Memphis Slim - Just Blues & Tribute To Big Bill Broonzy (Remastered) (2019)
Artist: Memphis Slim
Title: Just Blues & Tribute To Big Bill Broonzy (Remastered)
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: Profound
Genre: Piano Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 82:48
Total Size: 428 MB | 191 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Just Blues & Tribute To Big Bill Broonzy (Remastered)
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: Profound
Genre: Piano Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 82:48
Total Size: 428 MB | 191 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Beer Drinking Woman (3:27)
2. Teasing The Blues (3:42)
3. The I.C. Blues (2:51)
4. Baby Doll (2:08)
5. Just Blues (3:34)
6. Blue And Disgusted (2:31)
7. Blue Brew (4:24)
8. Rack 'em Back Jack (2:30)
9. Motherless Child (3:03)
10. Brenda (3:46)
11. When Your Dough Roller Is Gone (2:40)
12. Hey Slim (4:13)
13. I Feel So Good (3:20)
14. Rockin' Chair Blues (3:20)
15. Baby Gone (3:40)
16. Cow Cow Blues (3:52)
17. Miss Ida B. (4:48)
18. Forty-Four Blues (3:58)
19. Trouble In Mind (3:33)
20. Worried Life Blues (3:20)
21. Don't Want My Rooster Crowin' After The Sun Goes Down (2:38)
22. Lonesome In My Bedroom (4:54)
23. Diggin' My Potatoes (2:25)
24. In The Evening (3:58)
Just Blues (1961):
Cut during one session in November of 1960, Memphis Slim's Just Blues features the urbane singer both alone at the piano and backed by guitarist Lafayette Thomas and jazz bassist Wendell Marshall; harp player "Harpie" Brown joins the party for two cuts. One of a handful of stellar albums Slim cut for Prestige's Bluesville label, the 12-track set offers a particularly pleasant way to check out the pianist's tasty keyboard work and wide-ranging topical bent: From booze drinking and sexual innuendo to real lowdown blues, Slim tackles the varied terrain with aplomb. Also part of a Prestige two-fer that includes the album No Strain. ~Stephen Cook
Memphis Slim's Tribute to Big Bill Broonzy, Leroy Carr, Cow Cow Davenport, Curtis Jones, Jazz Gillum (1961):
Blues pianist Memphis Slim, harmonica wizard Jazz Gillum, and guitarist Arbee Stidham assembled in a New York City recording studio on January 16, 1961, under the supervision of Nat Hentoff to track an album session for Candid Records. That they did, but what began to emerge was a loose, musical "trialogue" on departed blues artists that the trio had either known or been influenced by, a list that included Big Bill Broonzy, Leroy Carr, Cow Cow Davenport, Curtis Jones, Walter Davis, Roosevelt Sykes, Blind Blake, Washboard Sam, and Big Maceo, each of whom is given a tip of the hat in one song or another. Slim's piano is a bit out of tune throughout the proceedings, as is Stidham's guitar, which makes this less than a perfect recording, but the respect and reverence and wonderfully loose, intimate, and ragged delight these three veteran blues performers bring to these tracks offset the technical defects. Highlights include a sparkling and upbeat version of Cow Cow Davenport's "Cow Cow Blues," a crisp take on Roosevelt Sykes' "Forty-Four Blues," and a vigorous tip of the hat to Blind Blake on "Diggin' My Potatoes." The end result isn't a perfect album, mostly due to the tuning problems, but it has a very real intimacy to it, and it unwinds like an easy musical reminiscence between three old friends. This tribute from Slim, Jazz, and Arbee may not be essential, but it sure is honest, and true to the name of the record label, it is indeed candid. There's something to be said for that. ~Steve Leggett
Cut during one session in November of 1960, Memphis Slim's Just Blues features the urbane singer both alone at the piano and backed by guitarist Lafayette Thomas and jazz bassist Wendell Marshall; harp player "Harpie" Brown joins the party for two cuts. One of a handful of stellar albums Slim cut for Prestige's Bluesville label, the 12-track set offers a particularly pleasant way to check out the pianist's tasty keyboard work and wide-ranging topical bent: From booze drinking and sexual innuendo to real lowdown blues, Slim tackles the varied terrain with aplomb. Also part of a Prestige two-fer that includes the album No Strain. ~Stephen Cook
Memphis Slim's Tribute to Big Bill Broonzy, Leroy Carr, Cow Cow Davenport, Curtis Jones, Jazz Gillum (1961):
Blues pianist Memphis Slim, harmonica wizard Jazz Gillum, and guitarist Arbee Stidham assembled in a New York City recording studio on January 16, 1961, under the supervision of Nat Hentoff to track an album session for Candid Records. That they did, but what began to emerge was a loose, musical "trialogue" on departed blues artists that the trio had either known or been influenced by, a list that included Big Bill Broonzy, Leroy Carr, Cow Cow Davenport, Curtis Jones, Walter Davis, Roosevelt Sykes, Blind Blake, Washboard Sam, and Big Maceo, each of whom is given a tip of the hat in one song or another. Slim's piano is a bit out of tune throughout the proceedings, as is Stidham's guitar, which makes this less than a perfect recording, but the respect and reverence and wonderfully loose, intimate, and ragged delight these three veteran blues performers bring to these tracks offset the technical defects. Highlights include a sparkling and upbeat version of Cow Cow Davenport's "Cow Cow Blues," a crisp take on Roosevelt Sykes' "Forty-Four Blues," and a vigorous tip of the hat to Blind Blake on "Diggin' My Potatoes." The end result isn't a perfect album, mostly due to the tuning problems, but it has a very real intimacy to it, and it unwinds like an easy musical reminiscence between three old friends. This tribute from Slim, Jazz, and Arbee may not be essential, but it sure is honest, and true to the name of the record label, it is indeed candid. There's something to be said for that. ~Steve Leggett