Classic Sides
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Average customer review:Track Listing
Disc 1:
- I Want to Be Like Jesus in My Heart
- All I Want Is That Pure Religion
- Got the Blues
- Long Lonesome Blues
- Booster Blues
- Dry Southern Blues
- Black Horse Blues
- Corinna Blues
- Got the Blues
- Long Lonesome Blues
- Jack O' Diamond Blues
- Jack O' Diamond Blues
- Chock House Blues
- Beggin Back
- Old Rounder's Blues
- Stocking Feet Blues
- That Black Snake Moan
- Wartime Blues
- Broke and Hungry
- Shuckin' Sugar Blues
- Booger Rooger Blues
- Rabbit Foot Blues
- Bad Luck Blues
Disc 2:
- Black Snake Moan
- Match Box Blues
- Easy Rider Blues
- Match Box Blues
- Match Box Blues
- Rising Hig Water Blues
- Weary Dogs Blues
- Right of Way Blues
- Teddy Bear Blues
- Teddy Bear Blues
- Black Snake Dream Blues
- Hot Dogs
- He Arose from the Dead
- Struck Sorrow Blues
- Rambler Blues
- Chinch Bug Blues
- Deceitful Brownskin Blues
- Sunshine Special
- Gone Dead on You Blues
- Where Shall I Be?
- See That Grave's Kept Clean
- One Dime Blues
- Lonesome House Blues
Disc 3:
- Blind Lemon's Penitentiary Blues
- 'Lectric Chair Blues
- See That My Grave Is Kept Clean
- Lemon's Worried Blues
- Mean Jumper Blues
- Balky Mule Blues
- Change My Luck Blues
- Prison Cell Blues
- Lemon's Cannon Ball Moan
- Long Lastin' Lovin'
- Piney Wood's Money Mama
- Low Down Mojo Blues
- Competition Bed Blues
- Lock Step Blues
- Hangman's Blues
- Sad News Blues
- How Long How Long
- Lock Step Blues
- Hangman's Blues
- Christmas Eve Blues
- Happy New Year Blues
- Maltese Cat Blues
- D.B. Blues
Disc 4:
- Eagle Eyed Mama
- Dynamite Blues
- Disgusted Blues
- Competition Bed Blues
- Sad News Blues
- Oil Well Blues
- Tin Cup Blues
- Big Night Blues
- Empty House Blues
- Saturday Night Spender Blues
- That Black Snake Moan, No. 2
- Peach Orchard Mama
- Big Night Blues
- Bed Spring Blues
- Yo Yo Blues
- Mosquito Moan
- Southern Woman Blues
- Bakershop Blues
- Pneumonia Blues
- Long Distance Moan
- That Crawlin' Baby Blues
- Fence Breakin' Yellin' Blues
- Cat Man Blues
- Cheaters Spell
- Bootin' Me 'Bout
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #93239 in Music
- Released on: 2003-03-18
- Number of discs: 4
- Format: Box set
- Dimensions: .65 pounds
Customer Reviews
Good intro to Lemon
The sound is better on the second of the two Yazoo releases ("The Best of Blind Lemon Jefferson") than it is here, but this is a more complete set (although it's missing a few alternate takes) at a good bargain. This set is certainly superior to the Documents, but some of the songs are mastered from very lousy 78s (better copies exist and are used on other compilations). The reviewer below mentions an upcoming Catfish set. In my opinion, the Catfish sets in general are of very poor quality, they eradicate all the surface noise then artificially add some treble to make up for the loss in sound quality, and the overall effect is a very flat, lifeless sound and compromised music. Catfish's releases seem to be aimed towards the 78 layman who is not used to hearing surface noise. If you want the (near) complete Jefferson output, this is the set to get, but the Yazoos still sound the best by a fairly wide margin.
That time is now
Having had this since about 3/23/03, I am ready to review it. I'll start by saying that it has not left my cd player since it arrived. I've listened to 2 or more discs each day every day that I have owned it so far.
I don't have that single-disc Yazoo Blind Lemon compilation from a couple years ago, so I can't compare/contrast the sound quality with that, but this does indeed sound better than do the Documents.
I do know that the Catfish label will be releasing their own complete Blind Lemon box later in 2003 (yes I know it is listed for sale here but I have e-mailed the label and it absolutely has not been released yet, and will not be until the tail end of 2003) and I am very curious to hear that one also, but I've been loving this one so far.
This box maybe isn't the sonic improvement I was hoping for, but I really can't fault it. You're definitely upgrading from your Documents if you purchase this set but I think I will really just have to hear this side-by-side with the new Catfish box for me to make a definitive statement.
I know some of you may be wondering why I went ahead and reviewed this already if I feel I have to hear the Catfish box to be sure of what I think of this one. Well, I've really been into this one and just thought some of you who don't own it yet would like to be able to read a review of it to help you decide.
So far my review has been geared towards the people who already know Lemon and his music. Now I'll try and write a bit for those of you who may be taking your first crack at him.
First, this is an excellent choice for a first Blind Lemon Jefferson purchase. I look at it like this... this box has a great price and you get everything he recorded, thus you can fully immerse yourself in his music and decide from there whether you are into him or not.
Blind Lemon's music ranges from mournful to lewd, upbeat to low-down. I suppose that many "first-time Lemon" fans may (or may not) be coming to him from Robert Johnson. All I am going to say is that the world of pre-war blues is a very large world that covers lots of moods and modes of personal expression. RJ is not the end-all and be-all that many would have you believe. That's really all there is to remember. Blind Lemon was his own man with his own unique artistic vision, all of which pre-date RJ by a decade. This box-set collects his entire recorded output. 1926-1929 were some great years for American music!
You may also want to consider Jelly Roll Morton's 5-disc JSP box-set. I've had that one for 2 or 3 years now and it just keeps getting better!
5 Stars because it's Lemon, but not the best sound
Blind Lemon Jefferson was the greatest of the country bluesmen. (For a measure of my enthusiasm, see my review of the Yazoo set.)
If you dig him enough, or are curious enough, to want his entire output in one place for a budget price, then by all means this is the package to buy.
But completeness and price are the top virtues of this set. If you want to hear these records at their best, with careful attention to making them sound clear and present, the Yazoo one-disc compilation still leads the pack, far and away.
Except for a slightly better mastering job, these four discs mirror the four separate BLJ volumes on Document. In fact, I would not be surprised to learn that these _are_ the old Document masters, run through a noise reduction system. The sound quality is quite uneven: the better-sounding takes sound pretty good, but some of the others are awful.
The version of " 'Lectric Chair Blues," one of Lemon's finest records, as heard here is terribly worn and noisy, to the point of being unintelligible. Also true of the same track on the Document. On Yazoo, it's a wonderful listen and you can hear and understand all of the words.
"Long Lonesome Blues," take 2, is also nearly inaudible. On the Yazoo, it sounds as if they may have been working with the same 78 disc, but the results are much improved.
JSP Records gained a stellar reputation because its earliest roots-and-jazz compilations were mastered by the late John R. T. Davies, who was a genius at resurrecting old recordings and making them sound real. But this is not one of those sets.
So: With Lemon Jefferson, you always get quality music, and with this JSP collection you get nearly all of it. (Several alternate takes are not here.) But if sound quality is an issue, I have to recommend Yazoo's "Best of."




