Seneca
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:36 PM
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List Your 5 Essential Blues Albums |
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Yes, YOUR 5 essential albums. And by listing 5, I am making this difficult on purpose. :P
1. Robert Johnson - "The Complete Recordings"
2. Howlin' Wolf - "The Chess Box" (boxed sets count as one, which will make this easier)
3. Muddy Waters - "The Chess Box"
4. Blind Willie McTell - "1927-1933 - The Early Years"
5. John Lee Hooker - "The Ultimate Collection: 1948-1990"
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Wickerman
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:38 PM
Response to Original message |
1. I'd add Muddy's Hard Again |
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other than that, great list!
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Seneca
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:40 PM
Response to Reply #1 |
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Johnny Winter does some mean production and back-up guitar! I think it has the definitive version of "Mannish Boy", and James Cotton WAILS on his harp on "Bus Driver", and hell, ALL OVER THE PLACE. :D
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Wickerman
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:41 PM
Response to Reply #3 |
5. Was the best Muddy was ever recorded |
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imo. And some of the performances were the best to boot. That harp is what blues harp was meant to be, huh?
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Seneca
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:45 PM
Response to Reply #5 |
9. It has amazing energy and strength |
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If he had thrown in a new version of "The Same Thing", I might have very well had it on my list.
Some of his best Chicago bandmates give it their all, including Pinetop Perkins. Love it.
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Zuni
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Wed Jun-08-05 08:55 PM
Response to Reply #5 |
19. no, the best Muddy years were '48-'55 |
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not including Mojo working, with hubert Sumlin on guitar
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Wickerman
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Wed Jun-08-05 09:21 PM
Response to Reply #19 |
23. No, the best recording in my opinion was Hard Again |
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can't beat his performance in the early Chess years and prior but for sonic capabilities of recording nothing like Hard Again.
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maxsolomon
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:40 PM
Response to Original message |
2. that sounds about right |
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i might put the Bessie Smith box(es) in the 4 slot, but ain't no way to beat 1 - 3. especially #1.
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Seneca
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:42 PM
Response to Reply #2 |
6. Bessie Smith is wonderful |
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Such sweet pain. And the subject of a great tune by The Band. :-)
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newscott
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:41 PM
Response to Original message |
4. I'd throw in an honorable mention |
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for
Mississippi John Hurt Charlie Patton
Hard to argue with your choices, though.
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Seneca
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:42 PM
Response to Reply #4 |
7. Those are two exemplary choices |
Bush_Eats_Beef
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:44 PM
Response to Original message |
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1). Freddie King: Gettin' Ready (for "Goin' Down")
2). BB King: Live at Cook County Jail (for the definitive "The Thrill Is Gone")
3). Live From Antone's Tenth Anniversary Anthology (For Buddy Guy's "Look On Yonders Wall"...his most aggressive, terrifying performance EVER. REALLY).
4). John Lee Hooker: Mr. Lucky (His performance of "This Is Hip" with Ry Cooder is sublime. When he yells "Ry!" and Cooder tears into a fluid slide solo, it's transcendent.
5). Muddy Waters: Fathers And Sons (for the live "Long Distance Call" and the moment when Muddy bellows "MUDDY WATERS...another mule's....been KICKIN' IN YOUR STALL..." I love the Blue Sky stuff, but it can't touch this one.)
:toast:
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Seneca
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:48 PM
Response to Reply #8 |
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I agree about "The Thrill Is Gone", and you know, much as I love "Live At The Regal", I prefer "Cook County Jail". Guess it's the same prison-vibe that Johnny Cash worked out so well on "Live At Folsom Prison".
"Mr. Lucky" is fantastic. Must add another favorite from that album - his duet with Van Morrison on "I Cover The Waterfront." :-)
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Bush_Eats_Beef
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Wed Jun-08-05 07:55 PM
Response to Reply #10 |
11. "Live At The Regal" and "Cook County Jail" are a REAL coin toss. |
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I already had the CD of "Live At The Regal," and a few weeks ago popped for the remastered version.
It's actually worth it, with much-improved sound and an expanded CD booklet. But you've got to LOVE something to buy it 3 times (I have the vinyl version, too)...:-)
I thought that out of the late-period string of albums that began with "The Healer" and ended with "The Best Of Friends," John Lee wore the "guest artists gimmick" most comfortably on "Mr. Lucky." It really is a STRONG album, and while the Cooder track is my favorite, there's not a bad track on the album. The John Lee "attitude" roars like a lion on "Father Was A Jockey" ("He taught me how to RIDE....RIDE...")...he's not talkin' about a horse, folks.
:evilgrin:
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Seneca
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Wed Jun-08-05 08:03 PM
Response to Reply #11 |
12. Yeah, that is his best collaborative album |
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Although "The Healer" album, with him and Bonnie Raitt getting downright dirty on "I'm In The Mood", is another favorite.
Worth tracking down, is a copy of Van Morrison's 1993 effort "Too Long In Exile". John Lee duets on a remake of Van's own "Gloria" (the call and response between him and Van is solid), and a mournful tune called "Wasted Years". Shows that the guest gimmick works for him in reverse too.
Yeah, RIDE...RIDE. :D
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ET Awful
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Wed Jun-08-05 08:07 PM
Response to Original message |
13. There's a surprising lack of Lightning Hopkins on your list |
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Edited on Wed Jun-08-05 08:08 PM by ET Awful
:)
And Big Mama Thorton is suspiciously absent as well.
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Seneca
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Wed Jun-08-05 08:11 PM
Response to Reply #13 |
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Damn. Might as well add my lack of Ma Rainey and T-Bone Walker too. :D
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Zuni
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Wed Jun-08-05 08:53 PM
Response to Reply #13 |
18. same with lowell Fulson |
madrchsod
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Wed Jun-08-05 08:34 PM
Response to Original message |
15. luther allison-"live in chicago" |
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best recording of a live blues performance of anyone i have ever heard. 2- "the paul butterfield blues band" first recording.vinyl only 3- "chicago-the blues today,three volume set,vinyl only 4- "hoodo man blues" jr wells- vinyl only 5- "1973 ann arbor blues and jazz festival"-vinyl 6- "bluesbreakers with eric clapton"- vinyl only
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Zuni
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Wed Jun-08-05 08:52 PM
Response to Original message |
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I am a HUGE blues fan, so it is hard to narrow it down
1. Muddy ---Chess 50th Anniversary Collection
2. Howlin Wolf--- 20 greatest, Chess 50th Anniversary
3. Robert johnson-- complete recordings
4. Butterfield Blues band---Anthology
5. Buddy Guy --- the very best of
6. Otis rush--- the essential otis Rush
7. Fleetwood Mac---Madison Blues Live, Live at the BBC (Peter green fleetwood mac, not stevie nicks)
8. Charlie Patton--- Yazoo records collection (best of and primeval blues, rags and gospel)
9. Living the Blues Collection---excellent collection of classics
10. John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers---A Hard road (extended version with 2 cds and unreleased stuff, plus singles with peter green)
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Kat45
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Wed Jun-08-05 08:53 PM
Response to Original message |
17. One of my faves is Buddy Guy's "Stone Crazy" |
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Any list of essential blues albums has to include Buddy Guy, whether that album or another one.
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Zuni
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Wed Jun-08-05 08:55 PM
Response to Reply #17 |
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"First time I met the Blues" is one of the greatest blues tracks ever recorded
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Enraged_Ape
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Wed Jun-08-05 09:14 PM
Response to Original message |
21. "To Our Children's Children's Children" |
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"In Search of the Lost Chord" "Days of Future Passed" "Seventh Sojourn" "On the Threshold of a Dream"
Oh, BLUES!!! I thought you meant Moody Blues.
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yardwork
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Wed Jun-08-05 09:18 PM
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22. I have this Smithsonian Blues compilation that was done in the 60s |
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and I couldn't live without it. It has field recordings from the 1920s forward. Oh it is so wonderful.
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Initech
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Wed Jun-08-05 09:30 PM
Response to Original message |
24. I only have one blues album |
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And that's BB King's greatest hits.
What would be some good ones for me to get?
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DU
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Wed May 08th 2024, 09:31 AM
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