R.L. Burnside - Sound Machine Groove (1981) [CD Rip]

Artist: R.L. Burnside
Title: Sound Machine Groove
Year Of Release: 1981/1997
Label: HighTone Records
Genre: Electric Blues, Delta Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks+log+scans) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 44:44
Total Size: 251 MB | 118 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Sound Machine Groove
Year Of Release: 1981/1997
Label: HighTone Records
Genre: Electric Blues, Delta Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks+log+scans) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 44:44
Total Size: 251 MB | 118 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Shake, Little Baby (3:23)
2. Rolling And Tumbling (2:56)
3. Bad Luck City (4:41)
4. Going Down South (3:24)
5. Sound Machine Groove (3:32)
6. Sitting On Top Of The World (3:57)
7. Begged For A Nickel (4:41)
8. Can't Let You Go (4:52)
9. Jumper Hanging Out On The Line (3:14)
10. Searching For My Baby (5:54)
11. Long Haired Doney (4:05)
Recorded by folklorist David Evans in 1979 and 1980, these are Burnside's first recordings with electric guitar and also his first with a band. That band was the Sound Machine, a band he literally created himself out of members of his own family, blending raw Mississippi blues with soul, funk, R&B, contemporary beats and other urban flavours to make a marvellous amalgam of his own.
Contemporary beats and modern themes like "Bad Luck City", "Searching for My Baby", "Can't Let You Go" and "Sound Machine Groove" sit nicely alongside slower, traditional material like "Going Down South" and "Begged for a Nickel”, while R.L.'s duets with drummer Calvin Jackson on "Goin' Away Baby" and "Long Haired Doney" show a marvellous empathy and interplay.
Especially notable is a version of "Sitting On Top Of The World" with Burnside on slide guitar that, with Jackson's help, neatly evokes the sound and feel of a fife and drum band.
Although Burnside became the darling of the blues crowd and hailed as something of an overnight success, one listen to this album tells you he was already forging a new chapter in the Mississippi blues tradition with these recordings.
Contemporary beats and modern themes like "Bad Luck City", "Searching for My Baby", "Can't Let You Go" and "Sound Machine Groove" sit nicely alongside slower, traditional material like "Going Down South" and "Begged for a Nickel”, while R.L.'s duets with drummer Calvin Jackson on "Goin' Away Baby" and "Long Haired Doney" show a marvellous empathy and interplay.
Especially notable is a version of "Sitting On Top Of The World" with Burnside on slide guitar that, with Jackson's help, neatly evokes the sound and feel of a fife and drum band.
Although Burnside became the darling of the blues crowd and hailed as something of an overnight success, one listen to this album tells you he was already forging a new chapter in the Mississippi blues tradition with these recordings.