Product Details
Deluxe Edition

Deluxe Edition
Koko Taylor

List Price: $17.98
Price: $13.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

36 new or used available from $8.54

Average customer review:
Kelvin's Picks

Product Description

No Description Available.
Genre: Blues Music
Media Format: Compact Disk
Rating:
Release Date: 22-JAN-2002

Track Listing

  1. I'm A Woman
  2. Beer Bottle Boogie
  3. Born Under A Bad Sign (with Buddy Guy)
  4. Mother Nature (with Carey Bell)
  5. Hey Bartender (with Pinetop Perkins)
  6. I'd Rather Go Blind
  7. Man Size Job
  8. Let The Good Times Roll (live)
  9. Voodoo Woman (with Mighty Joe Young)
  10. Wang Dang Doodle
  11. Stop Watching Your Enemies
  12. Sure Had A Wonderful Time Last Night
  13. Come To Mama
  14. Time Will Tell
  15. Blues Hotel (with B.B. King)

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #25577 in Music
  • Brand: TAYLOR,KOKO
  • Released on: 2002-01-22
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Original recording remastered
  • Dimensions: .24 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Koko Taylor's something of a deluxe edition herself. With a Cadillac of a voice that rumbles the earth and rattles the glassware, she reigns as the undisputed empress of the blues. Deluxe Edition, a retrospective of her 15 years with Alligator Records, may not include such classics as "I Got What It Takes" and the Willie Dixon-penned "Twenty-Nine Ways," but it does have "I'm a Woman," Taylor's answer to Muddy Waters, just to kick things off. Other highlights include "Born Under a Bad Sign"--a duet with Buddy Guy, of course. Much of Taylor's work in the 1970s included such duets, and here can also be found Carey Bell (on "Mother Nature"), Pinetop Perkins (on "Hey Bartender"), and B.B. King (on "Blues Hotel"). Everything on Deluxe Edition brims with Taylor's trademark attitude, the sass and toughness for which she's well known. Yet Taylor is capable of astonishing tenderness as well, as is borne out by "I'd Rather Go Blind" and "Time Will Tell." Though this collection boasts only one obligatory previously unreleased track, it's a doozy: "Man Size Job," simply put, kicks ass. Looks like Taylor's reign is in no danger whatsoever. --Genevieve Williams


Customer Reviews

****1/2. A really nice sampler4
Koko Taylor has been hailed as "Queen of the Blues" for forty-five years. Born Cora Walton in Mississippi in 1928 (according to her own website), she made her first recordings for Chess Records in Chicago, but signed with Bruce Iglauer's Alligator Records in 1975 when Chess went under.

This 2002 compilation brings together 14 songs from her first seven Alligator albums. And the good people at Alligator Records have included a new song, of course, just as you knew they would. If they can make a few thousand diehard fans buy 14 songs they already have in order to get one new one, they'll do it. (It's a really great song, by the way.)

Still, "Deluxe Edition" is a really fine collection, no doubt about that.
The opening track is a somewhat predictable rip-off of Muddy Waters' "Mannish Boy", and a couple of numbers are a little bit too polished for their own good. But most of what is here is top-notch. Koko Taylor has a deep, powerful voice which sounds like it was meant to sing the blues, and she excels on tough, swaggering grooves like "Come To Mama" and "Beer Bottle Boogie". Her brand of blues is the real thing, no pop, no blues-rock, no jazz, just down and dirty electric Chicago blues arranged by people who knew what they were doing, and Taylor is equally convincing on soulful R&B numbers, dirty mid-tempo blues grinds, and a smouldering rendition of Etta James' soul ballad "I'd Rather Go Blind". It's just too bad that one of the best songs of her career, "Find A Fool, Bump Her Head", is missing.

Again, this is an excellent compilation. The only "problem", if you will, is that almost all of Taylor's original albums are so good that you are actually missing out on a whole lot of good music if you only ever buy this compilation. But "Deluxe Edition" is a really good place to start, no doubt about that. Just remember that albums like "The Earthshaker", "Force Of Nature" and "I Got What It Takes" are just as good!

Queen of Chicago Blues: Koko Taylor's Greatest Hits on Alligator, 1975-1999 3
Before marrying "Pops" Taylor, Koko Taylor was Memphis native Cora Walton. She had a number of hit songs on Chess records in the 1960s. After her time at Chess she went without a record label until she signed with Alligator Records; this 2002 collection is taken from those seven studio albums and one live album.

DELUXE EDITION consists of 15 songs, including one live recording (track 8) and one previously unreleased track (track 7), recorded 1975-1999 (most from '78-'93). Disc packaged in clear jewel case; total running time: 64:07. Booklet includes track information, but it is not easily discerned. There is also a six-panel fold-out with a mini-poster on one side; the other side is an assortment of captioned photographs, a discography (that does not provide release dates), and a short essay. Sound quality is excellent.

Track listing & info:
01. I'm a Woman [1978] mid-tempo, from "The Earthshaker"
02. Beer Bottle Boogie [1985] up-tempo, from "Queen of the Blues"
03. Born Under a Bad Sign (with Buddy Guy: vocal & guitar) [1993] mid-tempo, from "Force of Nature"
04. Mother Nature [1993] mid-tempo, from "Force of Nature"
05. Hey Bartender [1978] up-temp, from "The Earthshaker"
06. I'd Rather Go Blind [1981] ballad, from "From the Heart of a Woman"
07. Man Sized Job [1998/1999] up-tempo, previously unreleased
08. Let the Good Times Roll (LIVE) [1985] mid-tempo, from "Live from Chicago - An Audience with the Queen"
09. Voodoo Woman [1975] up-tempo, from "I Got What It Takes"
10. Wang Dang Doodle [1978] mid-tempo, from "The Earthshaker"
11. Stop Watching Your Enemies [1987] slow-tempo, from "Jump for Joy"
12. Sure Had a Wonderful Time Last Night [1981] Jazzy up-tempo, from "From the Heart of a Woman"
13. Come to Mama [1985] mid-tempo, from "Queen of the Blues"
14. Time Will Tell [1987] ballad, from "Jump for Joy"
15. Blues Hotel (with B.B. King: vocal & guitar) [1999] up-tempo, from "Royal Blue"

Familiar songs include "Born Under a Bad Sign", Etta James's "I'd Rather Go Blind", "Come to Mama" (recorded by Ann Peebles), "Let the Good Times Roll", and a remake of her own 1965 hit "Wang Dang Doodle".

This is a really fun CD. Koko Taylor is very deserving of the title "Queen of Chicago Blues" and any other accolades she receives. She has a powerful voice, as amazing as Bessie Smith, Mahalia Jackson, Big Mama Thornton, and Etta James. Long live the queen!

Nice selection of Koko's work5
Typcially nice Alliagtor Deluxe Edition that is a retrospective of the artist (sorta of a greatest hits). Few have had a longer tenure with the label that the "Queen" of the Blues Koko Taylor and this nicely samples her various albums. She belts out a number of tunes that are associated with her the most with some special guests on some tracks but the finest moments are Koko herself belting out her songs with so much feeling and authority. Hopefully if you are new to her, this will inspire you to check out more stuff by her