Artist: Various Artists
Title: The Original Memphis Blues Brothers
Year Of Release: 2009
Label: Ace Records
Genre: Blues, Rock
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 01:13:51
Total Size: 210 mb
Tracklist---------
01. Good Lovin'
02. Drifting From Town To Town
03. Dry Up Baby
04. Crying All Night Long
05. Love Me Baby
06. Bad Women, Bad Whiskey
07. You're My Angel
08. She Calls Me Daddy aka Whole Heap Of Mama
09. I Wronged A Woman
10. I Can't Forgive You
11. Sad And Lonely
12. Rumpus Romp (Instr.)
13. Trouble And Me
14. I Cried
15. Midnight Hours Journey
16. B. B. Boogie
17. Mistreated Woman
18. The Other Night Blues
19. Walkin' And Cryin'
20. You're Driving Me Insane
21. Trouble And Heartaches
22. That Gal Of Mine
23. So Tired
24. Run To Me Baby
25. She Rocks Me
26. Don't Have To Worry 'Bout You No More
This originally came out as a 1989 LP on Ace; look, however, for the expanded 2000 Ace CD, as it increases the number of tracks from 15 to 26 with the addition of material by B.B. King, Ike Turner, and Rosco Gordon. All of the songs were recorded in Memphis in the early '50s by the Bihari Brothers, and much of it was released on 45s on their Modern, RPM, and Meteor labels, though some of it wasn't issued for decades. This was two or three years before the ascendance of Memphis rockabilly, and blues/R&B crossover ruled the roost in the city. The CD is thus a rough snapshot of local electric blues just as it began to be recorded more often, with some of the earliest sides by Bobby Bland, Junior Parker, Johnny Ace, and the aforementioned King, Turner, and Gordon, as well as the nearly unknown Earl Forest. In comparison to the somewhat more famous early Memphis electric blues released in the early to mid-'50s on Sun, this is a little more sluggish, and more tilted toward barroom piano styles. The songwriting, too, is not as sharp and electric as the best Sun stuff. All that taken into consideration, this is still a noteworthy supplement to those Sun recordings, as a document of the sound of Memphis electric blues - and, by extension, rock & roll - in its infancy. The band plays some serious havoc with timekeeping on Parker's chaotic "You're My Angel," which sounds like a drunken after-hours jam; Bland is well on his way to establishing his foggy urban blues delivery on his two singles. Forest is a typical but unremarkable period bluesman; Ace is represented by just one performance, the 1953 ballad "Midnight Hours Journey"; and Turner turns in relatively rare (and competent) vocal performances on his 1952 single. B.B. King's catalog from this period is actually pretty well represented by reissues, so collectors will be interested to note that the four numbers here are alternate takes of his first two 78 singles for RPM, from 1950.
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