Showing posts with label Jimmy Rogers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jimmy Rogers. Show all posts

Friday, May 18, 2018

Jimmy Rogers - The Complete Chess Recordings

Computer issues have made new posts impossible the last couple of weeks, but that is handled and here ya go....


https://www57.zippyshare.com/v/5eFOzTIo/file.html
https://www57.zippyshare.com/v/v0ejwe9B/file.html

Saturday, July 14, 2012

The Best Of Little Walter

This is a blues classic by one of the most legendary harp players, Little Walter.  Unlike the suggestion that the title makes, this was his first album.

Generally when we see "Best Of", we are led to think that a few albums have come before.  In this case, the Checker label had signed him and decided to go with the title.  The album was infact a compilation of songs which Walter had recorded as singles.  Shortly after the album's release, Chess bought the contract and decided to keep the album intact, even using the same call number in their catalogue.

Walter has an extremely soulful style and is technically proficient to boot.  My favorite tracks are Juke and Mean Old World  There's no doubt that this is one of the greatest harmonica albums ever put on wax, if not one of the greatest blues/r&b sides.  If you haven't heard this, you better skip to it and thank poppachubby later!!  A stone cold classic... enjoy!!

Chess Masters CH-9192
1986

Originally released on Checker LP-1428, 1958
Re-issued on Chess LP-1428 1958

A
1. "My Babe" (Willie Dixon) 2:44
2. "Sad Hours"   3:15
3. "You're So Fine"   3:07
4. "Last Night"   2:46
5. "Blues with a Feeling"   3:10
6. "Can't Hold Out Much Longer"   3:03

B
1. "Juke"   2:47
2. "Mean Old World"   2:57
3. "Off the Wall"   2:52
4. "You Better Watch Yourself"   3:04
5. "Blue Lights"   3:14
6. "Tell Me Mamma"   2:47

Little Walter – lead vocals, harmonica
Muddy Waters – guitar on "Juke" and "Can't Hold Out Much Longer"
Jimmy Rogers – guitar on "Juke" and "Can't Hold Out Much Longer"
David Myers – guitar
Louis Myers – guitar
Leonard Caston – guitar on "My Babe"
Robert Lockwood, Jr. – guitar on "My Babe"
Willie Dixon – bass, producer
Elgin Evans – drums on "Juke" and "Can't Hold Out Much Longer"
Fred Below – drums

Recorded in Chicago

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Jimmy Rogers - Chicago Bound


Before I leave this particular visit to the Blues side of things I need to offer one more special guy and say that this one is for my friend Clifford who is a huge fan of Jimmy and Otis in particular although he loves all this stuff. Cliff is in large part responsible for the inspiration and information that have made this project possible and he has been and will continue to be a major source of recordings that appear here. (I have a few of my own too, mind you) Perhaps at some point where I've managed to impress or at least intrigue him I'll get him to do some authoring himself.

Unky Cliff is a life-long Musicologist (a term I apply to myself in a far more casual mode) with a breadth and depth of knowledge that has become my morning learning session over coffee. I have also been intrusted with digitizing that portion of his mind boggling collection that hasn't been re-issued on cd. If you look at the door that bears his name you will see that this is not always an easy task but over time you come to see that ALL music is connected on some level and when you understand the roots of Western music, the same music patterns and song themes are repeated again and again in every supposed Genre. What becomes clear over time is that the major differences are driven by the culture in which the music is played (kind of like religion). The musicians themselves certainly didn't seem to care much about what anyone called what they were playing.

On to business: Jimmy Rogers was born James A. Lane in Ruleville, Mississippi on June 3, 1924 and was raised in Atlanta and Memphis. He adapted the professional surname 'Rogers' from his stepfather's last name. Rogers learned the harmonica alongside his childhood friend Snooky Pryor, and as a teenager took up the guitar and played professionally in East St. Louis, Illinois, where he played with Robert Lockwood, Jr. among others, before moving to Chicago in the mid 1940s. By 1946 he had recorded as a harmonica player and singer for the Harlem record label run by J. Mayo Williams. Rogers' name did not appear on the record, which was mislabeled as the work of "Memphis Slim and his Houserockers."

In 1947, Rogers, Muddy Waters and Little Walter began playing together as Muddy Waters' first band in Chicago (sometimes referred to as "The Headcutters" or "The Headhunters" due to their practice of stealing jobs from other local bands), while the band members each recorded and released music credited to each of them as solo artists. The first Muddy Waters band defined the sound of the nascent "Chicago Blues" style (more specifically "South Side" Chicago Blues). Rogers made several more sides of his own with small labels in Chicago, but none were released at the time. He began to enjoy success as a solo artist with Chess Records in 1950, scoring a hit with "That's All Right", but he stayed with Muddy Waters until 1954. In the mid 1950s he had several successful releases on the Chess label, most featuring either Little Walter Jacobs or Big Walter Horton on harmonica, most notably "Walking By Myself", but as the 1950s drew to a close and interest in the blues waned, he gradually withdrew from the music industry.

In the early 1960s Rogers briefly worked as a member of Howling Wolf's band, before quitting the music business altogether for almost a decade. He worked as a taxicab driver and owned a clothing store that burned down in the Chicago riots that followed the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1968. He gradually began performing in public again, and in 1971 when fashions made him a reasonable draw in Europe, Rogers began occasionally touring and recording, including a 1977 reunion session with his old bandleader Muddy Waters. By 1982, Rogers was again a full-time solo artist.

In 1995 Rogers was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame.
He continued touring and recording albums until his death from colon cancer in Chicago in 1997. He was survived by his son, Jimmy D. Lane, who is also a guitarist and a record producer and recording engineer for Blue Heaven Studios and APO Records.

***NEW LINK - I'VE ADDED 11 MORE TRACKS***