Product Details
John Lee Hooker

John Lee Hooker
John Lee Hooker

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. House Rent Boogie
  2. Wandering Blues
  3. Low Down-Midnite Boogie
  4. Goin' Mad Blues
  5. Miss Lorraine
  6. Morning Blues
  7. Talkin' Boogie
  8. Graveyard Blues
  9. I Love to Boogie
  10. Do the Boogie
  11. Prison Bound
  12. Bumble Bee Blues
  13. I'm So Worried Baby
  14. I See You When You're Weak
  15. Mama, You Got a Daughter
  16. Crazy About That Walk
  17. We're All God's Chillun
  18. My Own Fault
  19. Maudie
  20. Tupelo
  21. I Wanna Walk
  22. I Wish You Were Here

Disc 2:

  1. Mambo Chillun
  2. Time Is Marching
  3. Unfriendly Woman
  4. I'm So Worried Baby
  5. Baby Lee
  6. Road Is So Rough
  7. Trouble Blues
  8. Everybody Rockin'
  9. I'm So Excited
  10. Crawlin' Black Spider
  11. Little Fine Woman
  12. Rosie Mae
  13. You've Taken My Woman
  14. Mama, You Got a Daughter
  15. House Rent Boogie
  16. I'm a Stranger
  17. I'm Mad Again
  18. Hard Hearted Woman
  19. I Wanna Walk
  20. Run On
  21. Blues Before Sunrise
  22. Onions

Disc 3:

  1. Dimples
  2. Boom Boom
  3. This Is Hip
  4. I'm in the Mood
  5. I Love You Honey
  6. Crawlin' King Snake
  7. Boogie Chillen'
  8. I'm Mad Again
  9. Big Legs, Tight Skirt
  10. I'm Going Upstairs
  11. Onions
  12. It Serves Me Right to Suffer
  13. Send Me Your Pillow
  14. No Shoes
  15. I'm So Excited
  16. Hobo Blues
  17. Maudie
  18. What Do You Say
  19. She's Mine (Keep Your Hands to Yourself)
  20. Don't Look Back

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #458393 in Music
  • Released on: 1999-05-11
  • Number of discs: 3
  • Formats: Box set, Import

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
Dressed To Kill release featuring the best by the King of Mississippi Delta Blues, including 'Boom Boom', 'Dimples' & 'Crawlin' King Snake'. 64 tracks.


Customer Reviews

Rambling unfocused selection, but good stuff at a good price3
Basically this is a lot of stuff tossed into one big pot and stewed together. There's no apparent logic to the selection, and some of the sources are a bit dubious; on the first CD in particular I hear vinyl noise, and the recording quality varies, sometimes from song to song.

BUT...there is some awful good stuff on here, and at a very hard-to-beat price for three CD's that are around an hour each. There's no way to tell when this stuff was recorded; I suspect it was from the 50's and 60s, when John Lee would basically record for anybody who fronted him some cash. As a result some of these recordings have a real guerilla blues, down-home sound.

The first CD mostly consists of John Lee by himself, his big ole foot slamming into the floor, his distorted, honking, blaring guitar, and him growling, singing, mumbling and sometimes shouting over the ensuing racket. This is John Lee at his most primitive. The sound is raw, but if you aren't used to raw-sounding blues recordings by now you shouldn't even be listening to the blues. The recordings are generally clear; it just sounds rude, crude, and vicious. About 3/4 of the way through the first disc a band consisting of snare drum, bass and piano begins to accompany him. Some of these recordings are pretty trashy, but for the most part they work.

The second disc is John Lee with a band. John Lee is not easy to play music with because he tends to turn a 12-bar blues into a 13, 16, or 9-bar blues at will. The unnamed band accompanying him doesn't sound bad at all, but occasionally they have to scramble to keep up with John. Still, they connect with John more often than not and rock out. There are some strong songs and performances on this disc, and some lesser-known songs that will be interesting to blues scholars.

The third disc is definitely from the early 60s and features John Lee with a band again. It seems like the band is a little bit better connected with him than on the 2nd disc. It almost sounds like most of the material is from the same session as the second disc. No way to tell, because there are no liner notes. On the inside of the box is a small 2-page insert which basically gives you the names of the songs on each disc and a couple of pictures of John Lee from the late 50s or early 60s wielding an Epiphone electric.

Overall I would say this CD is worth having. It's not expensive and there's a ton of material on here, and most of it is of good quality. More importantly, the performances from John are strong throughout.

Fans of cleaned-up, sanitized, digitized blues will not be happy with this, but for people who regularly listen to imitators like Jon Spencer, here is the real, rough, crude, barfightin', low down dirty article. The two missing stars are for the absolute lack of sequencing and the total absence of liner notes/musician credits. The three stars are for the fact that it's a big fat hunk of John Lee Hooker's music at a dirt cheap price, and the performances are definitely worth buying this for.

Awesome rare Hooker at a bargain price.5
This is a great CD. The first CD alone is worth the purchase price. It consists of rare sides transcribed from old 78's from obscure labels like Chance, Staff, Acorn, Regent and others (1948-1950). Plus 5 live tracks w/backing by Muddy's band circa 1960. The sound quality is reasonable considering the source but some of the performances are blood curdlingly awesome. If you don't have any Hooker the other CD's have a lot of his best Vee-Jay sides. There is absolutely no documentation with the CD's except for a track list but it's all killer stuff.