Taj Mahal - Blues with a Feeling: The Very Best of Taj Mahal (2003)
Artist: Taj Mahal
Title: Blues with a Feeling: The Very Best of Taj Mahal
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Private Music/BMG Heritage
Genre: Blues, Modern Electric Blues, Modern Acoustic Blues, Country Blues
Quality: Mp3 320/WAVPack (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 75:34
Total Size: 189/522 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Blues with a Feeling: The Very Best of Taj Mahal
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Private Music/BMG Heritage
Genre: Blues, Modern Electric Blues, Modern Acoustic Blues, Country Blues
Quality: Mp3 320/WAVPack (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 75:34
Total Size: 189/522 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Senor Blues
02. Don't Call Us
03. Love Her With Feeling, (You've Got To) - (featuring Eric Clapton)
04. Lovin In My Baby's Eyes
05. Betty And Dupree
06. Here In The Dark
07. That's How Strong My Love Is
08. Lonely Avenue
09. Mockingbird - (featuring Etta James)
10. Mailbox Blues
11. Think
12. Sitting On Top Of The World
13. Mind Your Own Business
14. Cakewalk Into Town
15. Blues With A Feeling
16. Take A Giant Step
17. The New Hula Blues
18. The Hustle Is On
19. Let The Winds Blow
20. Blue Light Boogie
Throughout his career, Taj Mahal has always been considered a bluesman, which is true enough, since the basis for everything he does has been the country blues, but he is not a traditionalist at heart, and he has always looked for ways to push the blues into new places and shapes. Adding at times rhythms and sensibilities that are drawn from reggae, ragtime, calypso, zydeco, and other genres, Mahal practices a kind of blues hybrid that is his alone, and he has been a huge influence on newer artists like Chris Thomas King and Corey Harris. This collection derives from the five albums he recorded with Private Records during the 1990s, and overlaps somewhat with The Best of the Private Years, released in 2000. Highlights include his version of Doc Pomus' "Lonely Avenue," a bebop blues take on Horace Silver's "Señor Blues," and an atmospheric reading of Goffin & King's "Take a Giant Step." Among the most interesting tracks here are the ones penned by Taj Mahal himself ("Mailbox Blues," "Cakewalk into Town," "New Hula Blues"), each of which demonstrates aptly the singer's melting-pot approach to the blues.