Duke Robillard - Dangerous Place (1997) [CD Rip]
Artist: Duke Robillard
Title: Dangerous Place
Year Of Release: 1997
Label: Virgin Records
Genre: Electric Blues, Blues Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks+log+scans) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 46:21
Total Size: 361 MB | 150 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Dangerous Place
Year Of Release: 1997
Label: Virgin Records
Genre: Electric Blues, Blues Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks+log+scans) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 46:21
Total Size: 361 MB | 150 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Had To Be Your Man (3:15)
2. Going Straight (3:30)
3. Dangerous Place (3:44)
4. Don't Get Me Shook Up (4:13)
5. Take My Word For It (3:05)
6. Can't Remember To Forget (3:00)
7. Duke's Advice (3:51)
8. Nothing Like You (Where I Come From) (5:10)
9. I May Be Ugly (But I Sure Know How To Cook) (3:47)
10. All Over But The Paying (3:20)
11. No Time (3:33)
12. Black Negligee (5:48)
Duke Robillard's place in blues history seems secure - the founder of Roomful of Blues, a stint in the Fabulous Thunderbirds, and a veteran of sessions with such venerable bluesmen as Snooky Pryor, Jimmy Witherspoon, John Hammond and Pinetop Perkins, R&B queen Ruth Brown, the king of Kansas City swing Jay McShann, and rock legend Bob Dylan - and in this Dangerous Place, the writer, arranger, producer, singer, guitarist and leader of the Duke Robillard Band presents a total tour de force of all the different dimensions of that deceptively simple music known as "the blues": the brass-stoked swing of "Had To Be Your Man"; the straight-from-the-gut Chicago harp-and-guitar moan of "No Time"; the heartbreak of "All Over But the Paying"; the wry joviality of "I May Be Ugly (But I Sure Know How to Cook)"; the ruminative "Can't Remember to Forget" (courtesy of the pen of former Eric Clapton and Muddy Waters harpmeister Jerry Portnoy); and the slinky and silky set-ending instrumental "Black Negligee."
The Duke's electric guitar solo in the sexy, sassy "Ain't Nothing Like You (Where I Come From)," typical of this entire album, is an absolute model of sheer style and sly wit. ~Chris Slawecki
The Duke's electric guitar solo in the sexy, sassy "Ain't Nothing Like You (Where I Come From)," typical of this entire album, is an absolute model of sheer style and sly wit. ~Chris Slawecki