Product Details
Can't Quit the Blues

Can't Quit the Blues
Buddy Guy

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Way You Been Treating Me
  2. Sit and Cry (The Blues)
  3. This Is the End
  4. First Time I Met the Blues
  5. Ten Years Ago
  6. Let Me Love You Baby
  7. Stone Crazy
  8. When My Left Eye Jumps
  9. Hoodoo Man Blues
  10. In the Wee Hours
  11. I Can't Quit the Blues
  12. One Room Country Shack
  13. T-Bone Shuffle
  14. When You See the Tears from My Eyes [Live]
  15. I Smell a Rat
  16. She Suits Me to a T
  17. D. J. Play My Blues

Disc 2:

  1. Damn Right, I've Got the Blues
  2. Mustang Sally
  3. Five Long Years
  4. Mary Ann
  5. She's Nineteen Years Old
  6. Miss Ida B
  7. Feels Like Rain
  8. 7-11
  9. I Smell Trouble
  10. Someone Else Is Steppin' In (Slippin' out, Slippin' In)
  11. My Time After Awhile [Live]
  12. Your Mind Is on Vacation
  13. Midnight Train - Buddy Guy, Jonny Lang
  14. Totally out of Control

Disc 3:

  1. Nobody Understands Me But My Guitar
  2. Baby Please Don't Leave Me
  3. Done Got Old
  4. Honey Bee [#]
  5. Tramp
  6. Crawlin' Kingsnake
  7. Moanin' and Groanin'
  8. Bad Life Blues
  9. I Can't Be Satisfied [Live]
  10. First Time I Met the Blues [Live]
  11. I'd Rather Be Blind, Crippled and Crazy [#]
  12. Somebody's Sleeping in My Bed
  13. I Miss You
  14. Cut You Loose
  15. Price You Gotta Pay

Disc 4:

  1. Ten Years Ago [DVD][Live]
  2. Hoodoo Man Blues [DVD][Live]
  3. Messin' with the Kid [DVD][Live]
  4. Come on in This House [DVD][Live]
  5. Sweet Little Angel [DVD][Live]
  6. Damn Right, I've Got the Blues [DVD][Live]
  7. Drowning on Dry Land [DVD][Live]
  8. Tramp [DVD][Live]
  9. Mustang Sally [DVD][Live]
  10. What'd I Say [DVD][Live]
  11. Louise McGhee [DVD][Live]

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3910 in Music
  • Brand: Sony
  • Released on: 2006-10-31
  • Number of discs: 3
  • Formats: Box set, Original recording remastered
  • Dimensions: .90 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Robert Cray says that Buddy Guy's guitar solos sound like laughter from space, but they can also peal like the cries of lost souls attempting to cross the River Styx. If these 47 songs on three CDs plus a DVD boasting a new 75-minute documentary and six performances from the Montreux Jazz Festival prove anything, it's that Guy is one of the most dynamic, diverse, expressionistic, and emotional guitarists--in any genre. The set neatly examines the 70-year-old Chicago blues legend's half-century career, starting with a ragged but soulful "The Way You Been Treating Me" cut in 1957 at a radio station in Guy's native Louisiana that finds him developing his searing, exploratory style. A year later, he's in Chicago working with tunesmith Willie Dixon, and the rest is history (chronicled in Anthony DeCurtis's excellent lines notes) that leads from the glory days of Chess Records to Guy's early breakout recordings for Vanguard to his modern-day mastery. The most recent recordings often find him working with acolytes: Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Keb' Mo', Jonny Lang, Bonnie Raitt, Keith Richards, and John Mayer (who duets with Guy on the unreleased "I'd Rather Be Blind, Crippled & Crazy"). B.B. King, who along with Guitar Slim was Guy's most important early influence, also joins Clapton and Guy on a stirring acoustic version of John Lee Hooker's "Crawlin' Kingsnake."

This set makes the argument for Guy's ever-continuing growth as a musician--not only as a player whose frenzy, improvisational instincts, and tonal control keep stretching with age, but as a stylist who was unafraid to put aside his trademark electric approach in 2003 to make the acoustic Blues Singer (represented here by "Bad Life Blues" and the Hooker tune) and to embrace primal North Mississippi juke joint music with Sweet Tea, which lends this set a pair of Junior Kimbrough covers. Guy's sole artistic weakness is his songwriting. He's never been prolific, and even in the '60s his lyrics drew on well-established clichés. But, as these performances attest, his playing's never been less than daring--and his voice knows every nuance of heartache and joy. --Ted Drozdowski


Customer Reviews

Can't Quit watching "Buddy Live"5
This package is advertised as a Boxed Set that happens to have a bonus DVD included. For casual fans this may ring true, but for die hard Buddy fans it's all about the DVD. The documentary is the best ever about Buddy and His life. With extensive live footage throughout, you will sit in a state of awe as the "BEST GUITARIST" ever, frantically expels doses of raw emotion matched only by his skills with a guitar. The collection of songs on the CD's are great,but the price of the box set would be worth it, even if only the DVD was included. He's that moving "LIVE".

A Must Have For Buddy Guy Fans. 5
First of all, this box set is not perfect, mainly for what was left out of it, but if you judge it for what they did put in it, I think the only conclusion you can come to is that it's a tremendous success.

Buddy Guy's career is going on 50 years, so for there to be only 13 tracks devoted to the first 25 years or so of his career is indeed leaving a lot out, but Silvertone has done a good job of cherry-picking the highlights of that era, including two tracks from Hoodoo Man Blues, on which Guy was a sideman to Junior Wells. Two discs would have been more appropriate for this pre-Silvertone work, but what has been crammed onto one disc does touch on the highlights of that time period.

The remaining two discs cover his Silvertone work, but again, there is nary a scrap of fat to be found. This is all prime Buddy Guy, rippling with electricity and raw emotion. For completists, there are a few unreleased tracks scattered throughout, and you know what? They're all good enough to make you wonder why they weren't released.

The DVD is very well produced, and for those who may have all of Guy's albums, this is what sells the box set. First, you get a 90 minute documentary featuring a very casual and relaxed Buddy Guy talking about everything from growing up in Louisiana, to seeing his first electric guitar, to the sight of a streaking Junior Wells. The interview is intertwined with performance footage (most of which can be seen in total in the concert footage section of the DVD).

In addition, the DVD has a section of complete live performances, the best of which probably being Buddy with Junior Wells at the 1974 Montreux Jazz Festival. Those who have heard the Guy/Wells album "Drinkin' TNT 'n' Smokin' Dynamite" will recognize the performances, and the added visuals only heighten the experience. Again, several phases of Guy's career are touched on, as a sideman with Wells, as a solo electric performer, and even as an acoustic performer.

And presentation-wise, everything is top-notch. The package unfolds to reveal a thick, glossy booklet that features information on all of the tracks included (date it was recorded, date it was released, what album it appeared on, who played on the track, etc.), great photos, and a well-written essay on Mr. Guy.

For a Buddy Guy fan, there's nothing not to like here. Sure, more pre-Silvertone material would have been greatly appreciated, but it's also tough to dismiss the prime material that has been included. Can't Quit the Blues is a fine box set that can be enjoyed by both hardcore fans of Buddy Guy, as well as casual fans of his music.

This Buddy Guy DVD is a Must!5
This Boxed Set is an excellent overview of Buddy Guy's career. It is well presented and has a comprehensive song selection but the absolute highlight is the DVD. Like Albert King, early B.B. King and just about everyone else, material on these legends is scarce! The DVD contains eleven performances from different stages of Guy's career. The first two are from Montreux in 1974 with Junior Wells, Pinetop Perkins and Bill Wyman on Bass. This is a must because this set is not longer available in the States. Junior also plays his chromatic harp, in the style of Little Walter, on "Ten Years Ago" and they also do a slow version of Junior's "Hoodoo Man Blues" (a title, interestingly which came from a Louis Jordan tune). It is fantastic. Buddy plays through a solid state Japanese-made amp for the first time (they were the Montreux House Amps that year)and it has quite an unsual sound. It is similar to the one he had playing through the Leslie Speakers when his amp blew up while recording on Junior's original "Hoodoo Man" LP(1962). These two numbers remind me of seeing Buddy in NY in 1967 by himself (Jr and the Band didn't show up)he just carried on and played out the door of the Cafe Au GoGo with his long lead, just like in "Drownin' On Dry Land" in this set.

"Messin' with the Kid" and "Come On This House" are also gems from Montreux in 1978. On the first two tunes in 1974 they were essentially backing Muddy Waters (as they did in the 1950s) but here they are stars in their own right after the release of their early 1970s hit LP. It is great and features "Fast Fingers" Jimmy Dawkins on second Guitar (his only ever early video clip as far as I know! He is also featured on the recent Delmark release "Tail Dragger"). He plays a better solo on "Messin' With The Kid" than Buddy!

"Sweet Little Angel", a Robert Nighthawk hit and B.B. King tune recorded many times (B.B.'s most famous version: "Live At The Regal")has been done many times by Buddy too. This one is done at Montreux in 1992. I like his version on the "Real Deal" DVD with the SNL Band. This however, is also a strong version.

"Damn Right, I Got The Blues" is from Buddy's comeback period commencing in the early 1990s when there was a short Blues Revival period following the death of SRV. We are still at Montreux in 1998 and the band cooks for this performance. It is great.

"Drowning On Dry Land", "Tramp",and "Mustang Sally" are from Montreux again in 2002. It is important to note that these are NOT the performances issued last year with the Carlos Santana package. These are good, but in all honesty, the band on the Santana set is much better, for one thing the keyboardist from Otis Rush's band is magnificent. Buddy does the Buddy thing at the end and sings without a mike when it fails.

The final two performances are acoustic, something he has added to his shows since the middle 1990s. The performance of "What I'd Say", since Ray Charles has died, is particularly interesting. The solo acoustic "Louise McGhee" from 2004 closes the set.

The 75 minute documentary with this DVD is also a must to see. OK, most of it we have heard many times over the years on other releases, about going to Chicago (he remembers the day in September), and meeting Muddy Waters who fed him and so on. This is all well done and presented and you can watch this many times. The snippets of performances are what really shines here. "Red House" with Joe Satriani is cool and the clips of him (I think it's at Antones!!! In Dallas!) of "The Things I Used to Do" and others we wish they would release that whole set!!!!

Interesting final note: this DVD like so many Blues DVDs in the last 5 years or so (AFBF 3 Vols; Albert King in Sweden and more)was produced by Janie Hendrix and Experience Hendrix Productions. Janie Hendrix is not Jimi's daughter if you are interested. Jimi's father Al remarried and Janie was his stepdaughter from his second marriage.