Browse Music
Rock & Pop
R&B & Hip-Hop
Country
Blues
Jazz
Classical
Latin
Christian
Soundtracks
Collections
Elmore James
Blues Kingpins
Elmore James:  Blues Kingpins

$6.99
Listen

Album Review

Released: 2003
Label: Virgin
Selection #: 150737
Essentials! I Believe, Lost Woman Blues (Please Find My Baby), Blues Before Sunrise, Rock My Baby Right, Standing At The Crossroads, Sinful Woman, 12 more.
Listen RM WM
1 Lost Woman Blues (Please Find My Baby)
2 Rock My Baby Right
3 I Believe
4 Baby What's Wrong
5 Sinful Woman
6 Hawaiian Boogie
7 Can't Stop Lovin' My Baby
8 Make My Dreams Come True
9 Dark and Dreary
10 Standing at the Crossroads
11 Sunnyland
12 The Way You Treat Me (Mean and Evil)
13 Happy Home
14 No Love in My Heart
15 I Was a Fool
16 Dust My Blues
17 Blues Before Sunrise
18 Goodbye Baby
  
Download Player:    Real Media Real Media    Windows Media Windows Media
Album Review

The CDs in The Right Stuff's "Blues Kingpins" series collections are, for the price, simply the finest money can buy in that they include tracks that may have been overlooked but are at least as necessary to an artist's oeuvre as her or his hits. In other words, the "Blues Kingpins" series is for connoisseurs of excellent performances and discriminating material. In addition, fine mastering, aesthetically pleasing packaging, an excellent track selection, and a wonderful set of biographical and critical liner notes accompany each volume. The Elmore James volume is a case in point. While it's true that James' biggest hit, his version of "Dust My Broom," the anthemic slide blues tune (which is not included, although his 1956 remake, "Dust My Blues," is) was issued in 1949, the sides documented on this CD were recorded for the Bihari Brothers' Flair label beginning in 1952. "Lost Woman Blues" and "Rock My Baby Right," while recorded in that year, were not issued until 1954, but his subsequent session recorded in Chicago and issued in 1953, including the hit "I Believe" (which went to number nine on the R&B chart), was issued on another Bihari imprint, Meteor. These 1953 sessions also yielded James' interpretations of "Crossroads" and "Make My Dream Come True." There are 18 cuts in all here, covering not only the aforementioned labels but also Modern, Chief, and Vee-Jay, ending with "Goodbye Baby" in 1959. What is heard here is the development in James' trademark style and how the recording studio could affect the inspiration in his performances. There are no ramshackle recordings here, nothing but inspired, slamming rough and tumble blues and R&B shouters that rock harder than almost anything coming from the rock & roll side of the fence -- Chuck Berry, Johnny Burnette, Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard, and Conway Twitty excepted. This is a solid hour of burning meltdown blues in the grand pre-rock tradition. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Back To Top
About This Artist
Biography

Related Artists
Chuck Berry
Roy Buchanan
Canned Heat
Eric Clapton
The Fabulous Thunderbirds
Eric Johnson
Ten Years After
George Thorogood & The Destroyers
Johnny Winter
more

Any reproduction, publication, further distribution, or public exhibition of materials provided at this site, in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited.
©2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Portions of content provided by All Music Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC