Muddy Waters - The Complete Plantation Recordings (Hd Remastered) (2017) [Hi-Res]

Artist: Muddy Waters
Title: The Complete Plantation Recordings (Hd Remastered)
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Reborn Recordings
Genre: Blues, Delta Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24/48, FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:01:29
Total Size: 516 / 186 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Complete Plantation Recordings (Hd Remastered)
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Reborn Recordings
Genre: Blues, Delta Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24/48, FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:01:29
Total Size: 516 / 186 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Muddy Waters - Country Blues (3:33)
02. Muddy Waters - Interview #1 (3:52)
03. Muddy Waters - I Be's Troubled (3:05)
04. Muddy Waters - Interview #2 (1:51)
05. Muddy Waters - Burr Clover Farm Blues (2:54)
06. Muddy Waters - Interview #3 (1:14)
07. Muddy Waters - Ramblin' Kid Blues (1:10)
08. Muddy Waters - Ramblin' Kid Blues (2) (3:16)
09. Muddy Waters - Rosalie (3:03)
10. Muddy Waters - Joe Turner (2:46)
11. Muddy Waters - Pearlie May Blues (3:26)
12. Muddy Waters - Take a Walk with Me (3:05)
13. Muddy Waters - Burr Clover Blues (3:13)
14. Muddy Waters - Interview #4 (0:35)
15. Muddy Waters - I Be Bound to Write You (3:26)
16. Muddy Waters - I Be Bound to Write You (2) (2:52)
17. Muddy Waters - You're Gonna Miss Me (3:25)
18. Muddy Waters - You Got to Take Sick and Die Some of These Days (2:09)
19. Muddy Waters - Why Don't You Live so God Can Use You? (2:08)
20. Muddy Waters - Country Blues (2) (3:34)
21. Muddy Waters - You're Gonna Miss Me (2) (3:40)
22. Muddy Waters - 32-2 Blues (3:25)
At long last, Muddy's historic 1941-1942 Library of Congress field recordings are all collected in one place, with the best fidelity that's been heard thus far. Waters performs solo pieces (you can hear his slide rattling against the fretboard in spots) and band pieces with the Son Sims Four, "Rosalie" being a virtual blueprint for his later Chicago style. Of particular note are the inclusion of several interview segments with Muddy from that embryonic period and a photo of Muddy playing on the porch of his cabin, dressed up and looking sharper than any Mississippi sharecropper on Stovall's plantation you could possibly imagine. This much more than just an important historical document; this is some really fine music imbued with a sense of place, time and loads of ambience.