Product Details
New Orleans Piano Wizard: Live!

New Orleans Piano Wizard: Live!
James Booker

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. On the Sunny Side of the Street
  2. Black Night
  3. Keep on Gwine
  4. Come Rain or Come Shine
  5. Something Stupid
  6. Please Send Me Someone to Love
  7. Tell Me How Do You Feel
  8. Let Them Talk
  9. Come in My House

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #32168 in Music
  • Released on: 1992-02-14
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Live

Customer Reviews

Hear it again (exponentially) and feel good5
If you love New Orleans jazz, esp. piano songs, you'll love this album. I end up listening to this album almost every day at work -- it's inspirational in the best sense of the word. I bought this CD because I love Prof. Longhair and Dr. John and was looking for new influences; read the above amazon reviews and decided to give it a shot. You should too. James Booker's voice and piano will shake your soul and make you love humanity. It's a feel-good CD, a really-feel-good CD.

A Wonderful Gem5
One of my favorite recordings. Booker is an outstanding pianist and his singing is both touching and powerful. He thrilled me as he obviously also did the audience present during the recording of this album. I have probably listened more often to this album, than any other in my collection.

James Booker's best5
This album was recorded at something called the "Boogie Woogie and Ragtime Piano Contest" in Zuerich, Switzerland. What I want to know is, who were the other contestants? James Booker's best album, and probably one of the most soulful and rhythmically exciting albums ever recorded in this genre. Booker was a musical originator, but also famous for his ability to impersonate a wide variety of players. He seems to borrow heavily from Ray Charles at points on this album, but in my opinion he actually surpasses Charles in certain respects. His singing on this album is both bizarre and tortured and soulful, he has a nasal style here that was de rigeur for funk groups such as The Commodores and Cameo. You know what I'm talking about. The whole album is just Booker and his pyrotechnical piano (check out the amazing crescendo on the last track,) and should serve as a reminder that you don't need a big band or fancy production to be funkier than the rest.