B.B. King - The Great B.B. King (1991)

  • 11 Jan, 19:10
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: The Great B.B. King
Year Of Release: 1991
Label: Ace Records
Genre: Ace Records
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:54:05
Total Size: 234 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Sweet Sixteen (Pts. 1 & 2)
02. (I'm Gonna) Quit My Baby
03. I Was Blind
04. What Can I Do
05. Some Day Somewhere AKA Someday Baby
06. Sneakin' Around
07. Ten Long Years
08. Be Careful with a Fool
09. Whole Lotta' Love
10. Days of Old
11. Young Dreamers
12. Bim Bam
13. Trouble in Mind
14. Down Now
15. Broke and Hungry
16. Shotgun Blues
17. What a Way to Spend the Night
18. A Woman Don't Care

Released in early 1960, the LP The Great B.B. King was actually a budget-priced compilation of songs he'd recorded for the Modern label over the past five or so years. This CD reissue nearly doubles the length of the original album with eight mostly previously unreleased bonus cuts, as well as adding historical liner notes. Of the ten songs found on the original The Great B.B. King, four ("Sweet Sixteen," "Ten Long Years," "Sneakin' Around," and "Whole Lotta' Love") had been big R&B hits, with "Sweet Sixteen" getting all the way up to number two; a fifth track, "Be Careful with a Fool," had made the bottom of the pop listings without showing up on the R&B charts at all. The emotional ballad "Sweet Sixteen" (actually a cover of a Big Joe Turner song) is presented here in all its six-minute, two-part glory. While the most of the rest of the LP doesn't scale the same heights, it's a respectable mix of brassy shuffles and slow tunes with more than a tinge of doo wop, King's guitar work on "Whole Lotta' Love" ranking among his most stinging. Of the eight bonus tracks, only "Bim Bam" (an anomalous 1956 rock & roll novelty single) and the Lightnin' Hopkins number "Shotgun Blues" (which showed up on a 1969 compilation LP) were previously released. The other six tracks are also not always typical of King's most celebrated style, including as they do the violin-drenched "Young Dreamers" and the much-covered ballad "Trouble in Mind," though the rest are in his more standard electric blues approach.