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Howlin' Wolf
The Real Folk Blues/More Real Folk Blues (Remastered)
Howlin' Wolf:  The Real Folk Blues/More Real Folk Blues (Remastered)

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Album Review

Released: 2002
Label: Chess
Selection #: 142639
24 tracks from 1953-65. With Willie Dixon, Buddy Guy, Otis Spann, others. Killin' Floor, Sittin On Top Of The World, more.
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1 Killing Floor
2 Louise
3 Poor Boy
4 Sitting on Top of the World
5 Nature
6 My Country Sugar Mama
7 Tail Dragger
8 Three Hundred Pounds of Joy
9 The Natchez Burning
10 Built for Comfort
11 Ooh Baby (Hold Me)
12 Tell Me What I've Done
13 Just My Kind
14 I've Got a Woman
15 Work for Your Money
16 I'll Be Around
17 You Can't Be Beat
18 No Place to Go (You Gonna Wreck My Life)
19 I Love My Baby
20 Neighbors
21 I'm the Wolf
22 Rockin' Daddy
23 Who Will Be Next
24 I Have a Little Girl
  
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Album Review

The "Real Folk Blues" series on Chess wasn't really folk, but titled that way, perhaps to gain the attention of young white listeners who had started to get turned on to the blues during the 1960s folk revival. And the Howlin' Wolf volumes in the series were not particularly more folk-oriented than his other Chess recordings, but more or less arbitrary selections of tracks that he'd done from the mid-'50s to the mid-'60s. It's thus also arbitrary to do a two-fer reissue of his "The Real Folk Blues" and "More Real Folk Blues", combined here onto a single disc. That doesn't mean, though, that this isn't very good and sometimes great electric blues music. "The Real Folk Blues", with tracks from 1956 to 1965, is by far the more modern of the pair in arrangements, and has a good share of classics: "Killing Floor," "Sittin' On Top Of The World," "Built For Comfort," "Tail Dragger," and "Three Hundred Pounds Of Joy." There were some lesser-known cuts on that record as well, never less than good and sometimes very good, like the blues-folk staple "Louise" and the driving "Poor Boy," as well as a couple brassy 1965 recordings with both Hubert Sumlin and Buddy Guy on guitars. "More Real Folk Blues", in contrast, consists entirely of 1953-1955 recordings, which are considerably more lo-fi and not as stuffed with high-class memorable material. Yet these are fine raw 1950s electric blues, and occasionally superb, as on the well-known "No Place To Go" and the propulsive "Just My Kind." You might already have some or many of the 24 tracks if you have a bunch of other Howlin' Wolf collections. But a lot of these, particularly from "More Real Folk Blues", don't show up on the standard best-of anthologies, so more likely than not if you only have one or two Howlin' Wolf anthologies and want more, this is a pretty good one to get. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

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