Product Details
Risque Rhythm: Nasty 50s R&B

Risque Rhythm: Nasty 50s R&B
Various Artists

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Track Listing

  1. Big Ten Inch Record - Tiny Bradshaw, Moose Jackson
  2. Big Long Slidin' Thing - Dinah Washington
  3. Laundromat Blues - The "5" Royales, Charles Ferguson
  4. Walkin' Blues (Walk Right in, Walk Right Out) - Fluffy Hunter, Jesse Powell Orchestra
  5. Wasn't That Good [*] - Wynonie Harris
  6. Butcher Pete, Pt. 1 - Roy Brown, Roy Brown & His Might-Mighty Men
  7. It Ain't the Meat - The Swallows
  8. Sixty Minute Man - The Dominoes
  9. Lemon Sqeezing Daddy - The Sultans
  10. Work With Me Annie - Royals, The Royals
  11. Keep on Churnin' (Till the Butter Comes) - Wynonie Harris, Todd Rhodes
  12. Silent George - Myra Johnson, Lucky Millinder
  13. Long John Blues [*] - Dinah Washington, Cootie Williams
  14. Mountain Oysters [*] - Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Bill Doggett
  15. My Man Stands Out - Julia Lee & Her Boy Friends, Julia Lee & Her Boy Friends
  16. Toy Bell [*] - The Bees
  17. Rocket 69 - Connie Allen, Todd Rhodes & His Orchestra
  18. (I Love to Play Your Piano) Let Me Bang Your Box - The Toppers

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #168988 in Music
  • Released on: 1991-10-15
  • Number of discs: 1

Customer Reviews

Some of the best off the wall R&B5
This collection goes into the sleezier side of R&B. "Sixty Minute Man" is true bravado. " "Big Long Slidin Thing" has the same effect as "Baby Let Me Bang Your Box." Add "Big Ten Inch Record" and 14 others and you have one truely great set. Rhino, of course, does a good job of transferring these songs to a digital format. A good bang for your bucks.

R&B That makes you laugh as well as dance5
This is some knee-slappin', gut-bustin', hee-haw, fall-down-on-the floor funny stuff that has a beat that you can dance to. If you're over 18 and hip to double-entendre and euphemisms, you'll roll with laughter and joy at songs like "Walkin' Blues," "Butcher Pete," "10 Inch Record," "Keep On Churnin," "I Love To Play Your Piano," etc. Modern rappers should listen to this to see that you don't have to blatantly curse to be funny. These songs are hilarious in what they leave to the imagination.

Dirty Ditties5
Rhino Records does it again with this compilation CD of early rock & roll and blues artists. It's a shame that most of these artists died without receiving the recognition they deserve.

From "Big Ten-Inch Record" by Moose Jackson, the tune that sets the tone for the rest of the collection, to "(I Love To Play Your Piano) Let Me Bang Your Box" by The Toppers, you can't help but get the urge to merge.

"The Walkin' Blues (Walk Right In, Walk Right Out)" by The Jesse Powell Orchestra with Fluffy Hunter is a clever toe-tapping ditty and anyone who has heard any version of Dr. Demento's "Shaving Cream" can appreciate the tongue-in-cheek humor.

Allusions to homoeroticism are included with "Butcher Pete-Pt.1" by Roy Brown & His Mighty-Mighty Men (unfortunately, Part 2 isn't included on the disc) and "Mountain Oysters" by Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis with The Bill Doggett Trio. These references to homosexuality are more subtle than "Sissy Man Blues" on another compilation available here.

All the songs are ... suggestive but "Work With Me Annie" by The Royals wins the award for the one tune that puts you into the ... act itself. Listen to the rocking beat, especially the refrain, and tell me you don't believe yourself to be flowin' with the motion and movin' with the groovin.' The beat feels "so good, so good, so good, so good, so good" you know that song is directly responsible for making some babies.

Perhaps the most surprising to me was THE Dinah Washington crooning two sophisticated melodies, "Big, Long Slidin' Thing" and then she expresses her oral tendencies with "Long John Blues." And although I have heard of the name Wynonie Harris, I've never been exposed to his songs until listening to this CD and his two tracks, "Wasn't That Good" and "Keep On Churnin'" are songs to get you out of your clothes.

I don't claim to be a music scholar, so I won't go into a long dissertation about music structure or rhyme meter, but I think I can articulate my opinions well enough for people to decide. Sometimes, you need Nine Inch Nail's grinding "Closer", and then sometimes, less is more. In any case, "Risqué Rhythm: Nasty 50s R & B" delivers the goods from the music to the liner notes.