Lightning Hopkins & The Blues Summit - Lightning Hopkins & The Blues Summit (1960)

Artist: Lightnin' Hopkins & The Blues Summit
Title: Lightnin' Hopkins & The Blues Summit
Year Of Release: 1960/2001
Label: Varese Sarabande
Genre: Acoustic Blues, Texas Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 63:25
Total Size: 370 MB | 149 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Lightnin' Hopkins & The Blues Summit
Year Of Release: 1960/2001
Label: Varese Sarabande
Genre: Acoustic Blues, Texas Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 63:25
Total Size: 370 MB | 149 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Ain't Nothing Like Whiskey (7:57)
2. Penitentiary Blues (6:47)
3. If You Steal My Chickens, You Can't Make 'em Lay (5:40)
4. First Meeting (7:11)
5. How Long Have It Been Since You Been Home (4:12)
6. Wimmen From Coast To Coast (5:49)
7. Right On That Shore (2:47)
8. Early Morning Blues (Aka Chain Gang Blues) (5:15)
9. Blues For Gamblers (6:55)
10. I've Been Buked And I've Been Scorned (5:13)
11. Brand New Car (Aka New Car Blues) (5:34)
An official issue of a much bootlegged studio and live session, Lightnin' Hopkins & the Blues Summit was recorded in Los Angeles on July 6, 1960. Along with Hopkins, in town at the behest of John Lomax Jr., the participants were Big Joe Williams, Sonny Terry, and Brownie McGhee, who were all completing a residency at the Ash Grove nightclub. The first half of the album is a well-lubricated studio jam session, while the even wilder second half takes place at the Ash Grove later that night. Like most straight jam sessions, this is loose to the point of messiness most of the time, with every song but one running well past the five-minute mark, with the foursome trading choruses and solos seemingly at random. Frankly, the whole thing sounds like it's on the verge of collapse three-quarters of the time, which makes moments like the sharp interplay of Terry's harp and Hopkins' finger-picked acoustic in the middle of a rave-up version of "Blues for Gamblers" that much more impressive. However, newcomers to these artists should probably start elsewhere; this is strictly for fans. ~by Stewart Mason