"...Rock Me Baby, All Night Long..."
When I first picked up on
Atlantic R&B in the mid 70s, I was an Irish teenager living in Dublin
embroiled in Rock, Prog, Soul, Funk, Reggae, Punk and New Wave. I knew of some
old Blues, Boogie Woogie, Rhythm 'n' Blues and Rock 'n' Roll like everyone else
in the schoolyard, but hard copies were so scarce on the LP ground that it only
registered as something vaguely interesting in the musical distance.
But when the stunning seven
double-albums Box Set "Atlantic Rhythm & Blues 1947-1974"
appeared on vinyl in 1985 - everything changed. With an awakened lust for
authentic Blues and R&B of the Forties and Fifties, I went into The
Clovers, Ruth Brown, La Vern Baker, The Coasters and Clyde McPhatter's Drifters
big time and I've been chasing that low down dog ever since. When you dive into that joyous music, you quickly come against one of Atlantic Records' biggest stars of the 50ts day - BIG JOE TURNER.
His first US Blues Album proper had been a self-titled duet with piano genius Pete Johnson on Emarcy Records in June 1955 and what we're dealing with here is technically his second LP release from June 1956 (his debut for Atlantic after five years of 78s and 45s).
His first US Blues Album proper had been a self-titled duet with piano genius Pete Johnson on Emarcy Records in June 1955 and what we're dealing with here is technically his second LP release from June 1956 (his debut for Atlantic after five years of 78s and 45s).
So when I hear that one of the
best reissue labels in the world (Bear Family of Germany) is finally going to
tackle one of the early Atlantic Records giants - then I'm gonna sit
up, get my tights in a tangle and a don that nylon hose baby (it can be a
problem at times I know). And true to BF's longstanding rep, their double-CD of
Big Joe Turner's landmark second album "The Boss Of The Blues..." is a cockle-doodle-doo rooster-crowing
humdinger – especially on the Stereo Audio front. Let's get the technical stuff out of
the way first...
German/UK/Europe released 14
February 2020 - "The Boss Of The Blues Sings Kansas City Jazz: The
Complete Mono And Stereo Recordings Recorded In New York City 1956" by JOE
TURNER on Bear family BCD 17505 (Barcode 5397102175053) is a 2CD 32-Track
Compilation of his second studio album from 1956, originally on Atlantic
Records. This newly remastered issue features the 10-track US and UK LP in both
Mono and Stereo form with 12 Bonus Track Outtakes from the original March 1956
New York Sessions and it breaks down as follows:
CD1 (71:11 minutes):
1. Cherry Red - STEREO [Side
1]
2. Roll 'Em Pete - STEREO
3. I Want A Little Girl -
STEREO
4. Low Down Dog - STEREO
5. Wee Baby Blues - STEREO
6. You're Driving Me Crazy -
STEREO [Side 2]
7. How Long Blues - STEREO
8. Morning Glories - STEREO
9. St. Louis Blues - STEREO
10. Piney Brown Blues -
STEREO
Tracks 1 to 10 are the album
"The Boss Of The Blues Sings Kansas City Jazz" - originally issued June
1956 in the USA in MONO only on Atlantic 1234, the STEREO version first
appeared January 1958 in the USA as an 'Open Reel Tape' on Atlantic ALC 1901
(this rarity is pictured on Page 8 of the booklet) with the VINYL 'High
Fidelity' STEREO LP showing in September 1958 as Atlantic SD 1234. The British
LP first appeared February 1957 in MONO-only on London American Recordings
LTZ-K 15053 and then June 1959 (over two years later) in STEREO on London SAH-K
6019 (American Series).
11. Pennies From Heaven –
STEREO **
A March 1956 "Boss Of
The Blues" outtake used to bolster up the track run for the September 1959
original recordings that made up the "Big Joe Rides Again" LP issued
in the USA in July 1960 on Atlantic SD 1332.
12. Roll 'Em Pete [Take 4] -
MONO **
13. Roll 'Em Pete [Take 5] -
MONO **
14. Cherry Red Blues [Take 1]
- MONO **
15. Cherry Red Blues [Takes 2
and 3] - MONO **
16. Morning Glories [Takes 1
and 4] - MONO **
17. Low Down Dog [Take 4] -
MONO **
** Tracks 11 to 17 are BONUS
TRACKS
CD2 (62:47 minutes):
1. Cherry Red - MONO [Side 1]
2. Roll 'Em Pete - MONO
3. I Want A Little Girl - MONO
4. Low Down Dog - MONO
5. Wee Baby Blues - MONO
6. You're Driving Me Crazy -
MONO [Side 2]
7. How Long Blues - MONO
8. Morning Glories - MONO
9. St. Louis Blues - MONO
10. Piney Brown Blues - MONO
Tracks 1 to 10 are the album
"The Boss Of The Blues Sings Kansas City Jazz" - originally issued
September 1956 in the USA in MONO only on Atlantic 1234 (the STEREO version is
Tracks 1 to 10 on CD1). The British MONO LP first appeared February 1957 in
MONO-only on London American Recordings LTZ-K 15053.
11. Pennies From Heaven -
MONO **
A March 1956 "Boss Of
The Blues" outtake used to bolster up the track run for the September 1959
original recordings that made up the "Big Joe Rides Again" LP issued
in the USA in July 1960 on Atlantic 1332 (Mono).
12. Testing The Blues - MONO
**
13. St. Louis Blues [Take 1]
- MONO **
14. You're Driving Me Crazy -
MONO **
15. I Want A Little Girl
[Takes 1 and 3] - MONO **
The album was recorded across
two days, 6 and 7 March 1956 at the Carnegie Hall Recoding Company on 57th Street
in New York with the following personnel:
BIG JOE TURNER – Vocals
PETE JOHNSON – Piano
FREDDIE GREEN – Guitar
PETE BROWN – Alto Saxophone
FRANK WESS – Tenor Saxophone
(Tracks 1, 2, 4, 7 and 10 only)
SELDON POWELL – Tenor
Saxophone (Tracks 3, 5, 6, 9 and 11 only)
LAWRENCE BROWN – Trombone
JOE NEWMAN – Trumpet (Tracks
1, 2, 4, 7 and 10 only)
JIMMY NOTTINGHAM – Trumpet
(Tracks 3, 5, 6, 9 and 11 only)
WALTER PAGE – Bass
CLIFF LEEMAN - Drums
If I’m completely honest, the
three-way foldout card sleeve packaging comes on as a bit of a disappointment.
As you can see, the pictures of BJT on the inside flaps aren’t anything like
the period memorabilia we’re used to from BF and the bare tightly-fitted CDs
inside each flap will cause problems for those wanting to remove them without
greasy thumb-prints or scratches. The 24-page booklet stuck inside the centre
flap almost caused me to rip the whole damn thing trying to get it out. On the
upside COLIN ESCOTT provides the liner notes and Discography at the rear and
(as always) offers up his knowledge and affection on the subject matter in an
entertaining and enlightening way.
Downsides – although the Side
1 US label for Atlantic SD 1234 is repro’d and there are a couple of photos of
our hero (one with Alan Freed and those Mercury Records R&B stars Buddy and
Ella Johnson (Page 7) – the 1956 or 1957 LPs actual cover artwork or rear
sleeve isn’t here for either the US or UK variants on Atlantic and London
Records nor are the subsequent reissues of the album (Discography too). But you
do get a genuine oddity and rarity. As you can see from the info I’ve provided
above, the STEREO variant first appeared in January 1958 not on an LP but on an
'Open Top Reel' of Tape. I've never seen a picture anywhere of Atlantic Records
ALC-1912 and a quick Superhighway trawl tells me that (it looks like) neither
has anyone else! While the expensive LP might have set a punter back four or
five bucks (a lot back then), the reel-to-reel tape was aimed at Hi-Fi buffs
and cost a whopping twelve dollars – so I can't imagine how many of these first
issued Blues Album in Stereo things are actually still intact and in existence
in 2020.
But all of those minor gripes
are wiped away once I clock my enormo-lugs on the AUDIO – Disc Transfers and Mastering
care of MARLON KLEIN. The last CD I had of this album was a Japanese 2012 issue
that claimed DSD Remastering – and it was/is great. But this Bear Family 2020
offering is another ball game altogether. Hardly surprising that Bear start
with the STEREO variant on Disc 1 because its shockingly good – the separation
clean and the sound just gorgeous. By the time I was onto "Roll 'Em
Pete" or "How Long Blues" or even the cheesy outtake
"Pennies From Heaven" – I was blubbing like a Wall Street Banker with
a Covid-19 thermometer in his gob.
The other Bonus Outtakes are
like eavesdropping on history albeit in a much muddier way – the Audio is
compromised - but Takes 4 and 5 of the fabulous horn-bopper "Roll 'Em
Pete" even with a distant vocal sound cool to me and I've never heard of
"Testing The Blues" over on the MONO CD2. Tasty…
Pete Johnson passed in March
1967 and Big Joe lasted until November 1985 - gigging to the end because he
needed to pay the bills (Ahmet Ertegun, the co-founder of Atlantic Records paid
off his debt so that his wife could live on in their home free of worry).
Anyone who loves old timey Rhythm 'n' Blues and especially the fantastic Atlantic
Records sound - will cry at this release. And isn't that how we should remember
a man many feel was the greatest R'n'B and Blues shouter of em all...