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Forums > Blues > Junior Wells - "Come On In This House", Ëó÷øèå áëþçìýíû


Posted by: dibbler on 05-12-2003, 15:52
Àðòèñò:Junior Wells (http://www.telarc.com//biography/bios.asp?aid=113&mscssid=9B0PMDENJJRL8P84GNGQ91KH6917C2B0
Àëüáîì:Come On In This House, 1996
Æàíð:Chicago Blues
Ôîðìàò ôàéëà:EAC/APE
Ññûëêà:CD (ed2k://|file|JWs-Domoy.rar|381493349|E2033C53F77BFF6C1A9B1A94962082EC|/
Íàõîæäåíèå:eDonkey
Ïðèìå÷àíèå:Îäèí èç ëó÷øèõ áëþçìåíîâ, âîêàëèñò, ìàñòåð èãðû íà áëþçîâîé ãàðìîíèêå.

Èíôîðìàöèÿ ñ ñàéòà www.telarc.com:

For his third Telarc Blues outing, bluesman Junior Wells lays out the welcome mat with an acoustic session of fourteen favorites. He sings, plays harmonica, and inspires the best from an array of guest guitar soloists—Tab Benoit, Corey Harris, Alvin “Youngblood” Hart, Sonny Landreth, Bob Margolin, John Mooney, Derek Trucks—with a rhythm section comprising of drummer Herman Ernest III, pianist Jon Cleary and bassist Bob Sunda.

In Wells’ gritty vocals, his expert phrasing, and his harp-blowing performances, you can hear his dues-paying, blues entitlements. Born as Amos Blakemore in Memphis in 1934, Wells first learned the rudiments of blues harp form Junior Parker. Wells moved to Chicago on 1946 where he joined Louis and David Myers to form the Three Deuces (later changed the Three Aces, then just Aces when drummer Fred Below joined them in 1950). In 1952, Wells joined the Muddy Waters band and there gained wider notice. He began a long-time association with Buddy Guy in 1958. Together, they made the classic recording, Hoodoo Man Blues (Delmark, 1965) which gave Wells recognition outside of Chicago. Wells has continued to tour, record and perform from the 1970s to present.

Titling his new album, Come On In This House, recalls a tune Wells recorded for the Chief label many years ago and hints at the nature of the album's historic selections. Wells selected classic blues tunes by some of the best blues generators—Robert Nighthawk’s “I’m Gonna Move to Kansas City,” Tampa Red’s “King Fish Blues,” Bobby Charles’ “Why Are People Like That,” Junior Parker’s “Mystery Train” and more.

This new, mostly acoustic endeavor augmented with stunning performances from his illustrious guitar friends can be claimed among his best work. Come On In This House is an exhilarating and fresh studio session that fuses the Delta sound with modern blues.

Junior Wells - vocals, harmonica
Herman Ernest III -- drums
Bob Sunda -- acoustic bass & 6-string electric bass
Jon Cleary -- acoustic piano
Tab Benoit -- acoustic guitar
Corey Harris -- slide guitar
Alvin "Youngblood" Hart -- slide guitar
Sonny Landreth -- guitar
Bob Margolin -- guitar
John Mooney -- guitar
Derek Trucks -- guitar

Tracks:
1.What My Momma Told Me/That's All Right (Crudup/Wells) - 4:34
2.Why Are People Like That? (Charles) - 3:55
3.Trust My Baby (Williamson) - 5:02
4.Millions Years Blues (Williamson) - 5:12
5.Give Me One Reason (Chapman) - 5:03
6.Ships on the Ocean (Wells) - 5:30
7.She Wants to Sell My Monkey (Whittaker) - 4:34
8.So Glad You're Mine (Crudup) - 5:51
9.Mystery Train (Parker/Phillips) - 7:02
10.I'm Gonna Move to Kansas City (McCollum/Nighthawk) - 3:42
11.King Fish Blues (Whittaker) - 5:18
12.You Better Watch Yourself (Little Walter) - 3:47
13.Come on in This House (Wells) - 5:57
14.The Goat (Williamson) - 3:46



Posted by: flogger77 on 05-12-2003, 19:30
Ïðàâèëüíûé, ÈÌÕÎ, ìóçûêàíò! Ñïàñèáî! newest/thumbsup.gif

Posted by: veneamin on 05-12-2003, 21:47
Ïàñèáà!

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