Barrelhouse Chuck - Prescription for the Blues (2002)

  • 31 Jan, 15:12
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Artist:
Title: Prescription for the Blues
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: The Sirens Records
Genre: Blues
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:44:54
Total Size: 208 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Sitting On Top of the World
02. My Own Lonesome Blues
03. Mean Mistreater Mama
04. Tin Pan Alley
05. Double D
06. Prescription for the Blues-with Erwin Helfer
07. Going Back to Memphis
08. Ain't Times Hard
09. Corrine, Corrina
10. Straight Alky Blues
11. Nutty Boogie-with Erwin Helfer
12. Johnson Machine Gun
13. Barrelhouse Woman
14. Ain't Nobody's Business-with Erwin Helfer
15. Yamato Stomp
16. Rooster's Blues


Chicago is home base for many of the top (but not necessarily well-known) piano blues (also boogie-woogie) artists in the country. The Sirens Records seems determined to document as many of them on disc as possible. This The Sirens CD features Barrelhouse Chuck (aka Chuck Goering), who gets a little help from his friend Erwin Helfer on three tracks. If any jazz style can make a piano wail and talk, it's piano blues. Listen to it talk about trials and tribulations on such cuts as "Mean Mistreater Mama" and "Tin Pan Alley." Although self-taught, Goering clearly comes under the stylistic influences of such leading practitioners of this art as Sunnyland Slim, Pinetop Perkins, Muddy Waters, and more, while his signing finds derivation in Little Brother Montgomery. Of the three tracks with Helfer, "Prescription for the Blues," where Helfer plays and Goering sings, is the "bluest" of the bunch. Modified boogie-woogie comes to the fore with "Barrelhouse Woman" when the singer, like thousands of blues singers before him, tries to set his woman straight with the same amount of success as had his predecessors. But it's great piano even if it's wishful thinking. Every jazz fan should periodically listen to this style to get a feel for the pathos and emotion that jazz can generate, as well as to revel in the amazing talent these players pack. They can shift between the up-tempo, such as "Nutty Boogie," and the slow drag, both pianistically and vocally, as if there is nothing to it. These artists offer a perspective on jazz that gets too little recognition in these days of high-tech, "let's merge jazz, rock, and adult contemporary" gimmickry too often foisted on the public by the record companies. Keep 'em coming, The Sirens!

  • whiskers
  •  18:15
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Many thanks
  • Rabisox
  •  17:54
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Many thanks for .FLAC!