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Showing posts with label Roots N’ Blues Series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roots N’ Blues Series. Show all posts

Monday, 3 July 2023

"Father Of The Delta Blues: The Complete 1965 Sessions" by SON HOUSE – Based on the October 1965 US Debut Album "Father Of Folk Blues" on Columbia Records in Mono and Stereo featuring Al Wilson later of Canned Heat Guesting on 2 Tracks (Only The Stereo Album Is Presented Here). Plus 12 Previously Unreleased Versions/Songs on CD2 from those April 1965 Sessions (June 1992 UK Columbia/Legacy Roots N' Blues Lawrence Cohn 2CD Compilation with David Mitson and Mark Wilder Digital Restoration and Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...






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This Review Along With Over 215 Others Is Available in my
SOUNDS GOOD E-Book on all Amazon sites

"MANNISH BOY" 
BLUES, VOCAL GROUPS, DOO WOP, ROOTS
RHYTHM 'n' BLUES and ROCK 'n' ROLL ON CD 
Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters 

Thousands of E-Pages
All Details and In-Depth Reviews From Discs 
(No Cut and Paste Crap)

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 *****

"...Grabbed Up My Suitcase...Took Out Down The Road... "

 

This is one of those fab CD compilations put out by Columbia on their Roots N' Blues: Contemporary Blues Masters label imprint way back in the summer of 1992. But come the following 30-years, it kind of slinkyed-away unnoticed when I think it should have been quietly worshiped ever since.

 

Born in Clarksdale, Mississippi as Eddie James House, Jr. in March 1902 (hence the name, 'Son' House) - the innovative Blues Man passed in October 1988. SH is remembered as much for his voice as his sound - the National Steel Guitar with Bottleneck Slide – hard rhythmic picking – strings that must have felt like plucking shipyard lines - the kind of effortlessly cool Mississippi Delta dude with a playing technique and vibe that people like Johnny Winter, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Joe Bonamassa would have knelt down on one knee to praise.

 

By the time the October 1965 Columbia debut album "Father Of Folk Blues" came out - produced by the legendary visionary John Hammond (the Stereo Version of which is on CD1) - the Sixties Roots Blues boom had begun. Son House had not played since 1957 and only restarted in 1964 - not aware of "rediscovery" LPs like Hammond was championing. But Hammond knew there was more mileage in this Blues giant. When you listen to the Acapella "John The Revelator" on Side 1 – just Son House singing and clapping hands – it is clear that the years had made his gargles-gravel-for-breakfast voice a thing of Blues expressionist beauty. His growl-singing style came on like a slightly more mellow Howlin' Wolf - but with just as much emotive power when he sang lyrics about poor me standing here with the whistle of the train in my ears – my woman on board waving goodbye – it was and still is fantastic stuff. The Remastered quality of those bare and stripped sessions has also not gone unnoticed amidst VINYL aficionados either – reissues of the LP and its environs on 180-gram audiophile LPs abound. But back to 1992...

 

UK released June 1992 - "Father Of The Delta Blues: The Complete 1965 Sessions" by SON HOUSE on Columbia/Legacy Roots N' Blues Lawrence Cohn 2CD Compilation with David Mitson and Mark Wilder Digital Restoration and Remasters that plays out as follows:

 

CD1 "Father Of Folk Blues" (44:59 minutes):

1. Death Letter [Side 1]

2. Pearline

3. Louise McGhee

4. John The Revelator

5. Empire State Express

6. Preachin' Blues [Side 2]

7. Grinnin' In Your Face

8. Sundown

9. Levee Camp Moan

Tracks 1 to 9 are the debut album "Father Of Folk Blues" by The Legendary SON HOUSE – released October 1965 in the USA on Columbia CL 2417 (Mono) and Columbia CS 9217 (Stereo) – the STEREO MIX ONLY is here on this CD

NOTES:

All Tracks recorded 12 to 14 April 1965 in New York City

Produced JOHN HAMMOND and FRANK DRIGGS

SON HOUSE on Steel-Bodied National Guitar and Vocals

AL WILSON (later with Canned Heat) plays Guitar on Track 5 and Harmonica on Track 9; see also Tracks 2 and 9 on CD2

 

CD2 (52:43 minutes):

1. Death Letter – Previously Unissued Alternate Take (Take 2 with False Start, 5:53 minutes)

2. Levee Camp Moan – Previously Unissued Alternate Take (Remake Take 1, 4:52 minutes)

3. Grinnin' In Your Face – Previously Unissued Alternate Take (Take 1, 3:14 minutes)

4. John The Revelator – Previously Unissued Alternate Take (Take 2, 2:17 minutes)

5. Preachin' Blues – Previously Unissued Alternate Take (Take 3, 5:29 minutes)

6. President Kennedy – Previously Unissued (Take 1, 3:44 minutes)

7. A Down The Staff – Previously Unissued (Take 2, 3:42 minutes)

8. Motherless Children – Previously Unissued (Take 2, 4:30 minutes)

9. Yonder Comes My Mother – Previously Unissued (Take 1, 3:40 minutes, Al Wilson of Canned Heat on Second Guitar)

10. Shake It And Break It – Previously Unissued (Takes 2 and 3 False Starts, Take 4, 2:43 minutes)

11. Pony Blues – Previously Unissued (Remake Take 1, 5:24 minutes)

12. Downhearted Blues – Previously Unissued (Take 1, 7:08 minutes)

All songs by Son House - plays Steel-Bodied National Guitar on all except Tracks 3 and 4 which is Voice only; Al Wilson later of Canned Heat on Harmonica on Track 2 and Second Guitar on Track 9

 

The fat double jewel-case is now a thing of the past and that look 16-page booklet the same. The final pages of it are actually given over to other CD releases in the Roots N' Blues: Contemporary Blues Masters series like Bessie Smith and and Memphis Minnie – and not to Son House. However, you do get two pages of Session Credits – an article on the man taken from 'Saturday Review' by Lawrence Cohen dated 28 September 1968 (Cohen collated this reissue) – that is in turn followed by an essay called 'Remembering' from Cohen as he readied this reissue in 1992. It's a sort of before and after comparison. There are five black and white photos of Son House followed by the Reissue Credits. But the big news is the Audio – Digital restoration and Engineering by DAVID MITSON at Sony in L.A. with MARK WILDER at Sony Studios in New York. The clarity is kind of shocking at times – just him and that huge-sounding National Steel – it's a sweetheart listen – if not a little samey at times as you wade through CD2. 

 

You would have to say that the shorter nine-track album has the edge here – concise – clear – his singing and playing the stuff of Mississippi legend. Not that there isn't magic in the Unreleased. Four Alternate Takes on CD2 are followed by eight Previously Unissued songs – each with spoken Track Announcements and their Master Number from the engineer Frank Driggs (I have provided the Take numbers in the list above which is not provided in the booklet – playing times too because the booklet ones are inaccurate).

 

All of it is like peeking into a hidden recording history unseen for eons. There is dialogue at the beginning of "Death Letter" – the engineer giving us Take 2 with a False Start. And Son House tells us he wants to get religion and become a Baptist Preacher (or maybe a Deacon) so he won’t have to work – a fantastic Take 3 of "Preachin' Blues" with some very cool playing.

 

Although the intention is noble (hurt for the assassination of a US President who held a candle for people of colour and their societal miseries), the lyrics pressing and the melody prettier than most – you can hear why they left "President Kennedy" in the can – it just feels out of place. Son House does well to keep his guitar playing in synch with the singing through "Motherless Children" – his playing thrilling in its creaking and pinging accuracy. Even better is Al Wilson providing muscle to "Yonder Comes My Mother" by way of a second guitar accompaniment (you kind of wish they explored more of this). "Shake It And Break It" is terrible – false starts and a version that just does not work. "Pony Blues" is a different kettle of fish – five minutes of Primo Son House getting in the groove.

 

This is a cool reissue of genuine Sixties Mississippi Delta Acoustic Blues – cumbersome in presentation maybe – a tiny bit out-dated looking by today's standards perhaps – but its contents and audio ROCK. Eddie James House, Jr. - John The Revelator – nice one son...

Sunday, 14 February 2021

"Roots & Blues: 20 CD Box Set" by VARIOUS ARTISTS (January 2015 UK/EUROPE Sony Music Box Set - Reissues 16 Individual "Roots 'N Blues" CD Compilations Along With One 4CD Box Set Originally Issued 1990-1996 Into One Box Set) - A Review by Mark Barry...









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"…Big Legs, Empty Beds And Moonshiners…"

Entirely made up of tracks dubbed from Twenties, Thirties, Forties and Early Fifties 78"s - the 437 tracks across these 20 fabulous "Roots & Blues" CDs (all now in 5" card repro sleeves) represent an Americana Fest you've probably not heard before. 

Bluegrass, Old Timey Country, Guitar Blues, Washboard Shuffles, Church Music and Gospel, Fiddle Music, Piano Blues, Boogie Woogie, Vocal Blues, Cow Bells and Kazoos - it's all here and more - and neatly repackaged too.

Originally issued in the USA between 1990 and 1996 by Columbia/Legacy as 16 individual CD compilations and one 4CD box set - the riches contained within this mid-priced European 20-disc mini box set reissue bundle are amazing. But a word about the SOUND first - we're not talking audiophile here - and you need to accept that as a given for every disc

Across 20 themed-sets the audio varies wildly as you can imagine - most times alarmingly good in its clarity given the vintage and sources - but on other occasions it can be utterly atrocious (included for historical and rarity value). But I find the clicks and pops (which aren't that often really) and ghostly voices and messages from the past are part of the thrill and charm. This is grittily real stuff and very funny too in places. Go with the flow on this one...

Another downside (if you could call it that) is that a 36-page booklet giving you basic track lists/credits and little else has replaced the heavily annotated booklets that accompanied the original individual CD releases. You do at least get some paragraphs on each compilation by liner notes king DEAN RUDLAND and the pictures are nice - but the songs and artists are so obscure and interesting that you long for more info on what's what. This is one of those occasions where you wish Sony would have gone a bit better on the booklet (worth pointing out). Here are the finite details...

UK/Europe released January 2015 - "Roots & Blues: 20 CD Box Set" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Sony Music 88875043322 (Barcode 888750433220) breaks downs as follows (all compilations Previously Issued in Jewel Cases, here they are individual card sleeves):

Disc 1 "The Retrospective (1925-1950) Vol.1", 25 Tracks, 76:09 minutes
Disc 2 "The Retrospective (1925-1950) Vol.2", 25 Tracks, 77:52 minutes
Disc 3 "The Retrospective (1925-1950) Vol.3", 29 Tracks, 77:52 minutes
Disc 4 "The Retrospective (1925-1950) Vol.4", 28 Tracks, 77:07 minutes
Disc 5 "Legends Of The Blues Volume One", 20 Tracks, 59:00 minutes
Disc 6 "Legends Of The Blues Volume Two", 20 Tracks, 61:21 minutes
Disc 7 "Great Blues Guitarists: String Dazzlers", 20 Tracks, 61:29 minutes
Disc 8 "The Slide Guitar: Bottles, Knives & Steel", 19 Tracks, 57:36 minutes
Disc 9 "The Slide Guitar: Bottles, Knives & Steel Vol. 2", 20 Tracks, 62:10 minutes
Disc 10 "Lonnie Johnson: Steppin' On The Blues", 19 Tracks, 58:26 minutes
Disc 11 "Preachin' The Gospel: Holy Blues", 20 Tracks, 60:23 minutes
Disc 12 "Good Time Blues: Harmonicas, Kazoos, Washboards & Cow-Bells", 21 Tracks, 59:28 minutes
Disc 13 "News & The Blues: Telling It Like It Is", 20 Tracks, 59:03 minutes
Disc 14 "Booze & The Blues", 22 Tracks, 65:44 minutes
Disc 15 "Messed Up In Love And Other Tales Of Woe", 16 tracks, 45:32 minutes
Disc 16 "Raunchy Business: Hot Nuts & Lollipops", 20 Tracks, 61:31 minutes
Disc 17 "Cajun Vol.1: Abbeville Breakdown 1929-1939", 22 Tracks, 61:23 minutes
Disc 18 "Cajun Dance Party: Fais Do-Do", 23 Tracks, 67:58 minutes
Disc 19 "White Country Blues 1926-1938: A Lighter Shade Of Blue Vol.1", 24 Tracks, 73:05 minutes
Disc 20 "White Country Blues 1926-1938: A Lighter Shade Of Blue Vol.2", 24 Tracks, 66:52 minutes

It opens smartly clumping together the 4-discs of the much praised and long deleted "Retrospective: 1925-1950" 4CD Sony/Legacy Box Set first issued June 1992 in the USA (107 tracks). Highlights on Disc 1 are "Cow-Cow Blues" by Dora Carr and "Empty Bed Blues" by Elizabeth Johnson - the kind of 78" Blues you'd swear turned up in episodes of "Boardwalk Empire". Discs 2 and 3 feature names you know like Lonnie Johnson, the piano of Albert Ammons, Roosevelt Sykes, the twelve-string guitar of Blind Willie McTell, Leroy Carr, Charlie Patton, Joshua White and Big Bill Broonzy ("...leaving this morning on the C&A"). Highlights include "Good Woman Blues" where Scrapper Blackwell instructs the lady folk of the USA "...women if you got a good man, give him three meals a day..." and Joshua White worries that he'll have to travel to find love because his "good gal might be in China..." Cliff Carlisle yodels his woes about a lack of clothes, the little ones coming on and his wife eating all the time in "Onion Eating Mama".

By the time you get to Disc 4 every track is really clear and a blast in its own genre right - Bluegrass, Old Timey Country, Guitar Blues, Washboard Shuffles, Church Music and Gospel, Fiddle Music, Piano Blues, Boogie Woogie  - it's all here. Favourites include the saucy "You Got To See Mama Ev'ry Night (Or You Can't See Mama At All)" where our hero is getting instruction on martial bliss and "Mean Black Snake" where another dude suspects his lady is removing traps for another kind of visitor. Two huge Blues giants show up in early form - Muddy Waters and Joe Williams - with William's monster "Baby, Please Don't Go" thrilling still (how many bands have cut their Blues teeth on this song!).

Of the other discs I have two personal favourites - the eerie and harrowing "News & The Blues: Telling It Like It Is" and the deliciously saucy and sexy "Raunchy Business: Hot Nuts & Lollipops". The first has Bessie Smith moaning "it's rained five days and the sky is dark at night...there's trouble in the lowlands..." while the amazing guitar of Blind Willie Johnson has "people run and pray..." as the 1912 Titanic sinks during "God Moves On The Water" (amazing solo in the centre of it). 

And when the singers let their hair down - the results on "Raunchy Business" are brilliant. Titles like "My Stove's In Good Condition", "Banana In Your Fruit Basket" and "My Pencil Won't Write No More" don't leave much to delicacy but will make you grin. In fact when Lucille Brogan gives us Part 2 of "Shave 'Em Dry" - the opening lyrics about nipples as big as thumbs and pulling back her mattress so Daddy can oil her springs - is shocking even now. Lillie Mae Kirkman waxes lyrical about a man she met last night in "He's Just My Size" where apparently he's a kitchen mechanic who makes her biscuits rise (lovely).

Some of the Cajun and Washboard stuff is samey for sure and hard to take at times - but the "Booze" and "Messed Up" CDs have nuggets galore (The Mississippi Sheiks and Memphis Minnie to name but a few). But that's what so great about a box as full as this - the sheer variety - Robert Johnson, Bukka White, Blind Boy Fuller and so many more - you'll be digging into it for years to come. "Take It Easy Greasy" the song tells us (Lil Johnson on Disc 2) - I say buy it and jump right in and enjoy...

Monday, 31 January 2011

"Shuggie’s Boogie: Shuggie Otis Plays The Blues" [aka "Roots N' Blues" from 1994] by SHUGGIE OTIS (March 2009 SPV/Blue Label 'Expanded Edition' CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...We Had A Cooking Little Band...We Had A Lot Of Fun..."

Like most people I came across this superlative guitar player in a roundabout kind of a way – via The Brothers Johnson and their huge Funk/Soul hit of 1977 "Strawberry Letter No. 23" (which Otis wrote). I remember looking at the A&M Records label credit at the time on the BJ album and wondering - who the hell is the funky-sounding Shuggie Otis?

And while this mid-priced UK reissue doesn’t feature Shuggie’s 1971 original of "Strawberry Letter No. 23" (it’s on his 1971 "Freedom Flight" LP – see my review for the "Original Album Classics" 3CD Mini Box Set) – don't let that put you off for a nanosecond. "Shuggie's Boogie: Shuggie Otis Plays The Blues" is a truly stunning CD compilation of his rare and desirable funky blues output in the early Seventies - a proper big daddy bargain at twice the price. There’s a lot to wade through - so let’s get to the jammy details…

UK released March 2009 - "Shuggie's Boogie: Shuggie Otis Plays The Blues" by SHUGGIE OTIS on SPV Records/Blue Label SPV 306422 CD (Barcode 693723064222) is a reissue CD of a 1994 USA Columbia "Roots N' Blues" compilation. It uses the same front-cover artwork and name (though this time it’s in a card digipak rather than a jewel case) - but has had its original quota of 12-tracks bumped up by 2 - meaning that Tracks 13 and 14 here are Bonuses on this 'Extended Edition' reissue. It breaks down as follows (65:16 minutes)

1. 12:15 Slow Goonbash Blues
2. Shuggie's Boogie
3. Gospel Groove
4. The Hawks
5. Me And My Woman
6. I Can Stand To See You Die
7. I Got The Walkin' Blues
8. Purple
9. Cold Shot
10. Sweet Thang
11. Bootie Cooler
12. Shuggie's Old Time Slide Boogie

BONUS TRACKS:
13. Shuggie's Shuffle
14. Oxford Gray

Tracks 1, 12 and 13 are from the AL KOOPER LP "Kooper Session – Al Kooper Introduces Shuggie Otis" released January 1970 in the USA on Columbia Records CS 9951 and in the UK on CBS Records S 63797

Tracks 2, 3, 4, 11 and 14 are from Shuggie Otis' debut solo album "Here Comes Shuggie Otis" released February 1970 on Columbia BN 26511 in the USA and in the UK on CBS Records S 63996

Tracks 6 and 7 are from the JOHNNY OTIS LP (credited as The Johnny Otis Show) "Cuttin' Up" released 1970 in the USA on Epic Records BN 26524. "I Can Stand To See You Die" features Shuggie Otis on Guitar, Bass, Harmonica, Organ and Piano with SUGARCANE HARRIS on solo Lead Vocals. "I Got Walkin' Blues" has the same instrumentation but features duet vocals between Johnny Otis and Sugarcane Harris.

Tracks 5, 8 and 10 are from Shuggie’s 2nd solo LP "Freedom Flight" released September 1971 in the USA on Epic Records KE 30572 [produced by Johnny Otis]

Track 9 is an October 1970 recording featuring Johnny & Shuggie Otis and had remained unreleased until the 1994 "Roots N' Blues" CD compilation

Originally mastered for Columbia by Roger Lomax at Ro-Lo Studios in the USA, the sound quality is uniformly excellent and at times 'so' sweet. But it’s the material that blows you away. His debut "Here Comes Shuggie Otis" is the very definition of lost classic and 'cool album' you must hear before you die.

Musically it’s a little instrumental B.B. King ("Purple") meets trippy Albert King on Stax ("Sweet Thang") meets the straight-up blues workout ("12:15 Slow Goonbash Blues") – it’s hugely impressive stuff and strangely diverse too. The fantastic soulful organ shuffle of "Bootie Cooler" – an instrumental I regularly put on a 70’s Fest CD - always brings customers to the counter asking after the 'cool' tune that’s playing. The false 78" crackle put on "Shuggie’s Old Time Slide Boogie" by Al Kooper in 1970 now sounds a tad gimmicky (even if the old-time National Steel blues guitar feel of the track is great), but it’s quickly sorted out by the organ-guitar driven "Shuggie’s Shuffle" – great stuff.

His 'talking about his influences and past' song "Shuggie's Boogie" (lyrics above) features him name-checking every great Blues player and then imitating their licks for about two minutes before the band kicks in. The track sung by Sugarcane Harris “I Can Stand To See You Die” and the unreleased instrumental cover of “Cold Shot” are more indicative of the Fifties/Sixties Rhythm'n'Blues stuff he would play with his Dad in the mid to late Seventies. Those tracks were issued by Johnny Otis on his own US label and featured huge R'n'B and Blues stars of old (that period is covered extensively on another superb CD called "In Session" from 2002 on the Goldenlane label). "Gospel Groove" sounds like Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac on a churchy tip – a slow-paced Blues groove with organ – 'so' good. And we should make special mention of Otis' incredibly accomplished guitar playing throughout which completely belied his 20 to 21 year’s old age when it was all recorded.

"Shuggie’s Boogie: Shuggie Otis Plays The Blues" is the kind of superlative little reissue that might pass you by – don’t let it. It’s a genuine voyage of discovery for lovers of Seventies Blues – especially those who like their particular poison with a slightly soulful tint. 

Recommended like a preacher feeling the groove on a Sunday morning...

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