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Mississippi Fred McDowell
I Do Not Play Rock 'N' Roll
Mississippi Fred McDowell:  I Do Not Play Rock 'N' Roll

$13.98 2-CD Set
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Album Review

Released: 1969
Label: Capitol
Selection #: 215184
Bottleneck guitarist/vocalist plays the blues, pure and simple, albeit electrified. 61 Highway, Red Cross Store, etc.
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1 Baby Please Don't Go
2 Good Morning Little School Girl
3 Kokomo Me Baby
4 That's All Right Baby
5 Red Cross Store
6 Everybody's Down on Me
7 61 Highway
8 Glory Hallelujah
9 Jesus Is on the Mainline
10 Someday
11 Write Me a Few of Your Lines
12 Mortgage on My Soul
13 Baby Let Me Lay Down (In Your Cool Iron Bed)
14 Drop Down Mama
15 A.) Rap / B.) Louise
16 Somebody Keeps Callin' Me
17 Eyes Like an Eagle
18 My Baby She Gonna Jump and Shout [#]
19 Long Line Skinner [Previously Unreleased]
20 Baby Please Don't Go [Alternate Take][#]
  
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Album Review

This reissue of the original Capitol landmark from 1969 adds ten tunes. The performance is classic and retains all of its spiky edginess. Even though blues purists griped because it was the first recording where the previously acoustic McDowell played electric guitar, his lines are so stark, spare, and jagged that the fullness and volume the instrument provides works perfectly with his hardcore Delta approach. McDowell is in wonderful voice and exuberant spirits throughout, spinning lively stories on the nine-minute "Everybody'S Down On Me," where he doesn't start playing guitar or singing until four minutes into the track. The raconteur expresses, as well as explains, the album's title on the opening version of Big Joe Williams' "Baby Please Don'T Go," the session's only cover. The rhythm section that caused such commotion on the album's initial release remains ensconced in the background, and the drummer's contributions are so subtle as to be almost inaudible. This keeps the focus on McDowell, whose guitar work is stunning, complex, and emotionally moving. He spins quicksilver slide runs that echo and answer his sung lines like he's been plugged in all his life. Smoother and less abrasive than some of the Fat Possum artists that first appeared in the '90s, McDowell nonetheless exudes frightening power when he hits his stride on the jagged "61 Highway" and his version of "The Train I Ride," complete with chugging chords and "Mystery Train" verses. A perfect place to learn about Mississippi Fred McDowell since it includes both "Kokomo Me Baby" and "You Got To Move," two of his most popular tracks. "I Do Not Play No Rock 'n' Roll" is an essential part of any Delta blues lover's collection. ~ Hal Horowitz, All Music Guide

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