Sunday, October 4, 2009

Jimmy REED - Rockin' With Reed 1959


Jimmy REED - Rockin' With Reed 1959
Label: Vee Jay / Collectables / Charly
Audio CD: (September 12, 2000)

Blues

"Rockin' With Reed" was Jimmy Reed's second LP, released in 1959 on the VeeJay label, and featuring a strong track list.
Most of Reed's best known songs came from his first album, "I'm Jimmy Reed", and from the later "Found Love", but there is a lot of really good stuff here, even if these titles aren't as well known as "Big Boss Man", "Shame, Shame, Shame", "Ain't That Lovin' You Baby" or "Honest I Do".

This is nothing revolutionary, just half an hour of Reed's laid-back two-string boogie and drawling vocal delivery, but the catchy swagger of "Going To New York" and "My Bitter Seed", the easy, loping boogie of "The Moon Is Rising", and the deep, funky groove of "Take Out Some Insurance", are as instantly appealing as they are simple, and its not hard to understand why Jimmy Reed found the commercial succes that he did, outselling a number of arguably more talented but also less radio friendly bluesmen like Muddy Waters, Elmore James, and Howlin' Wolf.

It's no secret that Mathis James Reed only had a limited arsenal of songs, which he played and recorded over and over again with small variations and different lyrics, but that particular "Jimmy Reed sound" is so immediately appealing and so easily digestable that it brought him a mainstream audience other blues singer only dreamt about.
This album presents Jimmy Reed at the top of his game, and while casual fans will be satisfied with "Blues Masters: The Very Best Of Jimmy Reed" or the double-disc "Big Boss Man: The Best Of Jimmy Reed" from Rhino and Recall respectively, this VeeJay/Collectables reissue is a really fine purchase for serious fans, and for those who simply want a little more than just the radio hits.
By  Docendo Discimus.
**
Jimmy Reed's second album was a little bit different from his first, but not in a way that detracted from its value. Oh, as with most blues albums of the period, it consisted mostly of previously released single sides, in this case that he'd recorded and released over the prior seven years; but three of the dozen songs here were new to listeners when they showed up on Rockin' with Reed. And, of course, that opens several possible lines of inquiry -- were the later tracks held back for an anticipated second (or third) Reed LP, or were they just not deemed suitable for singles or B-sides? And what of the 1953 vintage "Rockin' with Reed"? One suspects that the latter, given the slang of the period, might have been considered too raunchy as a title to release in 1953, whereas in 1960 it sounded like it could "pass" for something more innocent. But as the material here came from the very same sessions that yielded the uniformly phenomenal music that comprised his debut album, it's no surprise to say that this album is every bit as enjoyable and equally essential listening, including "Down in Virginia," "Going to New York," and "Take Out Some Insurance," the latter two the latest recordings on this album; and even the one or two seeming throwaways here, the instrumentals "Ends & Odds" and "My Bitter Seed" are worth hearing for what they reveal of the playing on these sessions. Reed's incredibly expressive voice, coupled with his sinewy guitar and virtuoso-level harp playing, is consistently great throughout the dozen songs here. The sound is also a little more consistent here than it was on his first album, as guitarist Eddie Taylor and drummer Earl Palmer (the latter preceded at the skins on the handful of really early tracks by none other than Albert King) are playing with Reed on most of what's here. Slow blues, ballads, boogie numbers, Reed could do it all, and with Taylor's restrained flourishes the impressive playing is spread around these recordings in large, healthy portions, all the better to be appreciated by modern listeners with the remastered sound that's been making the rounds since the end of the '90s on this library. [A Japanese remaster of the 1959 LP was released in 2006.]
By Bruce Eder, All Music Guide.
**
Jimmy Reed- (Guitar, Harmonica, Vocals)
Henry Gray- (Piano),
Eddie Taylor- (Guitar),
John Littlejohn- (Guitar),
Lefty Bates- (Guitar),
Remo Biondi- (Guitar),
W.C. Dalton- (Guitar),
Albert King- (Drums),
Earl Phillips- (Drums),
Milton Recto-r (Bass),
Morris Wilkerson- (Drums).
**
Side 1
A1.  Going to New York  2:18
A2.  A String to Your Heart  2:42
A3.  Ends and Odds  2:12
A4.  Caress Me Baby  2:48
A5.  Take Out Some Insurance  2:23
A6.  The Moon Is Rising  2:23

Side 2
B1.  Down in Virginia  2:24
B2.  I Know It's a Sin  2:23
B3.  Wanna Be Loved  2:14
B4.  Baby What's on Your Mind  3:06
B5.  My Bitter Seed  2:13
B6.  Rockin' with Reed  2:29
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