Hubert Sumlin - Hubert Sumlin's Blues Party (Reissue) (2005)

  • 22 Nov, 14:36
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Hubert Sumlin's Blues Party
Year Of Release: 2005
Label: Shout! Factory
Genre: Blues, Electric Chicago Blues
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 37:20
Total Size: 92/217 Mb (scans)
WebSite:

Hubert Sumlin - Hubert Sumlin's Blues Party (Reissue) (2005)


Tracklist:

01. Hidden Charms
02. West Side Soul
03. A Soul That's Been Abused
04. Letter To My Girlfriend
05. How Can You Leave Me, Little Girl?
06. Can't Call You No More
07. Blue Guitar
08. Down In The Bottom
09. Poor Me, Pour Me
10 Living The Blues

Hubert Sumlin: guitar, vocals on #5, 10
Mighty Sam McClain: vocals on #1, 3, 6,8
Michael "Mudcat" Ward: bass
Ronnie Earl: guitar and slide guitar
Ron Levy: piano, organ, vocals on #9
Greg Piccolo: tenor sax, vocals on #4
Jerry Portnoy: harmonica
John Rossi: drums
Dave Maxwell: piano on #6-8
Doug James: baritone sax
Bob Enos: trumpet

Quiet and extremely unassuming off the bandstand, Hubert Sumlin played a style of guitar incendiary enough to stand tall beside the immortal Howlin' Wolf. The Wolf was Sumlin's imposing mentor for more than two decades, and it proved a mutually beneficial relationship; Sumlin's twisting, darting, unpredictable lead guitar constantly energized the Wolf's 1960s Chess sides, even when the songs themselves (check out "Do the Do" or "Mama's Baby" for conclusive proof) were less than stellar. Sumlin started out twanging the proverbial broom wire nailed to the wall before he got his mitts on a real guitar. He grew up near West Memphis, Arkansas, briefly hooking up with another Young Lion with a rosy future, harpist James Cotton, before receiving a summons from the mighty Wolf to join him in Chicago in 1954. Sumlin learned his craft nightly on the bandstand behind Wolf, his confidence growing as he graduated from rhythm guitar duties to lead. By the dawn of the '60s, Sumlin's slashing axe was a prominent component on the great majority of Wolf's waxings, including "Wang Dang Doodle," "Shake for Me," "Hidden Charms" (boasting perhaps Sumlin's greatest recorded solo), "Three Hundred Pounds of Joy," and "Killing Floor."

About Them Shoes Although they had a somewhat tempestuous relationship, Sumlin remained loyal to Wolf until the big man's 1976 death. But Sumlin cut a handful of solo sessions before that, beginning with a most unusual 1964 date in East Berlin that was produced by Horst Lippmann during a European tour under the auspices of the American Folk Blues Festival (the "behind the Iron Curtain" session also featured pianist Sunnyland Slim and bassist Willie Dixon). In subsequent years Sumlin allowed his vocal talents to shine, recording solo sets that revealed him to be an understated but effective singer -- while his guitar continued to communicate most forcefully. The esteem with which he was held by musicians of a later generation was ably demonstrated by the guest list on Sumlin's 2004 album About Them Shoes, including Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, Levon Helm, and David Johansen, not to mention a noted bluesman from Sumlin's own past, harmonica player James Cotton, the old friend and bandmate who first played with Sumlin in West Memphis back in their teenage years of the early '50s, before Cotton joined up with Muddy Waters and moved to Chicago, paralleling Sumlin's own journey to the Windy City around the same time. He followed up About Them Shoes with Treblemaker in 2007. Hubert Sumlin died of heart failure in Wayne, New Jersey on December 4, 2011; he was 80 years old. Mick Jagger and Keith Richards paid for the bluesman's funeral expenses.