Straight To Watts: The Central Avenue Scene 1951-54 Vol 1 (2013)
Artist: Various Artist
Title: Straight To Watts: The Central Avenue Scene 1951-54 Vol 1
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Ace Records
Genre: Soul, R&B
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 01:11:22
Total Size: 204 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Straight To Watts: The Central Avenue Scene 1951-54 Vol 1
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Ace Records
Genre: Soul, R&B
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 01:11:22
Total Size: 204 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
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01. Slowly Go Out Of Your Mind - Jake Porter Combo
02. Motor Head Baby - Chuck Higgins and His Mellotones
03. Baby I Don't Want You No More - Chuck Hamilton Combo
04. I Owe Everybody - Gene Phillips
05. I Got Hi - Frankie Ervin and His Band
06. Straight To Watts - Jimmy O'Brien
07. T-Town Mambo - Ernie Fields Combo
08. Ridin' Mighty High - Johnny Moore's Three Blazers
09. Oh, How The Geese Did Fly! - Jack McVea Combo
10. Ain't Gonna Leave Baby - Chuck Higgins and His Mellotones
11. Mama And Papa - Tal Carter
12. Talk About A Girl Child Being Down - Honey Coleman
13. Take Off My Wig - Johnny Moore's Three Blazers
14. The Monkey - Jake Porter Combo
15. The Whang - Jake Porter Combo
16. Frustration, Frustration - Betty Hall Jones
17. Fish Man - Gene Phillips
18. Stormy - Chuck Higgins and His Mellotones
19. Hi Ho Silver - Brother Woodman and Candy Rivers
20. Where Have You Been - Smokey Hogg
21. A Soul Without A Name - Frankie Ervin and His Band
22. Hot Dog! That Made Him Mad - "Palmer"
23. Safronia #1 - Jake Porter
24. The House Of Blue Lights - Rozelle Gayle
Straight to Watts is a 24-track collection of material originally issued by Jake Porter's Combo Records in Los Angeles between 1951-1954. Compiled by British record collector Tony Rounce for Ace Records, with excellent notes by Jim Dawson, this set - which is merely the first volume in a projected set -- showcases the raw, woolly R&B and jump blues that stood in stark contrast to the slicker New York styles of the time. Pre-rock & roll and yet solidly swaggering with the same careening spirit of freedom and wildness, this stuff is full of heat and passion, piss and vinegar. Like Motown a decade later, Combo featured a few different house bands playing behind a revolving stage of frontpersons. Here, Chuck Higgins, Porter, Johnny Moore and his band the Three Blazers (which featured the incomparable Floyd Dixon), Ernie Fields, Johnny "Guitar" Watson, Betty Jones, Jack McVea, Rozelle Gayle, Gene Philips, Honey Coleman, and many other obscure but now legendary R&B singers laid down vocal tracks for singles that were regional hits - and some misses. This is the music that would be spun in the back of Dolphin's drugstore in Hollywood, and Porter made it all in a basement studio on Virgil Avenue in Watts. There are no standout tracks, as everything here is brilliant. This is the only side necessary for a jumpin' party on a summer night under the lights. But there are some real heretofore hidden gems here - such as the "T-Town Mambo" duet between Ernie Fields and Angela Walls, or "Ridin' Mighty High" by Johnny Moore's band fronted by Dixon, who could move a song into overdrive the same way Joe Turner did. There are also several unreleased tracks that are mind-blowing - the final cut, a Rozelle Gayle version of "The House of Blue Lights," feels like it was recorded there: it's drunken, loose, and pumps like mad. This is a classic set for anyone interested in the music of the period or region, whether you are a musicologist or an R&B nut. And if you aren't, this'll convert you or you're already dead.