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Showing posts with label Dave Pruter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Pruter. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 September 2010

“Blowing The Fuse – 29 R&B Classics That Rocked The Jukebox In 1953” by VARIOUS ARTISTS. A Review Of The Award-Winning 2005 Bear Family CD Compilation

"...Get Out That Big Ten-Inch...Record Of The Band That Played The Blues..."

The "Blowing The Fuse" series of CD compilations stretches across 16 volumes from 1945 to 1960 and was then followed by Bear Family's equally magnificent "Sweet Soul Music" series of 10 sets from 1961 to 1970 (I've reviewed all 10 of those in detail). Having been drawn in by the truly beautiful sound quality and presentation of the 'Soul' discs, I knew it would be a big blow to my bank balance buying even one of these R&B issues - and it was! I’ve laboured with all of these time-consuming detailed reviews because these reissues are the business...

"Blowing The Fuse - 29 R&B Classics That Rocked The Jukebox In 1953" is on Bear Family BCD 16708 AS and was released April 2005 in Germany. Each US-based yearly compilation comes in a 3-way foldout card digipak sleeve. The left flap pictures an original record relevant to the year (1953 has "Gabbin’ Blues" by Big Maybelle on Okeh), the centre flap holds a 70 to 90 page oversized booklet that slips out so you can read it separately and the right flap a colour-themed CD that matches the outer packaging. As with the 10 "Sweet Soul Music" compilations, each of the 16 R&B spines makes up a whole photo when placed alongside each other (a fantastic black & white shot of a crowd of hip dudes and their gals dancing at some Saturday night bar). As you can see from the cover photos of these compilations too, the theme of people dancing and artists enjoying themselves is repeated right across all of these wonderfully restored photographs (they're from The Showtime Music Archive in Toronto). This 1953 issue has 72-pages in its booklet and the CD runs to a healthy 79:27 minutes.

Compiler Dave "Daddy Cool" Booth took his time with this - actually playing the set through - mixing in the famous with the obscure but in a new order - and the result is a truly satisfying listen rather than a patchy one. The compilation begins in January and in rough chronological order ends in December. And even the way-too-familiar tracks on here like "Crying In The Chapel" by The Orioles, "Mess Around" by Ray Charles and "One Scotch, One Bourbon, One Beer" by Amos Milburn are all sorted out by the next big plus...the beautifully clear sound...

THE SOUND and TRACK CHOICES:
Bear Family have gotten all the ORIGINAL master tapes from each record company (both Mono and Stereo) and their resident expert JURGEN CRASSER has mastered them with care - and given the wildly varying sources, the sound is uniformly GLORIOUS.

Little prepares you for the clarity of Ruth Brown’s tambourine in the opening seconds of “Mama, He Treats Your Daughter Mean” which is followed by the fabulous “Baby Don’t Do It” from The “5” Royales – an equally astute lyric and infectious rocker. In fact throughout 1953, the tunes are about hitting someone, getting drunk or getting laid – or all three combined. Bull Moose Jackson’s staggeringly lewd "Big Ten-Inch Record" (lyrics above) and Jimmy Liggins’ mean old bottle song “Drunk” are perfect examples – masterpieces of the teasing double-entendre. Offset against this naughtiness is the almost clinging innocence of the Doo Wop songs (“The Clock” by Johnny Ace) - all sweetness and light and heartfelt longing. Its also noticeable just how far ahead of the game “Atlantic” was as a label – “Good Lovin’” by The Clovers, “Honey Hush” by Joe Turner and “Money Honey” by Clyde McPhatter And The Drifters are all such irresistible smashes that they sit as awkward bedfellows with the heavy-handed blues tunes like Earl Forest’s “Whoppin’ And Hollerin’” which seemed to struggle with the word ‘hit’. And having been treated to truly great sound, the obviously rare but dubbed from disc “I Had A Notion” by Joe Morris is sonically rough to say the least.

The women are either loving their men or killing them – “Sweetheart Of The Blues” Shirley is in lovely voice on “I’m Gone” by Shirley & Lee, while Rose Marie McCoy’s spoken answers in Big Maybelle’s “Gabbin’ Blues” are full of staggeringly catty insults and full-on slag-offs – you’d rather face a baseball bat than the wrath of this Mississippi belle. There’s also a sense to of changing times among some songs – “TV Is The Thing (This Year)” by Dinah Washington.

Genius choices go to “Marie” by The Four Tunes – a brilliant fast vocal-group cover of an Irving Berlin song that is part “Reet Petite” and part Platters on speed! Tiny Bradshaw’s “Soft” is a brassy instrumental that sounds like a World War II dancefloor shuffle – a really sweet discovery. Little Junior Parker’s “Feelin’ Good” is fantastic too – it’s half Bo Diddley, half John Lee Hooker boogie – a joke done in the studio that turned out to strike a new rocking-guitar chord. Little Walter’s “Blues With A Feeling” is the absolute dog’s bollox - his huge-sounding amplified harmonica warbling through your speakers - mean and gritty – it’s astonishingly potent stuff.

THE BOOKLET:
Although slightly different in layout, like the "Sweet Soul Music" series, the booklet is to die for. With an intro on Page 4, the text for the songs begins on Page 5 and ends on Page 69, so there's almost no wasted space. Each artist is pictured using quality publicity shots, and every now and then, a beautiful full colour plate of lesser-seen singles and their label bag graces an entire page ("Hound Dog" by “Big Mama” Thornton on Peacock and "Please Don’t Leave Me" by Fats Domino on Imperial are on Pages 16 and 38). Each song then has an essay on its history by noted writer COLIN ESCOTT with knowledgeable contributions from BILL MILLAR, DAVE BOOTH, Marv Goldberg's online R&B site, Robert Pruter, Robert L. Campbell and Tom Kelly. And because the booklet allows Escott to spread out on each song, the details come thick and fast - like Dahl's work on "Sweet Soul Music" - it's a fabulously entertaining and informative read. I just wish there was more of it...

Niggles - the glossy card sleeve is easy to smudge and I wish the booklet was 90 pages and not 72, but apart from that there's just way too much great stuff on here to whinge about.

To sum up - even though they're expensive as imports, I think once long-time collectors actually get their hands on even one of these compilations (no matter what the date) - they'll be irresistibly hooked. For the casual buyer just looking for a great one-stop account of R&B Music for a given year - "1953" is 'the' place to start.

Compilations like this live or die based on a few key ingredients - great track choices, properly remastered sound and all of it wrapped up in knowledgeable and (if you're lucky) sumptuous presentation. Well "Blowin The Fuse" wins on all counts - it really does. The entire series is gorgeous to look at and especially to listen to. Well done to all involved...

Track List for the CD "Blowing The Fuse 1953"
(Label & Catalogue Number For The US 78”/7" Single Follow The Title. If There's TWO Catalogue Numbers, The First Is The Original; The 2nd Is The Reissue In That Year)

1. Mama, He Treats Your Daughter Mean – RUTH BROWN (Atlantic 986)
2. Baby Don't Do It – THE “5” ROYALES with Charlie Ferguson, His Tenor & Orchestra (Apollo 443)
3. Gabbin' Blues – BIG MAYBELLE (Okeh 6931)
[Duet vocals with Rose Marie McCoy who also co-wrote the song]
4. Whoopin' And Hollerin' – EARL FOREST with The Beale Streeters (Duke 108)
5. Hound Dog – WILLIE MAE “Big Mama” THORNTON with Kansas City Bill & Orchestra (Peacock 1612)
6. Big Ten-Inch Record – BULL MOOSE JACKSON with Tiny Bradshaw’s Orchestra (King 4580)
7. I'm Gone – SHIRLEY & LEE with Dave Bartholomew and his Orchestra (Aladdin 3153)
[Shirley Goodman and Leonard Lee]
8. Please Love Me – B.B. KING and his Orchestra (RPM Records 386)
9. Soft – TINY BRADSHAW (King 4577)
10. Dream Girl – JESSE And MARVIN (Specialty 447)
[Jesse Belvin and Marvin Phillips]
11. I'm Mad – WILLIE MABON and His Combo (Chess 1538)
12. I Wanna Know – THE DU DROPPERS (RCA Victor 20/47-5229)
13. The Clock – JOHNNY ACE and The Beale Streeters (Duke 112)
14. Get It – THE ROYALS (Federal 45-12133)
15. Please Don't Leave Me – FATS DOMINO (Imperial 5240)
16. Crying In The Chapel – THE ORIOLES (Jubilee 5122)
17. Hittin' On Me – BUDDY JOHNSON And His Orchestra, Vocal by Ella Johnson (Mercury 70116)
18. Good Lovin' – THE CLOVERS (Atlantic 1000)
19. Mess Around – RAY CHARLES And His Orchestra (Atlantic 999)
20. Shake A Hand – FAYE ADAMS With The Joe Morris Orchestra (Herald H-416)
21. One Scratch, One Bourbon, One Beer – AMOS MILBURN and his Aladdin Chickenshackers (Aladdin 3197)
22. Honey Hush – JOE TURNER And His Band (Atlantic 1001)
23. Blues With A Feeling – LITTLE WALTER And His Jukes (Checker 780)
24. Marie – THE FOUR TUNES (Jubilee 5128)
25. I Had A Notion – JOE MORRIS ORCHESTRA Vocal By Al Savage (Herald H-417)
26. Feelin' Good – LITTLE JUNIOR’S BLUE FLAMES (Sun 187)
27. TV Is The Thing (This Year) – DINAH WASHINGTON (Mercury 70214)
28. Money Honey – CLYDE McPHATTER And The Drifters (Atlantic 1006)
29. Drunk – JIMMY LIGGINS And His 3-D Music (Specialty 470)

Sunday, 5 September 2010

“Blowing The Fuse – 29 R&B Classics That Rocked The Jukebox In 1954” by VARIOUS ARTISTS. A Review Of The Award-Winning 2005 Bear Family CD Compilation

"...I Didn’t Want To Do It ...But She Sends Me So..."

The "Blowing The Fuse" series of CD compilations stretches across 16 volumes from 1945 to 1960 and was then followed by Bear Family's equally magnificent "Sweet Soul Music" series of 10 sets from 1961 to 1970 (I've reviewed all 10 of those in detail). Having been drawn in by the truly beautiful sound quality and presentation of the ‘Soul’ discs, I knew it would be a big blow to my bank balance buying even one of these R&B issues - and it was! But – and I can’t state this enough – they are a new benchmark in terms of sound and packaging, and are intended as such…

"Blowing The Fuse - 29 R&B Classics That Rocked The Jukebox In 1954" is on Bear Family BCD 16709 AS and was released April 2005 in Germany. Each US-based yearly compilation comes in a 3-way foldout card digipak sleeve. The left flap pictures an original record relevant to the year (1954 has "Hearts Of Stone” by The Charms on DeLuxe), the centre flap holds a 70 to 90 page oversized booklet that slips out so you can read it separately and the right flap a colour-themed CD that matches the outer packaging. As with the 10 "Sweet Soul Music" compilations, each of the 16 R&B spines makes up a whole photo when placed alongside each other (a fantastic black & white shot of a crowd of hip dudes and their gals dancing at some Saturday night bar). As you can see from the cover photos of these compilations too, the theme of people dancing and artists enjoying themselves is repeated right across all of these wonderfully restored photographs (they're from The Showtime Music Archive in Toronto). This 1954 issue has 72-pages in its booklet and the CD runs to a healthy 79:08 minutes.

Compiler Dave "Daddy Cool" Booth took his time with this - actually playing the set through - mixing in the famous with the obscure but in a new order - and the result is a truly satisfying listen rather than a patchy one. The compilation begins in January and in rough chronological order ends in December. And even the way-too-familiar tracks on here like "Goodnite, Sweetheart, Goodnite" by The Spaniels, "I Just Want To Make Love To You" by Muddy Waters and "Honey Love" by The Drifters are sorted out by the next big plus...the beautifully clear sound...

THE SOUND and TRACK CHOICES:
Bear Family have gotten all the ORIGINAL master tapes from each record company (both Mono and Stereo) and their resident expert JURGEN CRASSER has mastered them with care - and given the wildly varying sources, the sound is uniformly GLORIOUS.

Bear Family have gotten all the ORIGINAL master tapes from each record company (both Mono and Stereo) and their resident expert JURGEN CRASSER has mastered them with care - and given the wildly varying sources, the sound is uniformly GLORIOUS.

It opens with a genre-mixing double-whammy, "Gee" by The Crows and "You're So Fine" by Little Walter - romantic Doo Wop followed by hard-hitting Blues and R'n'B. "Gee" sounds really clean, but the drums and guitar of Freddie Bellow and Jimmy Rogers on "You're So Fine" (as well as Walter's harmonica) are just huge - like they're going to invade your living room. The audio drops a notch on the infamously lo-fi Johnny Ace track "Saving My Love For You" - the hiss is more than apparent, but it's still the best I've ever heard this fateful song (he died in 1954). I'm not particularly enamoured with Faye Adams or Guitar Slim, but the saucy "I Didn't Want To Do It" by The Spiders is a dancer I'll never tire of (lyrics above). There's also a wonderful indication of changing times on Page 22 which pictures Buddy And Ella Johnson's wonderful "I'm Just A Fool" 45 - its Mercury Records label-bag proudly announcing that their 7" single product is "non-breakable" (unlike the shellac 78)!

Fans of the much-loved vocal group The Harp Tones will be shocked at the clarity of Willie Winfield's lead vocal on the churchy "Sunday Kind Of Love". The same applies to "Gloria" by The Cadillacs. The audio quality is just beautiful, incredibly clean - and even towards the end of the song where there are two or three clicking glitches on the tape, Bear Family hasn't edited them out - thereby keeping the integrity of the recording intact (as their blurb on transfers regularly says).

“Lovey Dovey” by The Clovers, “It Should Have Been Me” by Ray Charles and “Oh What A Dream” by Ruth Brown show why Atlantic was such a great label – and all of them sonically improved to my ears. The chipper dancefloor rhythms of "Work With Me Annie" with Hank Ballard’s great vocal work follow perfectly after Cozy Eggleston’s "Big Heavy" – a brilliant guitar and brass instrumental re-working of Louis Jordan’s “Blue Light Boogie”. Like so many cleverly written songs of the day, they reached out to the teen audience and their longings (especially the whites) and won them over.

Obscurities and genius choices go to a rare outing by Fats Domino’s principal songwriter Dave Bartholomew on "Jump Children” (a great bopper) and the hugely likeable dancer called “Hearts Of Stone” by The Charms who featured Otis Williams on Lead vocals (the tune is a re-working of a Doo Wop track by The Jewels on R&B Records from earlier in the year). And it all ends with a genuine gem – the huge blasting Saxophone of Joe Houston on his largely instrumental “All Night Long” – the kind of cool party tune that’s going to turn up in a hip-movie coming to you real soon.

THE BOOKLET:
Although slightly different in layout, like the "Sweet Soul Music" series, the booklet is to die for. With an intro on Page 4, the text for the songs begins on Page 5 and ends on Page 71, so there's almost no wasted space. Each artist is pictured using quality publicity shots, and every now and then, a beautiful full colour plate of lesser-seen singles and their label bags graces an entire page (“I Feel So Bad” by Chuck Willis on Okeh and “Shake, Rattle & Roll” by Joe Turner on Atlantic are on Pages 43 and 48). Each song then has an essay on its history by noted writer COLIN ESCOTT with knowledgeable contributions from BILL MILLAR, DAVE BOOTH, Marv Goldberg's online R&B site, Robert Pruter, Robert L. Campbell and Tom Kelly. And because the booklet allows Escott to spread out on each song, the details come thick and fast - like Dahl's work on "Sweet Soul Music" - it's a fabulously entertaining and informative read. I just wish there was more of it…

Niggles - the glossy card sleeve is easy to smudge and I wish the booklet was 90 pages and not 72, but apart from that there's just way too much great stuff on here to whinge about.

To sum up - even though they're expensive as imports, I think once long-time collectors actually get their hands on even one of these compilations (no matter what the date) - they'll be irresistibly hooked. For the casual buyer just looking for a great one-stop account of R&B Music for a given year - "1954" is 'the' place to start.

Compilations like this live or die based on a few key ingredients - great track choices, properly remastered sound and all of it wrapped up in knowledgeable and (if you're lucky) sumptuous presentation. Well "Blowin The Fuse" wins on all counts - it really does. The entire series is gorgeous to look at and especially to listen to. Well done to all involved...

Track List for the CD "Blowing The Fuse 1954"
(Label & Catalogue Number For The US 7" Single Follow The Title. If There's TWO Catalogue Numbers, The First Is The Original; The 2nd Is The Reissue In That Year)

1. Gee – THE CROWS (Rama RR-5)
2. You’re So Fine – LITTLE WALTER And His Dukes (Checker 788)
[Features Willie Dixon on Bass and Jimmy Rogers on Guitar]
3. Saving My Love For You – JOHNNY ACE And Band (Duke 118)
4. I’ll Be True – FAYE ADAMS with Joe Morris Orchestra (Herald H-419)
5. I Didn’t Want To Do It – THE SPIDERS (Imperial 45-5265)
6. Sunday Kind Of Love – THE HARP-TONES Vocal Solo Willie Winfield (Bruce 101)
[Co-written with Louis Prima, aka “A Sunday Kind Of Love”]
7. I Do – THE “5” ROYALES With Charlie “Little Jazz” Ferguson And His Orchestra (Apollo 452)
8. I’m Just Your Fool – BUDDY JOHNSON And His Orchestra Vocal By Ella Johnson (Mercury 70251)
9. The Things That I Used To Do – GUITAR SLIM And His Band (Specialty 482)
10. Lovey Dovey – THE CLOVERS (Atlantic 969)
11. It Should Have Been Me – RAY CHARLES And His Orchestra (Atlantic 1021)
12. Goodnite, Sweetheart, Goodnite – THE SPANIELS (Vee-Jay VJ-107)
13. Big Heavy – COZY EGGLESTON And His Combo (States S 133)
[A cover version of Louis Jordan’s “Blue Light Boogie” from 1950 on Decca]
14. Work With Me Annie – THE MIDNIGHTERS (Federal 12169)
[Written by and featuring Hank Ballard on Lead Vocals]
15. Jock-A-Mo – SUGAR BOY And His Cane Cutters (Checker 787]
[Sugar Boy Crawford – the song was originally an Indian chant first recorded in the 1940’s by Danny Barker’s Creole Cats as “Chockomo-Fendo-Hey”. It was later revised as “Iko Iko” by The Dixie Cups in 1965 and then covered as “Iko Iko” by many other artists since then – including most famously by Dr. John]
16. Just Make Love To Me – MUDDY WATERS And His Guitar (Chess 1571)
[78”s carried the title “Just Make Love To Me”, but it is of course more famously known as “I Just Want To Make Love To You”]
17. I Feel So Bad – CHUCK WILLIS (Okeh 7029)
18. Sh-Boom – THE CHORDS (Cat 104)
19. Shake, Rattle And Roll – JOE TURNER And His BLUES KINGS (Atlantic 1026)
20. Oh What A Dream – RUTH BROWN And Her Rhythmakers (Atlantic 45-1036)
[Her ‘Rhythmakers’ were The Drifters under another name]
21. Riot In Cell Block No. 9 – THE ROBINS (Spark 103)
[Written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller]
22. Honey Love – THE DRIFTERS Featuring Clyde McPhatter (Atlantic 45-1029)
23. Evil is Goin’ On – HOWLIN’ WOLF (Chess 1575)
[Written by Willie Dixon]
24. Oop Shoop – SHIRLEY GUNTER And The Queens (Flair 1050)
25. Jump Children – DAVE BARTHOLOMEW (Imperial 5308)
26. Gloria – THE CADILLACS With The Jesse Powell Orchestra (Josie 765)
27. You Upset Me Baby – B.B. “Blues Boy” KING And His Orchestra (RPM 416)
28. Hearts Of Stone – THE CHARMS (DeLuxe 6062)
29. All Night Long – JOE HOUSTON (Money 203)

Sunday, 19 April 2009

"The Chess Story - 1947 - 1975" by VARIOUS ARTISTS (October 1999 US MCA/Universal/Chess 15-Disc Box Set of Erick Labson Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...





https://www.amazon.co.uk/Chess-Story-1947-1975-Cds/dp/B00002MCI4?crid=3SOK44IWLM5BK&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.-OFboz9-3hURYnfk2r6hWA.Tv_YAWZEc21qQ4bkoDvLjIPx65MURaNit6h5kZNfqAU&dib_tag=se&keywords=602438059621&nsdOptOutParam=true&qid=1729864702&sprefix=602438059621%2Caps%2C81&sr=8-1&linkCode=ll1&tag=mabasreofcdbl-21&linkId=44f746f6c74f3f38092c7068b01b4f93&language=en_GB&ref_=as_li_ss_tl

"...You Can Get More For Less…And Should…"

When this Blues, R 'n' B and Soul label retrospective behemoth was released 4 October 1999 by MCA/Universal in the USA - as you can imagine - "The Chess Story 1947-1975" was something of an event.

Initially limited to 10,000 numbered copies (number on the rear) - MCA/Universal 3805962 (Barcode 602438059621) was remastered by tape maestro ERICK LABSON (over 1,200 credits to his name – huge names across the vast Universal archives). This tome to the famous recording label at 2120 South Michigan Avenue was housed in a hard card outer with three colour-coded wood-effect books slid inside alongside a further printed 70-page hardback with 10,000 words – essays by noted R&B and Blues writers. "The Chess Story 1947-1975" certainly looked the hefty part.

Each slide-out hardback book carried 5CDs - 15 in total - offering up 340 tracks dating from 1947 to 1975 across 13 audio discs - Disc 14 and 15 being an interview disc with Phil and Marshall Chess (label founders) and a CD-ROM including visual clips of major Chess artists plus previously unseen footage of Chicago and the Chess Records operation. The 1999 CD-ROM is Interactive (ran on Windows 95/98 and Apple OS-7 operating systems at the time of issue) and has Chart Histories and perhaps more usual to buffs - a Catalogue/Artist Listing of all Chess recordings. 

Many were first time on CD and exclusive to "The Chess Story 1947-1975". Using the same look hardback book sets with a skinny attached-booklet, the original was then broken down into 3 separate 16 November 2001 releases which offered a cheaper option. 1947 to 1956 was on Chess 1126492 (Barcode 0008811269425) – 1957 to 1964 was on Chess 1126952 (Barcode 0008811269524) and 1965 to 1975 was on Chess 1126962 (Barcode 0008811269623). The first two were 5CD sets, the third a 4-Disc set with 3CDs of music and 1 x CD-ROM. 

Ten years down the line and into 2009, however, and time hasn't been to kind to either the original big box or the three liner-note-less reissues.

Back to the original beast - each of the three 'books' has a crappy centred booklet at the top which lists the song and artist, but amazingly for a retrospective of this size, doesn't provide a catalogue number nor which personnel played on what. The 70-page hardback book is nice to look at, but again despite its 10,000 word essays claim, is deceptively slight. It gives us a history of the label by ROBETT PRUTER (of Chicago Soul magazine), a printed version of the interviews on Disc 14 (repeating itself) and a Chess R&B Charts list at the very end. While Pruter's story of Chess is very entertaining, and the music on Disc 1 to 13 simply sensational, precisely because of its cost, you still feel like you've been short changed.

I've reviewed all three November 2001 reissued boxes separately and provided track-by-track catalogue numbers. But reviewing the full box now - something occurs to me.

Good releases - especially between 2007 and 2009 - have made much of the box's exclusivity redundant and its price tag since deletion a bit of an expensive extravagance (300 to 400 sterling or 500 to 600.00 dollars). The now ludicrous cost of acquiring this set coupled with the less than stellar packaging makes me think that you must be able to get better elsewhere. So I set about a trawl to find alternatives and have come up with the following list, which will provide fans with 90% of what's on this 15CD box while throwing in a good 20% more - and all of it for less than half the money...

All of the following are remastered by the best labels and have superb and detailed liner notes:

1. The Very Best Of - FONTELLA BASS (2006 CD, 25 Tracks)
2. Gold - CHUCK BERRY (2005, 2CDs, 50 Tracks, Remasters)
3. Standing Ovation - The Very Best Of - THE DELLS
(2007, 2CDs, 39 Tracks, Remasters)
4. Go Go Power - Complete Chess Singles 1961-1966 -SUGAR PIE DeSANTO
(2009 CD, 26 Tracks)
5. Gold - BO DIDDLEY (2008, 2CDs, 41 Tracks, Remasters)
6. Gold - JOHN LEE HOOKER (2007, 2CDs, 35 Tracks, Hip-O Select Remasters)
7. The Real Folk Blues/More Folk Blues - HOWLIN' WOLF
(2003, 2LP on 1CD, 24 Tracks, US Hip-O Select)
8. Gold - ETTA JAMES (2007, 2CDs, 36 Tracks - Hip-O Select Remasters)
9. The Chess Collection - LAURA LEE (2006 CD, 20 Tracks)
10. Hoochie Coochie Man - Complete Chess Masters Vol.2 - MUDDY WATERS
(2004, 2CD Hip-O Select Book set, 51 Tracks)
11. The Real Folk Blues/More Folk Blues - MUDDY WATERS
(US Hip-O Select)
12. Fathers & Sons - MUDDY WATERS (2001, 2LP set on 1 CD with bonus tracks)
13. The Real Folk Blues/More Folk Blues - SONNY BOY WILLIAMSON
(2003, 2LPs on 1CD, US Hip-O Select)
14. Chess Uptown Soul - VARIOUS (1997, 24 Tracks, UK Kent Compilation)
15. Chess Club Rhythm & Soul - VARIOUS
(1996, 25 Tracks, UK Kent Compilation)
16. Chicago Radio Soul - VARIOUS
(1996, 26 Tracks, Chess Labels, UK Kent Compilation)
17. Chess Chartbusters Vol. 1 to 6 - VARIOUS
(UK Budget-Priced 20 Track Compilations, 120 songs in total)
18. Chess Tearjerkers - VARIOUS (UK Mojo Comp 20 Tracks)
19. Chess Soul Sisters - VARIOUS (UK Mojo Comp, 20 Tracks)
20. Chess Northern Soul - VARIOUS (UK Mojo Comp, 20 Tracks)
21. Chess Blues - VARIOUS (1993, 4CD Box Set, 101 Tracks)
22. Just Keep On Dancing - Chess Northern Soul - VARIOUS
(1996, 24 Tracks, UK Kent Compilation)

There are over 500 tracks on 1 to 22 above and the cost is about £150 including P&P. Universal can't of course be held responsible for retailers trying to chance £350 on a deleted and desirable rarity, but punters should know that the same material - and better - is available elsewhere - and for a fraction of the cost.

Like Atlantic, Motown, Stax and Island Records - Chess is a label worth taking that time and effort for....

Tuesday, 7 April 2009

"The Chess Story 1947-1956" - Part 1 of 3 (November 2001 UK-EU MCA/Universal/Chess 5CD Box Set Reissue - Part 1 of 3 from the October 1999 Original 15-Disc Box set with Erick Labson Remasters) - A Review with Discography by Mark Barry....



"...Someone Said Jump The Boogie...And That's What We're Going To Do…"

Released UK/EU in 2001 on MCA/Universal/Chess 1126492 - "The Chess Story 1947-1956" is Part 1 of 3 - a long hardback book-shaped box set - coloured green with 5CDs. It was part of the October 1999 US 15-Disc original Box Set "The Chess Story: 1947-1975". 

I've supplied the catalogue numbers for all 5 CDs after the track details - it'll help those fans of Chess and its associate labels that are trying to hunt down that elusive tune...

Made in the USA, the entire 5CD set is remastered from original master tapes by one of Universal's top engineers ERICK LABSON and soundwise (with over 800 mastering credits to his name) it's a typically superb job. The packaging I feel could be a whole better (very disappointing booklets) - but for Chess fans many of these tracks remain unavailable anywhere else. To the details - song and artist names first followed by Catalogue Numbers afterwards...

SONGS and ARTIST NAMES
CD1:
1. Chicago Boogie (The Five Blazers)
2. Hey Pretty Mama (Jump Jackson & His Orchestra)
3. Ice Man's Blues (Tom Archia)
4. Boogie Woogie Blues (Clarence Samuels)
5. Bilbo Is Dead (Andrew Tibbs)
6. Johnson Machine Gun (Sunnyland Slim)
7. Gypsy Woman (Muddy Waters)
8. I Feel Like Crying (Andrew Tibbs)
9. She Ain't Nowhere (Sunnyland Slim)
10. I Feel Like Going Home (Muddy Waters)
11. I Can't Be Satisfied (Muddy Waters)
12. I Can't Be Tony Boogie (Forrest Sykes)
13. Florida Hurricane (St. Louis Jimmy)
14. You're Gonna Miss Me (Muddy Waters)
15. Locked Out Boogie (Leroy Foster)
16. Streamline Woman (Muddy Waters)
17. A Woman On Every Street (Forest City Joe)
18. Crying The Blues (Lura Rucker)
19. Baby I'm Sick Of You (Duke Jenkins' Aristocrats)
20. Black Angel Blues (Robert Nighthawk)
21. You're Gonna Need My Help (Muddy Waters)
22. Big Town Playboy (Little Johnny Jones)
23. Screamin' And Cryin' (Muddy Waters)
24. All I Need Is You (The Dozier Boys)
25. Six Three O (Robert Nighthawk)
26. Rollin' And Tumblin' (Muddy Waters)

CD2:
1. Rollin' Stone (Muddy Waters)
2. That's Alright (Jimmy Rogers)
3. You Got To Get It (The Dozier Boys)
4. Send For The Doctor (Doc Pomus)
5. Louisiana Blues (Muddy Waters)
6. Goin' Away Baby (Jimmy Rogers)
7. So Glad I Found You (Johnny Shines) (Shoeshine Johnny)
8. Mother Earth (Memphis Slim)
9. Long Distance Call (Muddy Waters)
10. Slow Caboose (Sax Mallard)
11. The World's In A Tangle (Jimmy Rogers)
12. Rocket 88 (Jackie Brenston)
13. Leave My Wife Alone (John Lee Hooker)
14. Honey Bee (Muddy Water)
15. My Real Gone Rocket (Jackie Brenston & His Delta Cats)
16. Moanin' At Midnight (Howlin' Wolf)
17. Howlin' Tomcat (Harmonica Frank)
18. Crying The Blues (Lura Rucker)
19. Juiced (Billy Love)
20. How Many More Years (Howlin' Wolf)
21. Still A Fool (Muddy Waters)
22. Hey Little Girl (John Godfrey Trio)
23. Booted (Rosco Gordon)
24. She Moves Me (Muddy Waters)
25. No More Doggin' Around (Rufus Thomas)
26. Dark Road (Floyd Jones)

CD3:
1. Mr. Highway Man (Howlin' Wolf)
2. Murmur Low (Big Boy Spires)
3. Walkin' The Boogie (John Lee Hooker)
4. When I Am Gone (Joe Hill Louis)
5. Truckin' Little Woman (Willie Nix)
6. Sugar Mama (John Lee Hooker)
7. Juke (Little Walter & His Nightcats)
8. Date Bait (Blue Smitty)
9. Every Day I Have The Blues (Joe Williams)
10. Standing Around Cryin' (Muddy Waters)
11. Mean Old World (Little Walter)
12. I Don't Know (Willie Mabon)
13. 24 Hours (Eddie Boyd)
14. Me And My Chauffeur (Memphis Minnie)
15. Sad Hours (Little Walter)
16. She Just Won't Do Right (Elmore James)
17. I'm Mad (Willie Mabon)
18. Be Careful What You Do (John Brim)
19. Off The Wall (Little Walter)
20. Diggin' My Potatoes (Washboard Sam)
21. Nadine (The Coronets)
22. I'm Glad (Mitzi Mars)
23. Forty Cups Of Tea (Danny Overbea)
24. Tell Me Mama (Little Walter)
25. Third Degree (Eddie Boyd)

CD4:
1. White Cliffs Of Dover (The Blue Jays)
2. Blues With A Feeling (Little Walter)
3. Jock-A-Mo (Sugar Boy Crawford)
4. Mad Love (Muddy Waters)
5. You're So Fine (Little Walter)
6. Wine, Wine, Wine (Jimmy Binkley)
7. Chicago Bound (Jimmy Rogers)
8. I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man (Muddy Waters)
9. Biscuit Baking Woman (Big Ed & His Combo (Eddie Burns)
10. I'm A Young Rooster (Leon D. Tarver) (The Chordones)
11. Just Make Love To Me (Muddy Waters)
12. Sloppy Drunk (Jimmy Rogers)
13. Evil (Howlin' Wolf)
14. When The Lights Go Out (Jimmy Witherspoon)
15. You Better Watch Yourself (Little Walter)
16. That Man Is Walking (Larry Ligget)
17. I'm Ready (Muddy Waters)
18. Reconsider Baby (Lowell Fulson)
19. Sincerely (The Moonglows)
20. Mama Talk To Your Daughter (J.B. Lenoir)
21. Last Night (Little Walter)
22. It Must Have Been The Devil (Otis Spann)
23. Forty Four (Howlin' Wolf)
24. I Want To Hug You, Kiss You, Squeeze You (Various)
25. Free And Easy Mind (Jimmy Nelson)
26. Most Of All (The Moonglows)
27. If You Don't Somebody Else Will (Jimmy & Johnny)

CD5:
1. Mardi Gras Mambo (The Hawketts- first recording of Aaron Neville)
2. Love Me (Jimmy Lee & Wayne Walker)
3. My Babe (Little Walter)
4. Check Yourself (Lowell Fulson)
5. I'm A Man (Bo Diddley)
6. Bo Diddley (Bo Diddley)
7. Are You Out There? (Percy Mayfield)
8. Mannish Boy (Muddy Waters)
9. Maybelline (Chuck Berry)
10. Diddley Daddy (Bo Diddley)
11. Walking The Blues (Sonny Boy Williamson)
12. The Seventh Son (Willie Mabon)
13. Pretty Thing (Bo Diddley)
14. Don't Start Me Talkin' (Sonny Boy Williamson)
15. The $64,000 Question (Bobby Tuggle)
16. Trouble, Trouble (Lowell Fulson)
17. Thirty Days (Chuck Berry)
18. In My Diary (The Moonglows)
19. See You Later Alligator (Bobby Charles)
20. Tippity Top (The Rays)
21. Trouble No More (Muddy Waters)
22. I'll Be Home (The Flamingos)
23. Who (Little Walter)
24. No Money Down (Chuck Berry)
25. So Glad She's Mine (Charles "Hungry" Williams)
26. You're The One (Jimmy Rogers)
27. Smokestack Lightnin' (Howlin' Wolf)

CATALOGUE NUMBERS
CD1 1947-1950 (76:07 minutes):
1. Aristocrat 201 [A] (1 to 26 were issued on 78's except 18 and 21)
2. Aristocrat 402 [A]
3. Aristocrat 602 [A]
4. Aristocrat 1001 [A]
5. Aristocrat 1101 [A]
6. Aristocrat 1301 [A]
7. Aristocrat 1302 [A]
8. Aristocrat 1103 [A]
9. Aristocrat 1304 [A]
10. Aristocrat 1305 [A]
11. Aristocrat 1305 [B]
12. Aristocrat 1401 [A]
13. Aristocrat 7001 [A]
14. Aristocrat 1307 [A]
15. Aristocrat 1234 [A]
16. Aristocrat 1310 [A]
17. Aristocrat 3101 [A]
18. Chess CHD4 9340 [4CD Box Set "Chess Blues", USA, 1992]
19. Aristocrat 811 [A]
20. Aristocrat 2301 [A]
21. Chess CHD2 9348 [2CD Chess Compilation "One More Mile", USA, 1997]
22. Aristocrat 405 [A]
23. Aristocrat 406 [A]
24. Aristocrat 409 [A]
25. Aristocrat 413 [A]
26. Aristocrat 412 [A]

CD2 1950-1951 (73:34 minutes):
1. Chess 1426 [A] (1 to 26 were issued on 78's)
2. Chess 1435 [A]
3. Chess 1436 [A]
4. Chess 1440 [A]
5. Chess 1441 [A]
6. Chess 1442 [A]
7. Chess 1443 [A]
8. Chess 1446 [A]
9. Chess 1452 [A]
10. Chess 750 [A]
11. Chess 1453 [A]
12. Chess 1458 [A]
13. Chess 1467 [A]
14. Chess 1468 [A]
15. Chess 1469 [A]
16. Chess 1479 [A] (see also 19)
17. Chess 1494 [A]
18. Chess 1472 [A]
19. Chess 1479 [B] (see also 16)
20. Chess 1480 [A]
21. Chess 1478 [A]
22. Chess 1486 [A]
23. Chess 1490 [A]
24. Chess 1492 [A]
25. Chess 1498 [A]
26. Chess 1504 [A]

CD3 1952-1954 PART ONE (73:33 minutes):
1. Chess 1510 [A] (1 to 10 were issued on 78's, 11 onwards on 45's)
2. Checker 752 [A]
3. Chess 1513 [A] (see also 6)
4. Checker 763 (Extended Version)
5. Checker 756 [A]
6. Chess 1513 [A]
7. Checker 758 [A}
8. Chess LP CHD 9330 ("The Blues, Vol.6", USA LP, 1991)
9. Checker 762 [A]
10. Chess 1526 [A]
11. Checker 764 [A]
12. Chess 1531 [A]
13. Chess 1533 [A]
14. Checker 771 [A]
15. Checker 764 [A]
16. Checker 777 [A]
17. Chess 1538 [A]
18. Chess LP 1537
(On the LP "Whose Muddy Shoes" by Muddy Waters & John Brim, USA, 1969)
19. Checker 770 [B] (see also 24)
20. Chess 1545 [A]
21. Chess 1549 [A]
22. Checker 773 [A]
23. Checker 774 [A]
24. Checker 770 [A] (see also 19)
25. Chess 1541 [A]

CD4 1952-1954 PART TWO (77:42 minutes):
1. Checker 782 [A]
2. Checker 780 [A]
3. Checker 787 [A]
4. Chess 1550 [A]
5. Checker 786 [A]
6. Checker 789 [A]
7. Chess 1574 [A]
8. Chess 1560 [A]
9. Checker 790 [A]
10. Checker 791 [A]
11. Chess 1571 [A]
12. Chess 1574 [A]
13. Chess 1575 [A]
14. Checker 798 [A]
15. Checker 799 [A]
16. Chess 1578 [A]
17. Chess 1579 [A]
18. Checker 804 [A]
19. Chess 1581 [A]
20. Parrot 908 [A]
21. Checker 805 [A]
22. Checker 807 [A]
23. Chess 1584 [A]
24. Chess 1586 [A]
25. Chess 1587 [A]
26. Chess 1589 [A]
27. Chess 4859 [A]

CD5 1955-1956 PART ONE (72:04 minutes)
1. Chess 1591 [A]
2. Chess 4863 [A]
3. Checker 811 [A]
4. Checker 812 [A]
5. Checker 814 [B] (see also 6)
6. Checker 814 [A] (see also 5)
7. Chess 1599 [A]
8. Chess 1602 [A]
9. Chess 1604 [A]
10. Checker 819 [A]
11. Checker 822 [A]
12. Chess 1608 [A]
13. Checker 827 [A]
14. Checker 825 [A]
15. Checker 823 [A]
16. Checker 829 [A]
17. Chess 1610 [A]
18. Chess 1611 [A]
19. Chess 1609 [A]
20. Chess 1613 [A]
21. Chess 1612 [A]
22. Checker 830 [A]
23. Checker 833 [A]
24. Chess 1615 [A]
25. Checker 831 [A]
26. Chess 1616 [A]
27. Chess 1618 [A]

PS:
PART 2, the 2nd box, is 5 discs also and covers 1957-1964, 133 tracks (see separate review)

PART 3, the 3rd box, is 5 discs too and covers 1965-1975. However, in box 3, there are only 3 audio CDs (70 tracks) - Disc 14 is divided into 18 interview parts (just over 74 minutes) and Disc 15 is a CD-Rom with interactive downloads, Chess catalogue etc

PPS: title of this review is from Track 1 on CD1 - "Chicago Boogie" by THE FIVE BLAZERS

Sunday, 5 April 2009

"The Chess Story 1957-1964" - Part 2 of 3 (November 2001 EU MCA-Universal/Chess 5CD Book Set Reissue with Erick Labson Remasters) - A Review and Discography by Mark Barry



PART 2 of a 3. A long hardback book-shaped box set - coloured blue - 5CDs.
(Originally issued by Universal in the States in 1999 as a 15CD Set). 

EU released 6 November 2001 - "The Chess Story 1957-1964" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on MCA/Universal/Chess 1126952 (Barcode 0008811269524) plays out as follows:

TRACKS and ARTISTS:
CD 6:
1. We Go Together (The Moonglows)
2. Roll Over Beethoven (Chuck Berry)
3. You Better Believe It (Paul Gayten)
4. A Kiss From Your Lips (The Flamingos)
5. Take It Easy, Greasy (Bobby Charles)
6. Who Do You Love (Bo Diddley)
7. See-Saw (The Moonglows)
8. Brown-Eyed Handsome Man (Chuck Berry)
9. Don't Go No Farther (Muddy Waters)
10. I Asked For Water (Howlin' Wolf)
11. 29 Ways (Willie Dixon)
12. Would I Be Crying (The Flamingos)
13. Keep It To Yourself (Sonny Boy Williamson)
14. Too Much Monkey Business (Chuck Berry)
15. Don't Touch My Head (J.B. Lenoir)
16. I'm Ashamed Of Myself (Floyd Dixon)
17. A Simple Prayer (The Ravens)
18. Tall, Dark And Handsome Man (Bobby Cisco)
19. Walkin' By Myself (Jimmy Rogers)
20. Been So Long (The Pastels)
21. Got My Mojo Workin' (Muddy Waters)
22. School Day (Chuck Berry)
23. Please Send Me Someone To Love (The Moonglows)
24. Susie Q (Dale Hawkins)
25. Rock Me (Muddy Waters)
26. Blue Velvet (The Moonglows)

CD7:
1. Hey Bo Diddley (Bo Diddley)
2. Fattenin' Frog For Snakes (Sonny Boy Williamson)
3. Long Lonely Nights (Lee Andrews) (The Hearts)
4. Mona (Bo Diddley)
5. Cool Off Baby (Billy 'Curley' Barrix)
6. Flat Foot Sam (T.V. Slim)
7. Happy, Happy Birthday Baby (The Tuneweavers)
8. Rock And Roll Music (Chuck Berry)
9. Before You Accuse Me (Bo Diddley)
10. That's Why I Love You So (Al Kent)
11. My Soul (Clifton Chenier)
12. Go Ahead (Billy Miranda)
13. Ninety Nine (Sonny Boy Williamson)
14. Book Of Love (The Monotones)
15. Look Out Mabel (G.L. Crockett)
16. Sittin' On Top Of The World (Howlin' Wolf)
17. The Walk (Jimmy McCracklin)
18. Nothin' Shakin' (Eddie Fontaine)
19. Ten Commandments Of Love (The Moonglows)
20. Yea Yea (The Kendall Sisters)
21. Sweet Little Sixteen (Chuck Berry)
22. Tornado (Dale Hawkins)
23. Four O'clock In The Morning (Stanley Mitchell) (The Tornados)
24. Say Man (Bo Diddley)
25. Everybody Rock (Jimmy McCracklin)
26. Anything To Say You're Mine (Lula Reed)
27. Your Funeral And My Trial (Sonny Boy Williamson)
28. Anything To Say You're Mine (Lula Reed)

CD8:
1. You Got Me Whistlin' (Johnny Fuller)
2. Oh-Oh (Eddie Bo)
3. Carol (Chuck Berry)
4. La-Do-Dada (Dale Hawkins)
5. Loud Mouth Annie (Dupont) (Myles)
6. Do You Remember? (L.C. Cooke)
7. Vacation's Over (Lou Josie)
8. Key To The Highway (Little Walter)
9. Close To You (Muddy Waters)
10. Sweet Little Rock And Roller (Chuck Berry)
11. I'm Sorry (Bo Diddley)
12. Sugaree (Rusty York)
13. This Broken Heart (The Sonics)
14. Crackin' Up (Bo Diddley)
15. Almost Grown (Chuck Berry)
16. This Should Go On Forever (Rod Bernard)
17. I Want To Know (Sugarpie DeSanto)
18. Save It (Mel Robins)
19. Back In The U.S.A. (Chuck Berry)
20. Bad Girl (The Miracles)
21. Unseeing Eye (Sonny Boy Williamson)
22. Howlin' For My Darlin' (Howlin' Wolf)
23. Anna Macora (The Calvaes)
24. Everything's Gonna Be Alright (Little Walter)
25. Let It Rock (Chuck Berry)
26. Road Runner (Bo Diddley)
27. Trying To Make A Living (Bobby Saxton)
28. Goin' Back To Memphis (Gene Simmons)
29. First Time I Met The Blues (Buddy Guy)

CD9:
1. All I Could Do Was Cry (Etta James)
2. All Your Love (Otis Rush)
3. I Can't Hold Out (Elmore James)
4. If I Can't Have You (Etta James) (Harvey Fuqua)
5. Blue Shadows (Lowell Fulson)
6. Spoonful (Howlin' Wolf)
7. Tiger In Your Tank (Muddy Waters)
8. Gunslinger (Bo Diddley)
9. But I Do (Clarence 'Frogman' Henry)
10. At Last (Etta James)
11. Back Door Man (Howlin' Wolf)
12. The Watusi (The Vibrations)
13. Just Your Fool (Little Walter)
14. Come On (Chuck Berry)
15. I Won't Be Hanging Around (Albert King)
16. You Always Hurt The One You Love (Clarence 'Frogman' Henry)
17. Peanut Butter (The Marathons)
18. Down In The Bottom (Howlin' Wolf)
19. Music, Music, Music (The Sensations)
20. I'm A Little Mixed Up (Betty James)
21. Little Red Rooster (Howlin' Wolf)
22. So Mean To Me (Little Milton)
23. Proof Of Your Love (Jackie Cannon)
24. Let Me In (The Sensations)
25. Smokey Places (The Corsairs)
26. Nine Below Zero (Sonny Boy Williamson)
27. Something's Got A Hold On Me (Etta James)
28. Stone Crazy (Buddy Guy)

CD10:
1. Reap What You Sow (Billy Stewart)
2. Rinky Dink (Dave "Baby" Cortez)
3. You Can't Judge A Book By Its Cover (Bo Diddley)
4. Stop The Wedding (Etta James)
5. Lonely Baby (Ty Hunter)
6. Mama Didn't Lie (Jan Bradley)
7. Got You On My Mind (Cookie & The Cupcakes)
8. Pushover (Etta James)
9. Help Me (Sonny Boy Williamson)
10. 300 Pounds Of Joy (Howlin' Wolf)
11. Sally Go Round The Roses (The Jaynettes)
12. You Keep Her (Joe Tex)
13. Second Hand Lover (The Knight Brothers)
14. Hi-Heel Sneakers (Tommy Tucker)
15. Nadine (Chuck Berry)
16. You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had (Muddy Waters)
17. Soulful Dress (Sugar Pie DeSanto)
18. My Time After A While (Buddy Guy)
19. Selfish One (Jackie Ross)
20. Don't Mess Up A Good Thing (Fontella Bass & Bobby McClure)
21. I Had A Talk With My Man (Mitty Collier)
22. Promised Land (Chuck Berry)
23. The Entertainer (Tony Clarke)
24. Voice Your Choice (The Radiants)
25. Crawlin' King Snake (Buster Brown)
26. I Do Love You (Billy Stewart)

CATALOGUE NUMBERS:
CD 6 1955-1956 (73:40 minutes):
1. Chess 1619 [A]
2. Chess 1626 [A]
3. Checker 836 [A]
4. Checker 837 [A]
5. Chess 1628 [A]
6. Checker 842 [A]
7. Chess 1629 [A]
8. Chess 1635 [B] (see 14)
9. Chess 1630 [A]
10. Chess 1632 [A]
11. Checker 851 [A]
12. Checker 853 [A]
13. Checker 847 [A]
14. Chess 1635 [A] (see also 8)
15. Checker 856 [A]
16. Checker 857 [A]
17. Argo 5261 [A]
18. Chess 1650 [A]
19. Checker 867 [A]
20. Argo 5259 [A]
21. Chess 1643 [A]
22. Argo 5287 [A]
23. Chess 1652 [A] (see also 27)
24. Chess 1653 [A]
25. Chess 1661 [A]
26. Checker 863 [A]
27. Chess 1652 [B] (see 23)
28. Chess 1811 [A]

CD7 1957-1959 (73:32 minutes)
1. Checker 860 [A] (see also 4)
2. Checker 864 [A]
3. Chess 1665 [A]
4. Checker 860 [B] (see also 1)
5. Chess 1662 [A]
6. Checker 870 [A]
7. Checker 872 [A]
8. Chess 1671 [A]
9. Checker 878 [A]
10. Checker 881 [A]
11. Checker 939 [A]
12. Checker 957 [A]
13. Checker 883 [A]
14. Argo 5290 [A]
15. Checker 1120 [A]
16. Chess 1679 [A]
17. Checker 885 [A]
18. Argo 5309 [A]
19. Chess 1705 (Full Version) [A]
20. Checker 889/Argo 5291 [A]
21. Chess 1683 [A]
22. Checker 892 [A]
23. Chess 1649 [A]
24. Checker 931 [A]
25. Checker 893 [A]
26. Argo 5297 [A]
27. Checker 894 [A]
28. Chess 1695 [A]

CD8 1957-1959 (75:09 minutes)
1. Checker 899 [A]
2. Chess 1698 [A]
3. Chess 1700 [A]
4. Checker 900 [A]
5. Argo 5326 [A]
6. Checker 903 [A]
7. Chess LP 9124
8. Checker 904 [A]
9. Chess 1704 [A]
10. Chess 1709 [A]
11. Checker 914 [A]
12. Chess 1730 [A]
13. Checker 922 [A]
14. Checker 924 [A]
15. Chess 1722 [A]
16. Argo 5372 [A]
17. Veltone 103
18. Argo 5340 [A]
19. Chess 1729 [A]
20. Chess 1734 [A]
21. Checker 927 [A]
22. Chess 1762 [A]
23. Checker 928 [A]
24. Checker 930 [A]
25. Chess 1747 [A]
26. Checker 942 [A]
27. Checker 947 [A]
28. Checker 948 [A]
29. Chess 1753 [A]

CD9 1960-1961 (74:41 minutes)
1. Argo 5359 [A]
2. Chess LP 1538 (Albert King & Otis Rush - "Door To Door", 1959)
3. Chess 1756 [A]
4. Chess 1760 [A]
5. Checker 959 [A]
6. Chess 1762 [A]
7. Chess 1765 [A]
8. Checker 945 [A]
9. Argo 5378 [A]
10. Argo 5380 [A]
11. Chess 1777 [A]
12. Checker 969 [A]
13. Checker 1013 [A]
14. Chess 1779 [A]
15. Chess LP 1538 (see 2)
16. Argo 5388 [A]
17. Argo 5389 [A]
18. Chess 1793 (Unedited Version)
19. Argo 5391 [A]
20. Chess 1801 [A]
21. Chess 1804 [A]
22. Checker 994 [A]
23. Chess 1807 [A]
24. Argo 5405 [A]
25. Chess 1808 [A]
26. Checker 1003 (Unedited Version)
27. Argo 5409 [A]
28. Chess 1812 [A]

CD10 1961-1964 (74:27 minutes)
1. Chess 1820 [A]
2. Chess 1829 [A]
3. Checker 1019 [A]
4. Argo 5418 [A]
5. Checkmate 1015 [A]
6. Chess 1845 [A]
7. Chess 1838 [A]
8. Argo 5437 [A]
9. Checker 1036 [A]
10. Chess 1870 [A]
11. Tuff 369 [A]
12. Checker 1055 [A]
13. Checker 1064 [A]
14. Checker 1067 [A]
15. Chess 1883 [A]
16. Chess 1895 [A]
17. Checker 1082 [A]
18. Chess 1889 [A]
19. Chess 1903 [A]
20. Checker 1087 [A]
21. Chess 1907 [A]
22. Chess 1916 [A]
23. Chess 1924 [A]
24. Chess 1904 [A]
25. Checker 1099 [A]
26. Chess 1922 [A]

The entire set is remastered from original master tapes by one of Universal's top engineers ERICK LABSON and soundwise (with over 800 mastering credits to his name) it's a typically superb job.

The packaging I feel could have been a lot better, disappointing booklets - but for Chess fans many of these tracks are simply not available anywhere else...

Recommended - even at a price.

PS:
The 1st box is 5 discs also and covers 1947-1956 (133 tracks)

The 3rd box is 5 discs too and covers 1965-1975. However, in box 3, there are only 3 audio CDs (70 tracks) - Disc 14 is divided into 18 interview parts (just over 74 minutes) and Disc 15 is a CD-Rom with interactive downloads, Chess catalogue etc

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order