Magic Slim & The Teardrops - Midnight Blues (2008) [CD Rip]

Artist: Magic Slim & The Teardrops
Title: Midnight Blues
Year Of Release: 2008
Label: Blind Pig Records
Genre: Blues, Chicago Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks+cue+log+scans) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 47:19
Total Size: 338 MB | 123 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Midnight Blues
Year Of Release: 2008
Label: Blind Pig Records
Genre: Blues, Chicago Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks+cue+log+scans) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 47:19
Total Size: 338 MB | 123 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Let Me Love You (3:41)
2. You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had (3:43)
3. Give Me Back My Wig (2:54)
4. Lonely Man (2:31)
5. Spider In My Stew (4:36)
6. Going Down The Road Feeling Bad (2:20)
7. Full Load Boogie (2:40)
8. Crosseyed Cat (4:06)
9. House Cat Blues (3:00)
10. Carla (4:34)
11. Cryin' Won't Let You Stay (3:40)
12. What Is It That You Got (5:06)
13. Loving You Is The Best Thing That Ever Happened To Me (4:23)
At 71, Magic Slim sounds as nasty and gritty as any bluesman you can name. He's one of the few Mississippi bluesmen who moved to Chicago in the early '50s still on the scene. His sound hasn't evolved much over the years -- he still plays slide guitar without a slide, just his fingers slipping up and down the strings so he's able to bend notes while he slides -- but it doesn't have to. His primal vocals, red-hot guitar work, and the supple backing of his Teardrops, Jon McDonald, guitar and vocals, Danny O'Conner, bass, and David Sims, drums, create the kind of deep bluesy feeling that can't be faked. On Midnight Blues he makes the most of every track, be it an original or a standard. He opens things with his own "Let Me Love You," a rockin' love song that showcases his stinging guitar and powerhouse vocals. Near the end of the tune he tosses off a brief, growling Howlin' Wolf imitation that'll bring a smile to you face. "Full Load Boogie" is an instrumental that moves like a freight train headed North with Slim and McDonald trading blistering solos. "Carla" is a slow drag, an ode to a faithless girlfriend, full of tortured blues notes. "What Is That You Got" is a slow, sly, sexy number with a long sultry solo, while "Cryin' Won't Let You Stay" is a rollicking goodbye song featuring Elvin Bishop on second guitar. Muddy Water's "You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had" is taken at a leisurely pace with James Cotton contributing one of his patented wailing solos. Slim pulls some country licks out of his bag for "Going Down That Road Feeling Bad," a folk song known by both white and black southerners. His unexpected rebel yells give the track a jaunty air. He closes the set with an R&B arrangement of Little Milton's "Loving You Is the Best Thing That Happened to Me" with a smoldering horn section and backing vocals by soul great Otis Clay. ~AMG