Product Details
The History of Rhythm & Blues

The History of Rhythm & Blues
Various Artists

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. My Soul Is a Witness - Austin Coleman
  2. It's Nobody's Fault But Mine - Blind Willie Johnson
  3. Crucifixion of Christ - Jessie May Hill
  4. Shake That Thing - Papa Charlie Jackson
  5. Outside Woman Blues - Blind Joe Reynolds
  6. It's a Good Thing - The Beale Street Sheiks, Frank Stokes
  7. Minglewood Blues - Gus Cannon & His Jug Stompers
  8. Match Box Blues - Blind Lemon Jefferson
  9. Diddie Wah Diddie - Blind Blake
  10. Milk Cow Blues - Sleepy John Estes
  11. Ease It to Me Blues - Barbecue Bob
  12. No No Blues - Curley Weaver,
  13. Apaloosa Blues - Robert Cooksey, Bobby Leecan
  14. Little Rock Blues - Pearl Dickson
  15. Kansas City Blues - Jim Jackson
  16. Train Whistle Blues - Jimmie Rodgers
  17. Goin' Back to Texas - Memphis Minnie
  18. Roll and Tumble Blues - Hambone Willie Newbern
  19. If You Haven't Any - Skip James
  20. Kokomo Blues - Scrapper Blackwell
  21. It's Tight Like That - Georgia Tom
  22. Didn't It Rain - Bryant's Jubilee Quartet
  23. Beale Street Breakdown - Jed Davenport
  24. Milk Cow Blues - Kokomo Arnold

Disc 2:

  1. Get Low-Down Blues - Bennie Moten & the Kansas City Orchestra
  2. Mr Johnson's Blues - Lonnie Johnson
  3. Backwater Blues - Bessie Smith
  4. Knockin' a Jug - Louis Armstrong
  5. Bullfrog Blues - Muggsy Spanier
  6. Pinetop's Boogie Woogie - Pinetop Smith
  7. Cow Cow Blues - Charles "Cow Cow" Davenport
  8. Guitar Boogie - Blind Graves Roosevelt & Uaroy Graves
  9. How Long, How Long Blues - Leroy Carr
  10. Dirty Dozen - Speckled Red
  11. Vicksburg Blues - Little Brother Montgomery
  12. Sweet Miss Stella Blues - Rufus and Ben Quillian
  13. Minnie the Moocher - Cab Calloway & His Orchestra
  14. St. Louis Blues - The Mills Brothers
  15. Somebody Stole Gabriel's Horn - The Three Keys
  16. Midnight Hour Blues - Leroy Carr
  17. Lafayette - Bennie Moten & the Kansas City Orchestra
  18. Flaming Reeds and Screaming Brass - Jimmie Lunceford & His Orchestra
  19. Strut That Thing - Cripple Clarence Lofton
  20. Dirty Mother for You - Roosevelt Sykes
  21. Weed Smoker's Dream - Harlem Hamfats
  22. Press My Button - Lil Johnson,
  23. Night Time Is the Right Time - Roosevelt Sykes
  24. Blues Ain't Nothing But - Georgia White

Disc 3:

  1. Teasin' Brown Blues - Louie Lasky
  2. Barrelhouse Woman - Leroy Carr
  3. Lead Pencil Blues - Johnnie "Geechie" Temple
  4. Policy Dream Blues - Bumble Bee Slim,
  5. Naptown Stomp - Bill Gaither
  6. Sloppy Drunk Again - Walter Davis
  7. Jockey Blues - Jazz Gillum
  8. Holy Mountain - Elder Otis Jones
  9. Standing by the Bedside of a Neighbour - Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet
  10. Louise Louise Blues - Johnnie Tempbe
  11. Barrelhouse When It Rains - Big Bill Broonzy
  12. Good Morning Little Schoolgirl - Sonny Boy Williamson
  13. Preachin' Blues - Robert Johnson
  14. Number Runner's Blues - Jimmie Gordon
  15. Tell Me Baby - Sonny Boy Williamson
  16. Rockin' Chair Blues - Big Bill Broonzy
  17. Diggin' My Potatoes - Washboard Sam
  18. This Train - Sister Rosetta Tharpe
  19. Don't You Lie to Me - Tampa Red
  20. Jivin' the Blues - Sonny Boy Williamson
  21. I Feel So Good - Big Bill Broonzy
  22. Worried Life Blues - Big Maceo
  23. Junker Blues - Champion Jack Dupree
  24. Ain't No Business We Can Do - Doctor Clayton
  25. Mean Ol' Frisco - Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup

Disc 4:

  1. Boogie Woogie Stomp - Albert Ammons & His Rhythm Kings
  2. Boogie-Woogie - Count Basie,
  3. One O'Clock Jump - Count Basie Orchestra,
  4. Sing Sing Sing - Benny Goodman
  5. Keep A-Knockin' - Louis Jordan
  6. T'Aint What You Do - Jimmie Lunceford
  7. Jumpin' Jive - Cab Calloway
  8. I Like to Riff - King Cole Trio, King Cole Trio
  9. That's the Rhythm - Three Sharps And A Flat
  10. I'd Rather Drink Muddy Water - The Cats & the Fiddle
  11. After Hours - Erskine Hawkins & His Orchestra
  12. Floyd's Guitar Blues - Andy Kirk & His Clouds of Joy
  13. Gangster's Blues - Peetie Wheatstraw
  14. Roll'em Pete - Pete Johnson, Joe Turner
  15. Down the Road a Piece - Will Bradley
  16. Central Avenue Breakdown - Lionel Hampton
  17. Natchez Mississippi Blues - Lewis Bronzeville Five
  18. Death Ray Boogie - Pete Johnson
  19. Confessin' the Blues - Jay McShann
  20. What's the Use of Getting Sober - Louis Jordan
  21. Take It and Git - Andy Kirk & His Clouds of Joy
  22. Cow Cow Boogie - Ella Mae Morse
  23. Flying Home - Lionel Hampton & His Orchestra
  24. Mean Old World - T-Bone Walker

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #103832 in Music
  • Released on: 2008-04-22
  • Number of discs: 4
  • Formats: Box set, Import

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
2008 four CD box set that investigates the accidental synthesis of Jazz, Gospel, Blues, Ragtime, Country and Pop into a definable form of black music, which in turn would influence all popular music from the '50s to the present. This four disc set comes complete with 32 page booklet including comprehensive track by track analysis of all 97 songs. Features tracks from Blind Willie Johnson, T-Bone Walker, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Lionel Hampton, Louis Jordan, Cab Calloway, Nat King Cole Trio, Count Basie, Arthur Crudup, Sonny Boy Williamson, Big Bill Broonzy and many others. Rhythm & Blues.


Customer Reviews

Woke up this morning... and I was back in 19255
As a Doctor Who fan, my greatest wish would be to travel back to pre-war America and see and hear some of the late, great blues stars of their generation. But let's face it, the Tardis is unlikely to materialise, pick me up and give me a ride there. So I'll have to settle for the next-best thing - an incredible four-CD journey that will at least let me listen to my heroes in all their glory and imagine I'm there with them as they croon, moan, hum and holler. And you won't get any closer to the real thing than with this superb £14.99 four-CD box set - arguably the most important and fascinating collection of rhythm and blues music compiled in recent years.
Attractively packed, the set features no less than 97 tracks culled from one of American music's most important eras, between 1925-1942, plus an incredibly informed 32-page booklet featuring comprehensive and musically-savvy sleeve notes. From the first, and frankly disturbing, field recording track from 1934 (My Soul Is A Witness by Austin Coleman) to the later urban sophistication of the last number (Mean Old World, by T-Bone Walker) this a collection that by turns fascinates, entertains, amuses and delights any self-respecting rhythm and blues fan with a sense of history.
The beauty of the boxset is that it resists the temptation to play safe. So many blues compilations are heavy on favourites such as John Lee Hooker, Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, BB King, and so on. Robert Johnson's in there for just one song, Preachin' Blues, but even greats like Son House just don't make it here. Instead, we are treated to some complete unknowns and peripheral players who, nevertheless, played a key role in the history of the genre.
Take Arthur `Big Boy' Crudup, for example. Who? Exactly. A man who didn't even learn to play guitar until he was 30, an artist of indifferent ability and largely forgotten by the music world. Yet Crudup penned a string of hits, including That's Alright Mama, and Mean Ol' Frisco that other artists feasted on - including a young hip-swingin' hopeful called Elvis Presley, no less. Without That's Alright, the world may have had to wait a little longer for the King's arrival. And didn't a certain Eric Clapton cover Mean Ol' Frisco a little later on? Crudup's original 1942 version of this number is featured here, and it's pretty good listening.
And how about Hambone Willie Newbern? He wrote the immortal Roll And Tumble Blues, giving us a riff that will be forever recalled and copied by scores of later artists, including Clapton, again. Good Morning Schoolgirl also became a timeless classic, and we hear the original 1937 version by John Lee `Sonny Boy' Williamson. And then there's Don't You Lie To Me, which everyone seems to think was written by a certain Chuck Berry, who made it famous, as well as The Rolling Stones and the Flaming Groovies. But it was the fabulous Tampa Red who was the original writer, and the definitive 1940 version is right here on CD 3. Tampa, gets star billing in the boxset, highlighting his perceived importance in the history of R&B, and the listener can only marvel at the control and dexterity of his single-string bottleneck riffs on numbers such as It's Tight Like That (1928).
For me, the first CD covering Country Blues And Spirituals, Jug Bands and Hokum, is a revelation. Stand-out tracks include Papa Charlie Jackson's Shake That Thing, Curley Weaver's No No Blues and Barbecue Bob's scintillating 12-string guitar on Ease It To Me Blues. The incomparably laid-back and multi-talented Blind Lemon Jefferson is also there with the classic Match Box Blues and the listener can only sit back and wonder at the fingerplay of Blind Blake on the irresistible Diddie Wah Diddie.
Disc 2 concentrates on Piano Boogie Woogie, Ragtime and Jazz - not particularly my scene, I thought. But I was surprised to find some absolute gems here, in particular Lil Johnson's hilarious Press My Button (full of wonderful double entendres), Louis Armstrong's Knockin' A Jug and Cab Calloway's melodramatic funster, Minnie The Moocher - guaranteed to lift anyone's spirits.
Next we move on to Urban Blues And Gospel on Disc Three, with Leroy Carr drawling his way through Barrelhouse Woman and Bill Bill Broonzy demonstrating why he was such a great singer on the same theme, this time with Barrelhouse When It Rains and Rockin' Chair Blues. Tampa Red pops up again with the catchy Don't You Lie To Me and the superb Big Maceo shows his piano and vocal skills to great effect on Worried Life Blues. This collection isn't just about guitars - there are some great pianists, big bands, little bands, kazoo players, jug-blowers and washboard raspers, all doing their thing in the name of entertainment. You have to hear ex-pro boxer Champion Jack Dupree's thumping piano style to believe it with Junker Blues (it's so punchy it sounds like he's playing in boxing gloves) and Sister Rosetta Tharpe (one of my favourites) wielding a mean electric Gibson guitar on This Train.
Gospel, of course, plays a big part in blues history. No streetwise busker would dream of playing all-secular songs when the audience demanded some gospel numbers and these were also perennial best-sellers on recorded music, even when times were hard. Hence the contributions of the wildly popular Ms Tharpe, Elder Otis Jones (Holy Mountain) and the spectacularly titled Somebody Stole Gabriel's Horn by the Three Keys.
Disc Four brings us to After Hours Swing, Boogie and Jive, allowing such luminaries as Count Basie and The Lionel Hampton Orchestra to take centre stage as music moved into a more sophisticated era of big band sound, even though the music remained mainly up-tempo. Albert Ammons And His Rhythm Kings showed here where music was heading with a cool rendition of Boogie Woogie Stomp, but there was still room for a more simple style on Floyd's Guitar Blues, by the astonishingly named Andy Kirk And His Clouds Of Joy. The song that deserves to knock everyone flat is the magnificent Bessie Smith's (pictured left) rendering of Backwater Blues, delivered in that powerful, sexy, laid-back voice that's instantly recognisable and backed by the superb pianist James P Johnson, whose rolling boogie woogie style is a delight but cleverly makes room for the vocals to shine through.
With so many treasures to trawl through, this massively impressive four-disc compilation deserves a place in any collection and a long, long listen. Cow Cow Davenport, Sleepy John Estes, Scrapper Blackwell, Kokomo Arnold, Speckled Red, the Harlem Hamfats, Jazz Gillum, Muggsy Spanier and Bumble Bee Slim may not be household names, and most of them still died penniless, even when they were moderately successful. Even Tampa Red, who once boasted a gold-plated National guitar and became know as "the man with the golden guitar", passed away destitute. As Lonnie Johnson says in Mr Johnson's Blues: "I want all you people to listen to my song. Remember me after all the days I'm gone". With this incomparable collection, we can at least do try to do that and applaud their priceless contributions to modern day music.
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