Thursday, November 5, 2015

Plug It In! Turn It Up! Electric Blues: Part 2, 1954-1967

AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

"The second volume of Bear Family's four-part electric blues series Plug It In! Turn It Up! features the years 1954-1967 but that's slightly misleading, as much of the latter years are bunched up on the third disc, which rounds up 29 significant instrumentals. The rest of the collection concentrates on continuing the story the first volume began, as West Coast, Delta, and Chicago blues all began to swing harder and play louder, working their way onto rock & roll jukeboxes as they did so. Some of these singles do play like rock & roll -- that's particularly true of Bo Diddley's heavy-footed rumble and Hank Ballard's easy shuffle on "Look at Little Sister" -- but this is primarily devoted to electrified blues that jolts and jumps like a bare wire. There are plenty of big names and classics here, songs that would later be standards in any number of house bands across the country: "Kansas City," "I'm Ready," "My Babe," "I'm a Man," "I Wish You Wouldn't," "I Can't Quit You Baby," "Got My Mojo Working," "I'm a King Bee," "Texas Flood," "Kansas City," "Baby What You Want Me to Do," "The Sky Is Crying," "Wham!," "Frosty." It's a crash course in history that plays like a party, even on that third disc of high-octane instrumentals."

11 comments:

KingCake said...

http://www.embedupload.com/?d=3UMWMRFIZC-Part 2- 1954-1967.rar
http://www.embedupload.com/?d=8WEHQFFPQR-Part 2- 1954-1967CD 2.rar
http://www.embedupload.com/?d=5FISAKIGEB-Part 2- 1954-1967CD 3.rar

kristophermc28 said...

Thanks again KingCake!

GuitarGus said...

Thanks KC
I've been around this music most of my life...and know most of these gems....but to get them all together like this is brilliant ! We had to search and collect many many albums to get even an inkling of this diversity of players in the good ole days....So you younger guys have it easy...and probably overdo the quantity of material available too...Great Post...Is there more...? I hope

Lil'ol'lady said...

Thank you, KingCake. I've been really looking forward to this. Part 1 was great and this is fantastic!

Anonymous said...

Great music..... Thank you...

Wayne

Anonymous said...

Thanks for this great post .I believe i have most of this , if not all , but Bear Family is doing a great job .
This is really excellent , merci !

Anonymous said...

What a rollicking set of instrumentals on D3! Great party music.
Thanks,
-peacenik

Feilimid O'Broin said...

Many, many thanks to the Bear Family for valuing and promoting so much of what is great about our music and to you, le Roi, and the other posters, who by posting such compilations, provide a great primer for those of us seeking an overview of an era and some sort of informed view or prism by which to learn about and sort out the best of the era. Also, a moment of silence for Mr. Toussaint. Undoubtedly a loss for New Orleans but to the rest of us as well. I still remember the joy of listening in college to the Pointer Sisters' wonderful version of "I Know We can Make It." The man transcended genres; Glen Campbell even popularized one of his songs. We'll not seek his like again especially in an era when the beat often supersedes the lyric and voice in popular rhythm and blues. Someday someone has to make a thorough documentary of New Orleans' importance in American and Caribbean music. It remains our only Caribbean city (I suppose one can make the case for Miami but that city strikes me as reflective of one or two Caribbean countries, Cuba and, perhaps, Haiti, rather than the entire region). That's it from the western shore; thanks for all you do, le Roi.

iggy said...

Thanks so much, KC, for the Ray C, Sehorn and this great electric guitar comp. Happy holidays to you and yours!

Iggyjingles

nikos said...

Thanks for this and the other parts of this collection. Looks excellent!

Steve Stelling said...

Looks unbelievable. Any chance of a re-up?

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