/2 WEEKS). ULTIMATE COLLECTION closes with a 2000 version of Leonard Cohen's "First We Take Manhattan," proof that over 30 years down the road, Cocker hadn't lost his knack for picking great material.

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"Deluxe Edition" (02/23/1999) Blues Taylor, Hound Dog, Alligator RecordsHound Dog Taylor And The Houserockers: Theodore Taylor (vocals, guitar); Brewer Phillips (guitar); Ted Harvey (drums). Producers: Bruce Iglauer, Wesley Race, Hound Dog Taylor. Compilation producers: Bob DePugh, Bruce Iglauer, David Forte. Engineers: Stu Black, Richard Whittington, Ken Rasek. Includes liner notes by Bruce Iglauer. All tracks have been digitally remastered using 20-bit technology. The music of Hound Dog Taylor & the HouseRockers remains the place where rock & roll and the blues meet at the end of a dark alley. A slide guitarist of the Elmore James school, Taylor played raw, nasty-sounding music long on energy and short on subtleties. Other blues guitarists used distortion before Taylor, but he explored it to depths only previously investigated by white rock guitarists playing instruments and amplifiers far superior in quality to the cheap Japanese guitars and Sears & Roebuck amplifiers through which he blasted his brand of tonal mayhem. But it simply wasn't the lack of a good guitar and amp rig that made Taylor's music stick out from the pack of leg-licking B.B. King imitators that still infest the music. Taylor's music flowed from the warmest of impulses, brimming with good feeling, raw energy, and more than a little Canadian club. A three-piece band with no bass player (second guitarist Brewer Phillips played basslines on a battered Telecaster when he wasn't squeezing out metallic leads on it), Taylor and the HouseRockers brought more raw energy to the blues than a herd of modern boogie bands could only attempt to produce. His ragged but right approach found him an enthusiastic audience with both grizzled blues veterans and wide-eyed college kids, and influenced a number of up-and-coming slide guitar practitioners. This entry in Alligator's Deluxe Edition series draws from Taylor's four albums for the label -- three studio and one live -- along with two previously unissued live tracks. The song selection is nigh to excellent, stressing the connection between Taylor and the band's approach to rock & roll ("What'd I Say," "Give Me Back My Wig," "Take Five," "Walking the Ceiling") and the blues ("Wild About You, Baby," "The Sun Is Shining," "It Hurts Me Too," "Rock Me"). The two bonus live tracks are a welcome addition to Taylor's small recorded legacy and show just how precarious and volatile the mixture of these three gentlemen could be. "Phillips' Theme" showcases Brewer Phillips playing some of his best lead guitar work with Taylor's heavily tremoloed bass rhythm finally overtaking the whole shebang by song's end, while "Ain't It Lonesome?" is a talking blues where Taylor constantly cuts time on the band during the monologue, Phillips and drummer Ted Harvey following his every quirky move the way only musicians who have been playing together for years can. The CD also includes a hidden bonus track at the end of Taylor on-stage telling one of his patented incomprehensible jokes, one minute and 47 seconds of lunacy that's as much fun as the music that preceded it. The bottom line is: This is way more than simply a cash-grabbing sign pointed toward the rest of his catalog. Quite simply, if someone wanted to know what Hound Dog Taylor & the HouseRockers' music was all about, you could give them this CD and consider your mission accomplished. ~ Cub Koda

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"No Jive: Authentic Southern Country Blues" (09/03/2002) Blues Various Artists, Ace Records (UK)

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"The Paul Butterfield Blues Band" (06/17/1988) Blues Butterfield, Paul, Elektra EntertainmentPersonnel: Paul Butterfield (vocals, harmonica); Sam Lay (vocals, drums); Elvin Bishop (guitar); Mike Bloomfield (slide guitar); Jerome Arnold (bass); Mark Naftalin (organ). Includes liner notes by Pete Welding. The Paul Butterfield Blues Band: Michael Bloomfield. The '60s Blues Revival begins here. Calling this album influential is an understatement akin to calling the Grand Canyon a rut; suffice to say that an entire generation of musicians (mostly young and white) heard this and had their lives changed forever. In fact, for at least a year after the album's release in 1965, it was impossible to walk down the hall of any college dorm in America without hearing one of the songs here echoing from somebody's room. Heard today, the thing still packs a wallop. Butterfield's harmonica and vocals are utterly idiomatic, without a hint of minstrelsy. Michael Bloomfield's lead guitar is stinging and eloquent, and the rhythm section, on loan from Howling Wolf, swings like mad. The only fly in the ointment is the fairly primitive production, which often makes Mark Naftalin's keyboards sound like a horde of angry bees, but that's a small criticism in the face of blues playing as passionate and accomplished as this. A genuine classic.

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"The Definitive Collection [Hip-O]" (05/23/2006) Blues Hooker, John Lee, Hip-O RecordsPersonnel: Bonnie Raitt (vocals, slide guitar); Joseph Barry Galbraith, Eddie Kirkland, Eddie "Guitar" Burns, Eddie Taylor, Luther "Guitar Junior" Johnson, Muddy Waters, Sammy Lawhorn, Buddy Guy, Carlos Santana (guitar); Louis Myers (harmonica); Lafayette Leake, Otis Spann (piano); Chester Thompson (keyboards, synthesizer); David "Panama" Francis, Francis Clay, Fred Below, Al Duncan , Leon "Ndugu" Chancler (drums); Armando Peraza (congas); Jos? Chepit¢ Areas (timbales). Liner Note Author: Colin Escott. Recording information: Chicago, IL (11/03/1948-04/??/1988); Detroit, MI (11/03/1948-04/??/1988); New York, NY (11/03/1948-04/??/1988); San Francisco, CA (11/03/1948-04/??/1988); Sausalito, CA (11/03/1948-04/??/1988). Photographers: Jean-Pierre Leloir; David Gahr; Stephanie Wiesand; Jan Persson; Brian Smith ; Chuck Stewart; Jim Marshall . What can be said about yet another John Lee Hooker greatest-hits collection!? Not only is the music consumer loaded down with these discs, but frankly, most are very similar in content. The main thing to look for when purchasing a compilation of "The Hook" is a trust-worthy label. Hip-O's Definitive Collection provides one such example, complete with professional packaging, informative liner notes, superlative sound, and most importantly, the best-known songs from Hooker's massive catalog spanning six decades. From solo material recorded in Detroit in the '40s for the Modern label, through his mostly electric recordings on Chess, Vee Jay, Impulse, and ABC-BluesWay up to his final, Grammy Award winning collaborations with Bonnie Raitt and Carlos Santana, these are the 20 cuts that any John Lee Hooker neophyte should hear. ~ Al Campbell

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"The Complete Studio Recordings" (10/31/2000) Blues Hurt, Mississippi John, Vanguard Records (USA)THE COMPLETE STUDIO RECORDINGS contains TODAY! (1966)/THE IMMORTAL MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT (1967)/LAST SESSIONS (1966). Solo performer: Mississippi John Hurt (vocals, guitar). Producer: Patrick Sky. Reissue producer: Tom Vickers. Recorded at Manhattan Towers Hotel, New York, New York in February 1966. Includes liner notes by John Milward. All tracks have been digitally remastered. Although not as consistently magnificent as Hurt's 1928 recordings, the performances the artist recorded for Vanguard in the mid 1960's would be the zenith of many blues artist's entire careers. Songs like the opening "Payday" and "Poor Boy, Long Ways From Home" rank with any folk-blues song ever recorded. This fantastic set collects the three albums Vanguard released in Hurt's lifetime and as such is undeniably the package to go for to acquire these later gems. ~ Thomas Ward

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