Thursday, April 11, 2013

Big Mama Thornton - Jail

It's ironic that blues great Big Mama Thornton is most famous for originating songs that later became associated with other singers. Her sole R&B hit, which never made the pop charts, became Elvis Presley's "Hound Dog" in most listeners' minds, just as surely as Otis Redding's "Respect" was universally credited to Aretha Franklin. It must have seemed like déjà vu when Thornton's "Ball and Chain" became known to most music lovers via Janis Joplin's version with Big Brother & the Holding Company. Nevertheless, Thornton has rarely had trouble reclaiming these and other compositions once onstage, and Jail vividly captures her gruff charm during a couple of mid-'70s gigs at two northwestern prisons. As a live album, Jail works largely because Thornton gives her musicians plenty of room to improvise, especially on six-minute versions of "Little Red Rooster" and "Ball and Chain." In her spoken introduction to "Ball and Chain," Thornton initially gives props to Janis Joplin, then reminds the audience, "I wrote this song." Having lost little of her commanding, masculine voice, Thornton becomes the talented leader of a gritty blues ensemble that features sustained jams from George "Harmonica" Smith and guitarists B. Huston and Steve Wachsman. Despite several lengthy numbers, the running time is less than 40 minutes, and there's not much between-song banter à la Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison. Listeners who are left wanting more Big Mama Thornton can invest in The Complete Vanguard Recordings, a triple-CD set that includes all of Jail and two albums from the same era: Sassy Mama and the previously unreleased Big Mama Swings. - Vince Ripol/AMG
Vanguard ‎– VSD 79351
1975
Recorded live at Monroe State Prison, Monroe, Washington and Oregon State Reformatory, Eugene, Oregon

A1   Little Red Rooster   6:01
A2   Ball 'N' Chain   6:40
A3   Jail   5:50
B1   Hound Dog   2:45
B2   Rock Me Baby   6:41
B3   Sheriff O.E. & Me   3:20
B4   Oh Happy Day   3:52

Vocals, Harp - Big Mama Thornton;  Bass – Bruce Sieverson;  Drums – Todd Nelson
Guitar – B. Huston, Steve Wachsman;  Harmonica – George "Harmonica" Smith
Piano – J.D. Nichols;  Tenor Saxophone – Bill Potter

Vinyl ripped at 24/44.1 wav and dithered to 16/44.1 FLAC... enjoy!!!

5 comments:

poppachubby said...

http://www67.zippyshare.com/v/4278680/file.html

KingCake said...

Ahhh...Very nice Poppa - Here Come The Girls!

beetee said...

thanks for the good stuff Poppa

Anonymous said...

This is one of my fave live albums so far --- a must from Big Mama! All songs are classics, true to form! Even if Janis surpassed her with "Ball & Chain" and Elvis... he recorded a good cover of "Hound Dog"!
It reminds me of my late father: He was a huge fan of Theodore Roosevelt Taylor --- aka. Hound Dog Taylor. "Fais gaffe au clébard!" he often said.
Now, Dad is gone and he even left before discovering Jonathan Boulet!
What a shame.
Serge

Brush&Stick said...

Big thanks for Big Mama!

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