Roscoe Chenier - Waiting For My Tomorrow (2006)

  • 02 Apr, 13:40
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Waiting For My Tomorrow
Year Of Release: 2006
Label: Black & Tan
Genre: Blues, Louisiana Blues, Soul Blues
Quality: Mp3/320
Total Time: 53:34
Total Size: 130 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Shake A Hand
02. Ain't Got No Home
03. Time Is Hard
04. Bad Luck
05. Tell Me How Long
06. Waiting For My Tomorrow
07. Secret Of Love
08. Rooster Blues
09. Kiss And Say Goodbye
10. Will The Circle Be Unbroken
11. You Don't Miss Your Water
12. Juanita
13. You Left Me Here To Cry
14. Funny How Time Slips Away

All the musicians (and the engineer) that you hear on this record have performed and toured with Roscoe over the last 10 years. With this record they wanted to pay their respect to Roscoe in a musical way. Too often artists get the respect and attention they deserve after they're gone. Roscoe is like a living Juke-box filled with all the highlights of the Louisiana musical heritage (from artists like Slim Harpo, Lonesome Sundown, Lazy Lester, Guitar Slim).

A second cousin of the late zydeco/blues legend Clifton Chenier, Roscoe Chenier is an expressive blues/R&B singer and guitarist who isn't nearly as well known as his famous relative. Roscoe was born and raised in Louisiana, where he joined a band called Rockin' CD & the Blues Runners as a teenager in 1957. Chenier formed his own band in 1959, and in 1961, he recorded the 45-rpm single "Born for Bad Luck" and its B side. "Annie Mae's Yo-Yo." for Reynaud. The single didn't do a lot nationally, although it was played on local jukeboxes in southern Louisiana and eventually became a collector's item. Chenier (whose influences range from B.B. King to Fats Domino) continued to play the Louisiana circuit into the '90s, but not until 1993 would he record again, and not until 1993 would he actually record an album. That year, a 52-year-old Chenier recorded his self-titled debut album for Avenue Jazz. The CD was good enough to make one wish that Chenier wasn't so obscure, but when the '90s were coming to a close, he had yet to come out with a second album or become better known outside of Louisiana.