Product Details
Atlantic Blues: Piano

Atlantic Blues: Piano
Various Artists

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


17 new or used available from $2.78

Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. Yancey Special - Jimmy Yancey
  2. Talkin' Boogie - Little Brother Montgomery
  3. Mournful Blues - Jimmy Yancey
  4. Salute to Pinetop - Jimmy Yancey
  5. Shave 'Em Dry - Jimmy Yancey
  6. Frankie and Johnny - Champion Jack Dupree
  7. T.B. Blues - Champion Jack Dupree
  8. Strollin' - Champion Jack Dupree
  9. Tipitina - Professor Longhair
  10. Blue Sender - Harry Van Walls
  11. After Midnight - Harry Van Walls
  12. Roll 'Em Pete - Joe Turner
  13. 'Fore Day Rider - Jay McShann
  14. My Chile - Jay McShann
  15. Cow Cow Blues - Meade "Lux" Lewis
  16. Albert's Blues - Meade "Lux" Lewis
  17. Honky Tonk Train Blues - Meade "Lux" Lewis
  18. Low Society - Ray Charles
  19. Hey Bartender - Floyd Dixon
  20. Floyd's Blues - Floyd Dixon
  21. After Hours Blues - Texas Johnny Brown
  22. Junco Partner - Dr. John
  23. I Don't Know - Willie Mabon

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #91153 in Music
  • Released on: 1990-03-12
  • Number of discs: 1

Customer Reviews

Atlantic Piano Blues Collection Has Its Highlights, But....3
In his liner notes to this Atlantic Records piano blues anthology, "Living Blues" magazine editor Jim O'Neal writes that "The Atlantic team knew what they liked; they also knew what sold." It's instructive, then, that six songs from the original vinyl release -- two each by Little Brother Montgomery and Ray Charles, one each by Professor Longhair and Joe Turner -- remain off the CD reissue 11 years later. Musical archeology only sells so far.

This carelessness of sequencing (two songs each from Jimmy Yancey and Meade Lux Lewis would have made their cases) is part of why "Atlantic Blues Piano" is weakest among the label's four volume blues series despite some exceptional performances. You get some of blues' finest pianists and samples of native city styles (Chicago, Kansas City, New Orleans. But the artists are caught either pre-ascension (Charles on a 1953 audition tape of Lowell Fulsom's "Low Society," Amos Milburn quarterbacking Texas Johnny Brown's jumpin' "After Hours Blues" with a superb intro) or post-peak (Yancey, heard without "Mama," heard here two months before his death with a somber "Mournful Blues" and salute to fellow piano great Pinetop Perkins).

O'Neil acknowledges this in his liner notes. "Most of the pianists represented on this volume were already well-established recording artists by the time they went into the studio for Atlantic," he wrote."...their Atlantic sessions were in one way or another intended to recapture or restore past glory."

That said, enough excellent music remains on this collection to earn partial recommendation. The New Orleans piano style is well-represented by Longhair's signature song "Tiptina," while Longhair disciple Dr. John rocks on a too-funky "Junco Partner" from 1971's "Gumbo." Turner (with ace Kansas City pianist Pete Johnson) provides some classic early R&B with 1956's "Roll 'Em Pete" while Lewis (helped by a young John Scofield on guitar) gallops through "Fore Day Rider" and the ballad "My Chile."

"Atlantic Blues: Piano" is worthwhile for completists, but unfulfilling for casual listeners. Blues or R&B piano fans would do better reading the artist lineup, then finding a full album from that performer.

Very good4
Not a bad song on it, and unusual for a complilation it flows from one song into the next quite well.