Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Abdullah IBRAHIM (Dollar Brand) - Black Lightning 1976

Abdullah IBRAHIM (Dollar Brand) - Black Lightning 1976
CR 2005

Jazz

A rare LP, still unreleased on disc as of 2001, Black Lightning finds the great pianist Abdullah Ibrahim (still generally known as Dollar Brand at this point) in the company of a number of fellow South African musicians for a very fine session that focuses on his township roots. The title track is a joyous, bouncing affair with the three-reed frontline strutting their stuff over a rolling rhythm that never loses its impetus. The melody is infectious and danceable, certainly relating to the local bands with whom Ibrahim grew up and played. The legendary tenor saxophonist Basil Manenberg plays with utter authority and is quite willing to extend into relatively free playing given the context. "Little Boy" has a decidedly funky feel and points the way toward a style that Ibrahim would dip into occasionally in the ensuing decades: a more relaxed, less ecstatically driven music than that which he practiced in the '60s and early '70s. "Black & Brown Cherries" finds him switching somewhat uncomfortably to electric piano with a quartet (though the song itself is enjoyable enough) and he takes things out with a homage to one of his heroes, Monk's "Blue Monk." Black Lightning, though not of the caliber of his incredible solo performances, covers several facets of Ibrahim's art and is well worth picking up if you're lucky enough to come across it.
By Brian Olewnick, All Music Guide.
**
If you look carefully on the liner notes for Black Lightning, you'll see the date 1976, the year of the Soweto student uprising, suggesting that this album was recorded shortly before Brand, disturbed by the continuing danger and cruelty in his homeland, once again sought refuge in New York. (There he based his ongoing successful career as Abudllah Ibrahim, until 15 years later he was able to return to record in South Africa.) Black Lightning's opening title track rides on a soulful blues vamp maintained by Brand's strong left hand, with tenors Coetzee (here calling himself "Basil Mannenberg") and Duku Makasi and veteran South African altoist Kippie Moketsi pursuing long solo meditations.
"Little Boy" returns to the Church of Mbaqanga, its affirming progressions satisfying the soul and Moketsi's slightly raw intonation working well against the sweetness. on "Black and Brown Cherries," Brand is again working an uncredited alternative keyboard, with soulful effect. In a rare (for this period) departure from original material, Brand closes the album with Thelonious's "Blue Monk," but the slack swing and less-than-apt improvisations suggest that this particular group should have stuck closer to home.
By Jeff Kaliss. AAJ.
**
Abdullah Ibrahim- Piano, Piano (Electric) 
Kippie Moketsi- Alto Sax;
Basil Manenberg- Tenor Sax & Flute;
Duku Makasi- Tenor Sax;
Sipho Gumede- Bass
Monty Weber, Gilbert Matthews- Drums.
**
A1. Black Lightning 15:00  
B1. Little Boy 8:00  
B2. Black & Brown Cherries 6:00  
B3. Blue Monk 7:00
**
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John Lee HOOKER and The Coast To Coast Blues Band - The Bellstar Lounge 1979

John Lee HOOKER and The Coast To Coast Blues Band - The Bellstar Lounge 1979
Bellstar Lounge, Colden, NY. 4/4/79
All The Credits Go To *dinostunz*

Blues

01. My Baby Left Me
02. Insturmental
03. Losin' Hand
04. Raining
05. One Burbon One Scotch and One Beer
06. Serve Me Right to Suffer
07. Rock Steady
08. When My First Wife Left Me
09. Boogie Chillun
**
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T-Model Ford - You Better Keep Still 1998

T-Model Ford - You Better Keep Still 1998

Blues

James "T-Model" Ford is the stereotypical old bluesman from rural Mississippi. However, he records for Blues/indie-rock label, Fat Possum out of Oxford, Mississippi. Ford's first album, _Pee Wee Get My Gun_, was "primitive" or lo-fi, up-beat, and had a peculiar emphasis on violence. _You Better_ doesn't live up to the quality or the intensity of the first. The album highlights Ford's idiosyncratic personality with songs like "These Eyes," in which Ford imitates a girlfriend's voice. A pretty good version of "Catfish Blues" also appears on the album as "The Old Number." An interesting blues remix also turns up on the album. "Pop Pop Pop" is in the same vein as the material on fellow Fat Possum artist, R. L. Burnside's Come On In. Overall, I believe, this album suffers from underproduction. A lot of the material sounds like a first take. T-Model Ford can play good music, but some rehearsal and refinement wouldn't hurt the quality of the music.
**
A menacing set of old school blues. The drumbeat on "If I Had Wings (Part 1)" sounds like a stapler being pounded on a desktop. Or a skull. "(Part 2)," which ends the record, is a more straightforward, acoustic lament, except the slurred vocal sounds like "if Ah had Wang!"

The remix of "Pop Pop Pop" (and I've not heard any original mix) begins with a heavy, sampled beat, then sets T-Model loose in a flurry of guitar noise, funky keyboard blips, and ungodly howls. "I'll play drums, you play your guitar!" shouts Mr. Ford. To freakin' Trent Reznor, I presume.
**
T Model Ford's YOU BETTER KEEP STILL is an even more stripped-down proceeding than its predecessor, PEE WEE GET MY GUN, as the keyboards and second guitar of the earlier record are often jettisoned the in favor of stark solo blues. In addition, Ford's voice and guitar are often accompanied only by the simple, low-key drums of his bandmate Spam.

The remix of this album's "Here Comes Papa" fleshes out the sound a bit, into something akin to R.L. Burnside's recordings with the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, but the most effective songs here are the simplest. There's the two-part "If I Had Wings," which brackets the album, as well as the rollicking "Catfish," which sounds not at all unlike some of Son House's Library of Congress recordings. Despite the tongue-in-cheek nicknames of the bandmembers, YOU BETTER KEEP STILL is dead-serious blues.CMJ (2/15/99, pp.24-25) - "...a stripped down affair, with the singer/guitarist's first person yowlings of woe and women backed only by a few chords and/or the unsteady, all-feel beats of drummer Spam..."
From CD Universe.
**
It's tough to look bad-ass when you're 77 years old, but check out the sneer on T-Model Ford's face on the cover of You Better Keep Still. The black hat-sporting ex-con from Mississippi didn't get serious about music until he was in his late sixties and he still doesn't take anything seriously as he improvises his way through many of these songs. Musically, he keeps everything as simple and spare as can be; no solos, just jagged guitar riffs set to his partner Spam's primitively unadorned drumming. The record begins with T-Model banging on a wooden box on "If I Had Wings, Pt. 1" and talking madness about trying to get a drink of water and being attacked by various reptiles and women he attempts to hit on. Then comes the extremely catchy guitar riff from "To the Left to the Right," a frenzied, juke-joint dance number. There's also the harsh, out of tune "Here Comes Papa" and the wacked and very funny "These Eyes." Though it's not really essential to the record, producer Jim Water's noisy remix of "Pop Pop Pop," based mostly on a riff from "Here Comes Papa," is groovy. But T-Model Ford is in no need of a club remix. He's got everything down perfect and the wild blues that flow naturally from him are as real and feisty as blues music gets.
By Adam Bregman, All Music Guide.

01. If I Had Wings (Part 1)   3:35
02. To the Left to the Right   3:16
03. Look What All You Got   4:24
04. Here Comes Papa   4:11
05. We Don't Understand   3:09
06. These Eyes   2:57
07. Pop Pop Pop (Remix)   4:27
08. The Old Number   4:56
09. Come Back Home   3:45
10. If I Had Wings (Part 2)   4:04
**
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Magic SLIM & The TEARDROPS - Anything Can Happen 2005 ((DVD-Rip)

Magic SLIM & The TEARDROPS - Anything Can Happen 2005 ((DVD-Rip)

Blues

This live recording of the Chicago blues band, taped in 2005 at the Sierra Nevada Brewery, showcases Slim's slashing, vibrato-drenched guitar, mountain-moving vocals and presents an authentic South Side, back-alley excursion into the true blues.
Magic Slim is known as the personification of a rollicking, electrified blues style, born of a cross-pollination of Mississippi and Chicago influences. A musician for most of his life, Slim's history is quintessential blues: born in the Deep South, he lost a finger in a cotton gin accident and was forced to switch from piano to guitar. He began playing house parties on the weekends at age 11, and after moving to Chicago before he was old enough to be in the bars in which he was performing, his Teardrops have become recognized as the last true Chicago blues band. Recalling Howlin' Wolf with his gruff vocals and no-nonsense, unapologetic delivery, Slim's imposing stature and improvisational tendencies make for a raw blues experience and an unforgettable stage show. Filmed here in 2005 at the Sierra Nevada Brewery, Slim's authentic south-side sound features his trademark vibrato and earthy, irresistible vocals, clearly showing why this group became one of the most popular touring blues bands around.
**
The Teardrops weathered a potentially devastating change when longtime second guitarist John Primer cut his own major-label debut for Code Blue, but with Slim and bass-wielding brother Nick Holt still on board, it's doubtful the quartet's overall sound will change dramatically in Primer's absence. In 1996, Slim signed with Blind Pig and has cut some of the most-celebrated albums of his career, including Scufflin' in 1996, Black Tornado in 1998, Snakebite in 2000, and Blue Magic in 2002. A live recording taped in 2005 at the Sierra Nevada Brewery was released that same year on both DVD and CD as Anything Can Happen. Tin Pan Alley, a set of recordings made between 1992 and 1998 in Chicago and Europe, was released in 2006 by Austria's Wolf Records. Midnight Blues appeared in 2008.
By Bill Dahl & Al Campbell, All Music Guide.
**
Magic Slim- (Vocals, Guitar)
Michael Dotson- (Guitar, Background Vocals)
Chris Biedron- (Bass)
Vernal Taylor- (Drums, Background Vocals)
**
01. I'm a Bluesman 
02.The Man You Need 
03.Goin' to Mississippi 
04.Please Don't Dog Me 
05.Mind Your Own Business 
06.I ain't Looking For No Love 
07.You Got to Pay 
08.I Need Lovin' 
09.Shake It 
10.Crazy Woman 
11.I Don't Believe You Baby 
12.Black Tornado
13.Final
**
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Foghat - Live 1977

Foghat - Live 1977
BRK 6971

Blues

The veteran blues, boogie 'n' rockin' touring machine known as Foghat shook arena walls throughout the seventies with their no frills approach. With Rod "The Bottle" Price and "Lonesome" Dave Peverett leading the way, the boys always gave 100% from the stage. Foghat is captured live from 1974 and 1976 on the compilation archive issue of The King Biscuit Flower Hour. With the likes of timeless seventies summertime rockers, "Slow Ride", "Fool for the City", "My Babe", "Drivin' Wheel", "Honey Hush", and "I Just Want to Make Love to You" tossed into the mix, Foghat turn up the heat during this powerhouse performance, while laying it down with a good time vibe. In addition to the smokin' live cuts, the compact disc closes with a bonus nine-minute interview with the band members.
**
FOGHAT LIVE is perhaps one of the best live albums of its day. Powerful, super-charged rock with a Stadium fel to it. Recorded at the War Memorial in Rochester, this album portrays Foghat in their heyday; at their height. Six wonderful blues rock songs with some of the very best slide guitar ever recorded from Rod Price. Lonesome Dave's vocals are on the merk this night, not to mention the incredible rythym section of Roger Earl and Craig McGregor. Any rock fan should get this album. There's no question as to why this went double platinum upon its release. The only problem is that it's only six songs, about 43 minutes worth. This really should have been a double album, and I want to believe that there were more songs recorded on this tour that would make up a wonderful re-release on the complete concert. Wouldn't that be special. The production is awesome, the performance flawless. GET THIS ALBUM!!!
RIP LONESOME DAVE.
By Michael Laimo.
**
A1. Fool for the City   5:28
A2. Home in My Hand   4:56
A3. I Just Want to Make Love to You   8:46
B1. Road Fever   5:29
B2. Honey Hush   5:38
B3. Slow Ride   8:20
**
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Monday, February 1, 2010

Charley PATTON - The Definitive Charley Patton 2001

Charley PATTON - The Definitive Charley Patton 2001

Blues

The recordings of Charlie (Charley) Patton are among the most important and powerful blues recordings of the 20th century. Patton's extent sides, especially those recorded in 1929 - 30, show an artist with a booming voice and an intensely rhythmic but ever-shifting guitar style. His songs speak of rambling and restlessness, of weariness, of harassment from police and authority figures, drinking sprees, sexual potency, floods, crop disasters, the fear and imminence of death, and the desire for better days.
Those expecting to find another Robert Johnson in Patton's recordings will be disappointed, despite the frequent association made between Johnson and Patton in thumbnail histories of the era. In spite of their similarity as romantic, rambling figures, Johnson's music derived from the recordings of a disparate range of stylists, including Skip James, Son House, Tommy Johnson, Scrapper Blackwell, Lonnie Johnson, Kokomo Arnold, Hambone Willie Newbern, Johnnie Temple, Casey Bill Weldon, and Henry Thomas. Johnson's recordings are rhythmically more standard and streamlined than Patton's. His diction is clearer and his voice higher. The thematic concerns of the two musicians are similar, no doubt due to their similar lifestyles, but in Johnson's recordings, the Devil is an overt presence, while the Devil leaves little mark in Patton's recordings. Evil is manifest as natural disaster in Patton's world - boll weevils and floods - while in Johnson's world it is given tangible form and named Devil. While some of Johnson's showmanship was no doubt derived from Patton, their association is not as linear as one might think. Both musicians, for instance, had what are purported to vast repertoires of mostly-unrecorded non-blues-oriented material that they would perform for non-blues-oriented crowds. On the basis of the recorded evidence, it is hard to imagine either musician performing pop songs of the time, but seemingly they did. Just how these performances sounded is something that will remain a mystery, but it is likely that Johnson's and Patton's pop song arrangements sounded as different from each other as did their blues.

As one of the oldest blues musicians on record, much of Patton's repertoire dates from a time before blues was the rhythmically static and hidebound musical structure that would become in the hands of a number of lesser musicians than Patton into the 1930's. Patton's guitar accompaniments are showy and elaborate, kaleidoscopic in their ever-changing response to his vocals and their incessant re-articulation of the song's rhythm. His lyrics are very difficult to understand, a combination of an occasionally mush-mouthed delivery and crude recording processes.

Catfish's package is excellent. The three discs come packaged in cardboard sleeves printed to resemble old 78 paper record jackets. The three discs are enclosed in a heavy cardboard box. The 18-page booklet includes an informative essay, focusing on Patton's life and the circumstances of his recordings. Previously, the two Yazoo discs had been the Patton volumes to beat. Catfish includes the few titles not included on those discs, and all of the titles are in the finest sound quality - there is enough noise reduction to get a better sense of Patton's lyrics than before, but not so much as to deaden the sound or make the recordings sound artificial. The titles are arranged chronologically, with the exception that Patton's work as accompanist to the fiddler Henry Sims and his wife Bertha Lee are placed on disc three. One title that completists might quibble is missing from this set is "On the Wall," (onetime-Patton girlfriend) Louise Johnson's erotic piano ditty from the 1930 Grafton sessions, on which Patton and Son House (or possibly Willie Brown) interject with spoken commentary. But Patton's musical contribution to this title is minimal, and its' absence is not a real problem. A more glaring omission, and one the keeps this set from being definitive, is that it does not include the existing alternate takes of three titles from the 1929 Henry Sims session: "Hammer Blues," "Elder Greene Blues," and "Some These Days I'll Be Gone." The exclusion of these recordings is baffling and disappointing, marring an otherwise spectacular presentation of Patton's recordings. Presumably, there is some reason for this omission - it violates the titles claim to being the "definitive" edition, and is a real shame. The alternates can be found in best quality on Yazoo 2001, "King of he Delta Blues."

Patton's epochal titles such as the two-part "High Water Everywhere," the slide guitar drenched paean to cocaine, "Spoonful" (a very different precursor to the popular `60's rock recording by Cream of the same title), "Pony Blues" and "Pea Vine Blues," "Prayer of Death Pts. 1 and 2," and the four monumental titles recorded in 1930 with Willie Brown (of Robert Johnson's "Crossroads Blues" fame) on second guitar remain riveting and essential music, over seventy years after the recordings were first issued. The titles with Willie Brown are especially interesting - Brown was arguably a more nuanced, rhythmic and dexterous guitar player than Patton, and these duets with Patton add to Brown's very small (two incredible commercial recordings from 1930, a few 1940's Library of Congress recordings) discography. They are sterling examples of pre-war blues, and deserve greater exposure than they have enjoyed.

The 1934 recordings presented on disc three show Patton in a slight decline, after having his throat slit in a 1933 fight. The years of chasing women and drinking and snorting cocaine had worn Patton down. His guitar playing became more listless and less intricate (though still at a very high standard), and his voice became rougher, his vocal range diminished. Patton died about three months after making his 1934 recordings, of a heart condition. His final recordings, while not in the same brilliant league as his 1929 - 30 recordings, are a monument to his lifetime of song and entertainment, a testament to a life better spent making music than making end's meat on a plantation.
By Francis Flannery.
**
Disc: 1 
01. Mississippi Boweavil Blues
02. Screamin' and Hollerin' the Blues
03. Down the Dirt Road Blues
04. Pony Blues
05. Banty Rooster Blues
06. It Won't Be Long
07. Pea Vine Blues
08. Tom Rushen Blues
09. Spoonful Blues
10. Shake It and Break It (But Don't Let It Fall Mama)
11. Prayer of Death, Pt. 1
12. Prayer of Death, Pt. 2
13. Lord, I'm Discouraged
14. I'm Goin' Home
15. Going to Move to Alabama
16. Elder Greene Blues
17. Circle Round the Moon
18. Devil Sent the Rain Blues
19. Mean Black Cat Blues
20. Frankie and Albert
 
Disc: 2 
01. Some These Days I'll Be Gone
02. Green River Blues
03. Hammer Blues
04. Magnolia Blues
05. When Your Way Gets Dark
06. Heart Like Railroad Steel
07. Some Happy Day
08. You're Gonna Need Somebody When You Die
09. Jim Lee Blues, Pt. 1
10. Jim Lee Blues, Pt. 2
11. High Water Everywhere, Pt. 1
12. High Water Everywhere, Pt. 2
13. Jesue Is a Dying-Bed Maker
14. I Shall Not Be Moved
15. Rattlesnake Blues
16. Running Wild Blues
17. Joe Kirby
18. Mean Black Moan
19. Dry Well Blues
20. Some Summer Day, Pt. 1

Disc: 3 
01. Moon Going Down
02. Bird Nest Bound
03. Jersey Bull Blues
04. High Sheriff Blues
05. Stone Pony Blues
06. 34 Blues
07. Love My Stuff
08. Revenue Man Blues
09. Oh Death
10. Troubled 'Bout My Mother
11. Poor Me
12. Hang It on the Wall
13. Farrell Blues
14. Come Back Corrina
15. Tell Me Man Blues
16. Be True Be True Blues
17. Yellow Bee
18. Mind Reader Blues
**
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John PRIMER & The Real Deal Blues Band - It's A Blues Life 2000

John PRIMER & The Real Deal Blues Band - It's A Blues Life 2000

Blues

Primer deserved his own share of the spotlight. In 1993, Michael Frank's Chicago-based Earwig logo issued Primer's debut domestic disc, Stuff You Got to Watch. It was a glorious return to the classic '50s Chicago sound, powered by Primer's uncommonly concise guitar work and gruff, no-nonsense vocals. With the 1995 emergence of The Real Deal -- produced by Vernon and featuring all-star backing by harpist Billy Branch, pianist David Maxwell, and bassist Johnny B. Gayden, Primer's star appeared ready to ascend. He soon transferred back to the Wolf label for sets such as 1997's Cold Blooded Blues Man, 1998's Blues Behind Closed Doors,
and 2000's It's a Blues Life.
By Bill Dahl, All Music Guide.
**
John Primer- Vocals, Guitar, Acoustic Guitar
Bert Robinson- Drums
Steve Bell- Harmonica
Tom Holland- Guitar
Ken Barker- Bass Guitar,Piano 
Nick Holt- Bass Guitar

01. I've Been Abused
02. Maggie
03. Last Night
04. Mama Talk to Your Daughter
05. Party Girl
06. Empty Arms
07. Lonesome For Your Love
08. Sweet as a Georgia Peach
09. Every Time You Leave Me
10. Can't You See What You're Doin' to Me
11. Give Me Back My Wig
12. Rock Me
**
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