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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Jack McDuff. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Jack McDuff. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2020. október 23., péntek

23-10-2020 BLUES:MiX # 33 blues(y) songs from the BLUES circle 1959-1968


23-10-2020 BLUES:MiX # 33 blues(y) songs from the BLUES circle 1959-1968 # Al Smith, Snooks Eaglin, Lonnie Donegan, Jack McDuff, Jimmy Witherspoon feat: Ben Webster, Lightnin' Hopkins, Reverend Gary Davis, B.B. King, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band, John Lee Hooker,Cream


B L U E S    M U S I C

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BLUES_circle The player always plays the latest playlist tracks. / A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. 

1959-1968

 


Albert B. Smith was born in Bolivar County, Mississippi, on November 23, 1923. His family moved to Pace, Mississippi, in 1927. He danced with a jug band on the streets of Rosedale, Mississippi, when he was 7. He learned how to play the string bass in a school band after hearing Big Joe Williams and other Delta bluesmen at his mother's barrelhouse...
Al Smith
Night Time Is The Right Time
Tears in My Eyes

from Hear My Blues 1959
As a rule, people who appreciate the late Jimmy Witherspoon have a very favorable reaction to Al Smith -- that is, if they get a chance to hear him. Neither of the two albums that Smith provided for Bluesville (Hear My Blues in 1959 and Midnight Special in 1960) are well-known. While Witherspoon was a big name in the blues world, Smith was a gospel singer who dabbled in secular music. But when Smith did venture outside the gospel realm, his approach was quite comparable to Witherspoon's -- like Witherspoon, he favored a jazz-influenced approach to blues and R&B...

When they referred to consistently amazing guitarist Snooks Eaglin as a human jukebox in his New Orleans hometown, they weren't dissing him in the slightest. The blind Eaglin was a beloved figure in the Crescent City, not only for his gritty, Ray Charles-inspired vocal delivery and wholly imaginative approach to the guitar, but for the seemingly infinite storehouse of oldies that he was liable to pull out on-stage at any second...
Snooks Eaglin
Looking for a Woman
Careless Love
Let Me Go Home, Whiskey

from New Orleans Street Singer 1959
Folkways Records released New Orleans Street Singer in 1959 and the album set the world of folk and acoustic blues fans on fire. Snooks Eaglin was in the early stages of his long R&B career when folklorist Harry Oster heard him playing solo on the streets of the French Quarter...

The "King of Skiffle" was huge in pre-Beatles England and even managed a hit or two stateside.
Lonnie Donegan
The House of the Rising Sun
Talking Guitar Blues

from Skiffle Folk Music 1960
To look at Lonnie Donegan today, in pictures taken 40 years ago when he was topping the British charts and hitting the Top Ten in America, dressed in a suit, his hair cut short and strumming an acoustic guitar, he looks like a musical non-entity. But in 1954, before anyone (especially anybody in England) knew what rock & roll was, Donegan was cool, and his music was hot. He's relatively little remembered outside of England, but Donegan shares an important professional attribute with Elvis Presley, Bill Haley, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and the Sex Pistols -- he invented a style of music, skiffle, that completely altered the pop culture landscape and the youth around him, and for a time, completely ruled popular music through that new form.

Author of one of the funkiest, most soulful, Hammond B-3 styles of all time, with rock-solid basslines and blues-drenched solos.
Jack McDuff
Dink's Blues
Blues and Tonic

from The Honeydripper 1961
The remaster of Jack McDuff's hard swinging 1961 album The Honeydripper was overseen by Rudy Van Gelder himself... The date featured the big tenor Jimmy Forrest, drummer Ben Dixon, and Grant Green on guitar in his recording debut. Green not only held his own with McDuff on the title track, "Dink's Blues," and "Blues and Tonic," ... Green was always more than a sideman as this date attests, and though he was part of the rhythm section, his playing is a standout on this date. McDuff was already in full possession of his voice as an organist, and his hard bop leanings began to subside here as he embraced a more soulful approach, no doubt informed by the effect Jimmy Smith was having on jazz with his crossover. This is an excellent date and should be picked up by anyone interested in McDuff as a great place to start, or for any serious collector because of the gorgeous sound of the remaster itself.

2020. augusztus 15., szombat

15-08-2020 > BLUES:MiX # 33 blues(y) songs from the BLUES circle 1965-1959


Howlin' Wolf
15-08-2020 BLUES:MiX # 33 blues(y) songs from the BLUES circle 1965-1959 # Howlin' Wolf, The Rolling Stones, Little Walter, Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup, Reverend Gary Davis, Curtis Jones, Al Smith, Snooks Eaglin, Lonnie Donegan, Jack McDuff


B L U E S    M U S I C

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1965-1959



A primal, ferocious blues belter with a roster of classics rivaling anyone else, and a sandpaper growl of a voice that has been widely imitated. In the history of the blues, there has never been anyone quite like the Howlin' Wolf. Six foot three and close to 300 pounds in his salad days, the Wolf was the primal force of the music spun out to its ultimate conclusion. 
Howlin' Wolf 
Killing Floor  (Chester Burnett)
Tail Dragger (Willie Dixon)
The Natchez Burnin' (Chester Burnett)
from The Real Folk Blues 1965
In the mid-'60s, Chess Records released a great series of compilations of '40s and '50s singles by some of its best blues artists, all of them called The Real Folk Blues. The Howlin' Wolf entry is possibly the best of the batch, and one of the best introductions to this mercurial electric bluesman. Opening with the savage "Killing Floor," the album doesn't let up in intensity, and it happily focuses on Wolf's less-anthologized sides, which gives the album a freshness a lot of blues compilations lack... every track is pure Chicago blues at its finest...

The premier British rock band for over half a century, creators of the sound and style imitated by countless groups. By the time the Rolling Stones began calling themselves the World's Greatest Rock & Roll Band in the late '60s, they had already staked out an impressive claim on the title.
The Rolling Stones
Confessin' the Blues  (Walter Brown / Jay McShann)
2120 South Michigan Avenue  (Mick Jagger / Nanker Phelge / Keith Richards)
from 12 x 5 1964
The evolution from blues to rock accelerated with the Rolling Stones' second American LP. They turned soul into guitar rock for the hits "It's All Over Now" and "Time Is on My Side" (the latter of which was their first American Top Ten single). "2120 South Michigan Avenue" is a great instrumental blues-rock jam; "Around and Around" is one of their best Chuck Berry covers; and "If You Need Me" reflects an increasing contemporary soul influence...

A major figure of post-war blues, brought the harmonica out of its rural setting into an urban context.
Little Walter
It Ain't Right (Little Walter)
Crazy Mixed Up World (Willie Dixon / Bruce Willis)
Confessin' the Blues (Walter Brown / Jay McShann)
from Confessin' the Blues 1953-1963 (1966)
...Still, for those who can't afford either of those pricey sets, this disc, coupled with the two best-of volumes, and the other Walter compilations, fills in some holes that are well worth filling. Made up of songs cut between 1953 and 1959 -- none of which had ever appeared on LP before the original 1974 release of this collection -- the selection features Walter in his prime, playing alongside Robert Lockwood, Jr. and Louis Myers or Luther Tucker on guitar (with Muddy Waters present on slide on one indispensable track, "Rock Bottom"), mostly Willie Dixon on bass, and Fred Below on the drums, with Lafayette Leake or Otis Spann on piano...



2018. december 12., szerda

MiXTAPE: 100 from bestofs / #1960 PnM.MiX

Analysis of Sound and Music in Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960)

1 9 6 0
H U N D R E D  S O N G S



Bernard Herrmann - The Murder from Psycho

Lorez Alexandria & Ramsey Lewis - Early in the Morning from Early in the Morning

Johnny "Hammond" Smith - Talk That Talk from Talk That Talk

Curtis Amy, Paul Bryant - The Blues Message from The Blues Message

Rolf Kühn - Caravan from And His Sound of Jazz

Kenny Burrell - Hootchie-Koo from Weaver of Dreams

Jack McDuff, Bill Jennings - Light Blues from Brother Jack

Lionel Hampton - Blue Moon from Silver Vibes

Chet Baker - Street of Dreams from Chet Baker with Fifty Italian Strings

Julie London- Evenin' from Send for Me

Tubby Hayes Quartet - Embers from Tubby's Groove

Wes Montgomery - Montgomeryland Funk from Montgomeryland

June Christy - Out of the Shadows from Off Beat

Lem Winchester - Blues Prayer from Another Opus

Jack McDuff - Yeah, Baby from Tough 'Duff

Roland Kirk  - Spirit Girl from Introducing Roland Kirk

Edith Piaf - Eden Blues from Sincerely... Edith Piaf
Toni Harper - Where Flamingos Fly from Night Mood

Josephine Baker - La Seine from The Fabulous Josephine Baker

Clifton Chenier - The Cat's Dremin' from Clifton Chenier King of Zydeco

Dalida - Itsi bitsi petit bikini from Les enfants du Pirée

Lotte Lenya - Bilbao-Song from Happy End 1960 Weill / Brecht

Arthur Lyman - Taboo Tu from Taboo Vol. 2

João Gilberto - Corcovado from O amor, o sorriso e a flor

Les Baxter -  Barbarian from Les Baxter's Teen Drums

Duane Eddy - Bobbie from A Million Dollars Worth Of Twang

Ventures - Raunchy from Morgen

Johnny Desmond - Blue Smoke fom Blue Smoke

Fernando Calati - Notte e giorno from Parole e musica

Helen Merrill - Niht and Day from Parole e musica

Etta Jones - I Love Paris from Don't Go to Strangers

Beverly Kenney - Sentimental Journey from Like Yesterday

Brenda Lee -I'm Sorry from Miss Dynamite

Dinah Shore - My Melancholy Baby from Dinah Sings, Previn Plays

Lotte Lenya - Surbaya Johnny from Happy End 1960 Weill / Brecht

Joan Baez - House of the Rising Sun from Joan Baez

Mose Allison - Baby Please Don't Go from Transfiguration of Hiram Brown

Sandy Nelson - Rainy Day from Plays Teen Beat

Everly Brothers - Some Sweet Day from It's Everly Time

The Fendermen - Torture from  Mule Skinner Blues

The Beatles, Tony Sheridan - Ain't She Sweet form In The Beginning

Johnny Hallyday - J'Suis Mordu from Hello Johnny

The Fireballs - Bulldog from The Fireballs

The Beatles, Tony Sheridan - Nobody's Child form In The Beginning

The Beau-Marks - Rockin' Blues from The High Flying Beau-Marks

Ronnie Hawkins - Summertime from The Folk Ballads of Ronnie Hawkins

Emile Ford and The Checkmates - To Know Her Is To Love Her from New Tracks with Emile

Billy Boyd - Diggin' the Blues from Twangy Guitars

Lonnie Donegan - The House of the Rising Sun from Skiffle Folk Music

The Clovers - Love Potion Number 9 from Love Potion Number 9

Bill Haley and His Comets - Blue Comet Blues from Bill Haley and His Comets

Billy Fury - Turn My Back on You from The Sound of Fury

Charlie Rich - Gonna Be Waitin' from Lonely Weekends With Charlie Rich

Johnny and the Hurricanes - Traffic Jam from The Big Sound of Johnny and the Hurricanes

Chet Atkins - Centipede Boogie from Chet Atkins and His Guitar

The Brothers Four - Greenfields from The Brothers Four

George Jones - Maybe Little Baby from The Crown Prince of Country Music

The 5 Royales - All Righty from  I Like It Like That

Bill Haley and His Comets - Singing the Blues from Haley's Juke Box

Santo & Johnny - Venus from Encore

The Three Suns - The 3rd Man Theme from On a Magic Carpet

Chuck Berry - (Get Your Kicks On) Route 66 from Juke Box Hits

Los Locos del Ritmo - El Rock De La Cárcel from Rock!

Gene Vincent - Pretty Pearly from  Crazy Times!

The Rock-A-Teens - Twangy from Woo-Hoo

Ronnie Hawkins - Honey Don't from Mr. Dynamo

Johnny And The Hurricanes - Reveille Rock from Stormsville

Duane Eddy - Up and Down from A Million Dollars Worth Of Twang

Chuck Berry - Let It Rock from Rockin' at the Hops

James Brown - I'll Go Crazy from Think!

Roy Orbison - Blue Angel from Roy Orbison Sings Lonely and Blue

Speedy West - Speedin' West from Steel Guitar

Bo Diddley - Road Runner from Bo Diddley in the Spotlight

Georges Brassens - Le bistrot from Les funérailles d'antan

The Louvin Brothers - Lorene from My Baby's Gone

Joan Baez - Donna Donna from Joan Baez

Johnny Cash - You Win Again from Cash Sings Hank Williams

Los Locos del Ritmo - Pólvora from Rock!

Everly Brothers - Nashville Blues from It's Everly Time

Ventures - Honky Tonk from Morgen

Wanda Jackson - Cool Love from Rockin' With Wanda

Bill Haley and His Comets - Strictly Instrumental from Strictly Instrumental

Bo Diddley - Scuttle Bug from Bo Diddley in the Spotlight

Chuck Berry - I'm Talking About You from Juke Box Hits

Elvis Presley - Frankfurt Special from G.I. Blues

Gene Vincent - Crazy Times! from Crazy Times!

Johnny Horton - The First Train Headin' South from The Spectacular Johnny Horton

Merle Travis - Saturday Niht Shuffle from Walkin' the Strings

Phil Upchurch - Straw Hat from You Can't Sit Down!

Sandy Nelson - Jivin' Around, Pt. 1 &  from Sandy Nelson Plays Teen Beat

Sam Butera and the Witnesses - Let the Good Times Roll from The Wildest Clan

The Staple Singers
The Fendermen - Honky Tonk from  Mule Skinner Blues

Jackie Wilson - I'll Be Satisfied from So Much

Josh White - I Know King Jesus from Spirituals & Blues

The Staple Singers - I Had a Dream from Will the Circle Be Unbroken

B.B. King - Jesus Gave Me Water from B.B. King Sings Spirituals

Harry Belafonte - Goin' Down Jordan from My Lord What a Mornin'

Dinah Washington - Misery from I Concentrate on You

Ella Fitzgerald - Angel Eyes from Intimate Ella

Ella Fitzgerald, Paris, France, 1960




2018. október 9., kedd

09-10-2018 BLUES:MiX # 33 blues songs from the BLUES circle 1959-1965


Brownie McGhee

09-10-2018 BLUES:MiX # 33 blues songs from the BLUES circle 1959-1965 # Brownie McGhee, Curtis Amy & Paul Bryant, Bill Jennings / Jack McDuff, Josh White, Big Joe Williams, Sunnyland Slim, Arthur 'Big Boy' Crudup, Junior Wells, Sonny Boy Williamson II, The Rolling Stones


B L U E S   M U S I C


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BLUES_circle The player always plays the latest playlist tracks. / A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. 


1959-1965

Folk-blues singer-guitarist whose long-running partnership with harp-man Sonny Terry was already legendary by 1950s revival time. Brownie McGhee's death in 1996 was an enormous loss in the blues field. Although he had been semi-retired and suffering from stomach cancer, the guitarist was still the leading Piedmont-style bluesman on the planet, venerated worldwide for his prolific activities both on his own and with his longtime partner, blind harpist Sonny Terry. 
Brownie McGhee
Poor Boy 4:40
Walking Blues 3:42
Brownie's Blues 4:25
How Long 4:04
from Brownie McGhee Sings the Blues 1959
Piedmont blues singer and guitarist Brownie McGhee's voice rings clear over his strumming about love, cheating, and remembering his friend Big Bill Broonzy.


A good soul-jazz and hard bop tenor and soprano saxophonist, Curtis Amy enjoyed a busy period in the '60s, then dropped out of sight. He had a strong tone and nice, lightly swinging style...
Curtis Amy & Paul Bryant
Paul Bryant - The organist and pianist, whose cool sound was a key component in the burgeoning L.A. sound, appeared on eight albums and performed around the world. 
Searchin' (Paul Bryant) 8:48
The Blues Message 8:43
This Is the Blues 8:25
from The Blues Message 1960
The Blues Message is an album by saxophonist Curtis Amy and organist Paul Bryant recorded in 1960 for the Pacific Jazz label.
Curtis Amy - tenor saxophone   Paul Bryant - organ   Roy Brewster - valve trombone   Clarence Jones - bass   Jimmy Miller - drums

Bill Jenning's sound has been compared to Tiny Grimes with a hint of early Charlie Christian. A peer of Billy Butler, Jennings played with Louis Jordan in the late '40s and early '50s. He also recorded R&B sides with Leo Parker and Bill Doggett.
Bill Jennings / Jack McDuff
A marvelous bandleader and organist as well as capable arranger, "Brother" Jack McDuff has one of the funkiest, most soulful styles of all time on the Hammond B-3. His rock-solid basslines and blues-drenched solos are balanced by clever, almost pianistic melodies and interesting progressions and phrases
Enough Said (Alvin Johnson) 6:45
Billin' and Bluin', Pt. 1 4:47
from Enough Said  / Glide On 1959 / 1960

Josh White began as a Southern bluesman but eventually evolved into an eclectic, urbane artist.  To many blues enthusiasts, Josh White was a folk revival artist. It's true that the second half of his music career found him based in New York playing to the coffeehouse and cabaret set and hanging out with Burl Ives, Woody Guthrie, and fellow transplanted blues artists Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee...
Josh White
Good Morning Blues 4:48
Mean Mistreater 4:59
T.B. Blues 4:43
from The House I Live In 1960