Amos Milburn - Blues, Barrelhouse and Boogie Woogie 1946-1955 [3 CD]

 

Joseph Amos Milburn, Jr. (April 1, 1927 – January 3, 1980) was an African-American rhythm and blues singer and pianist, popular during the 1940s and 1950s. He was born and died in Houston, Texas.



DISC 1
1. After Midnite 2:57
2. My Baby's Boogying 2:28
3. Down The Road Apiece 2:58
4. Amos' Blues 2:27
5. Amos' Boogie 2:21
6. Operation Blues 2:43
7. Cinch Blues 2:42
8. Everything I Do Is Wrong 2:41
9. Blues At Sundown 2:26
10. Money Hustilin' Woman 2:33
11. Sad And Blue 3:06
12. Mean Woman 3:07
13. Aladdin Boogie 2:21
14. Nickel Plated Baby 2:21
15. Real Gone 3:07
16. Rainy Weather Blues 3:01
17. Train Whistle Blues 3:09
18. Train Time Blues 3:08
19. Bye Bye Boogie 3:07
20. Pot Luck Boogie 2:40
21. It's A Married Woman 2:55
22. My Tortured Mind 2:36

DISC 2
1. Hold Me Baby 2:49
2. Chicken Shack Boogie 2:49
3. Hard Driving Blues 2:44
4. I'm Gonna Leave You 2:26
5. Pool Playing Blues 2:40
6. Rocky Road Blues (Take 1) 2:48
7. Rocky Road Blues (Take 2) 2:52
8. Lonesome For The blues 2:55
9. Slow Down Blues 3:03
10. Anybody's Blues 2:51
11. It Took A Long, Long Time 2:38
12. Wolf On The River 2:39
13. Frank's Blues 2:50
14. Empty Arms Blues 2:56
15. A & M Blues 2:55
16. Won't You Kinda Think It Over 2:47
17. Jitterbug Fashion Parade 2:28
18. My Luck Is Bound To Change 2:53
19. Roomin' House Boogie 2:44
20. Walkin' Blues 2:59
21. Blue And Lonesome 2:16
22. Let's Make Christmas Merry, Baby 2:53

DISC 3
1. Drifting Blues 2:51
2. Untitled Boogie 1:57
3. Melting Blues 2:44
4. Boogie Woogie 2:50
5. Atomic Baby 2:42
6. Sex Shack Boogie 2:50
7. Birmingham Bounce 3:05
8. Let's Rock A While 2:38
9. Hard Luck Blues 3:16
10. Two Years Of Torture 3:01
11. Bad, Bad Whiskey 2:57
12. Tears, Tears, Tears 2:46
13. Put Something In My Hand 3:02
14. Trouble In Mind 2:34
15. Flying Home 2:55
16. Let Me Go Home, Whiskey 2:48
17. Please Mr. Johnson 2:40
18. Let's Have A Party 2:31
19. One Scotch, One Bourbon, One Beer 3:15
20. Good, Good Whiskey 3:02
21. After Awhile 2:43
22. I Guess I'll Go 3:09



Susan Tedeschi discography


Guitarist, singer, and songwriter Susan Tedeschi is part of the new generation of blues musicians looking for ways to keep the form exciting, vital, and evolving. Tedeschi's live shows are by no means straight-ahead urban blues. Instead, she freely mixes classic R&B, blues, and her own gospel and blues-flavored originals into her sets. She's a young, sassy blues belter with musical sensibilities that belie her years.

Rush - Permanent Waves (40th Anniversary Remaster 2020/FLAC)


Permanent Waves is the band’s seventh studio album, released on New Year’s Day, 1980. It was recorded at Le Studio, Morin Heights, Quebec, and mixed at Trident Studios in London. The tracks were laid down just shy of four weeks, in part attributed to the idyllic working conditions of Morin Heights.

Jerry Garcia - Garcia Live series

Jerome John Garcia (August 1, 1942 – August 9, 1995) was an American singer-songwriter and guitarist, best known for being a principal songwriter, the lead guitarist and a vocalist with the rock band the Grateful Dead, of which he was a founding member and which came to prominence during the counterculture of the 1960s. Although he disavowed the role, Garcia was viewed by many as the leader or "spokesman" of the group. 

Marc Bolan & T Rex - Unchained Home Recordings & Studio Outtakes 1972–1977 (8 CD, 2015)

In 1973, alone and with an acoustic guitar, Marc Bolan recorded the revealing “This Is My Life”. Over its five minutes, a strummed elegy akin to the T Rex B-side “Baby Strange” evolves from a finger-picked blues. The lyrics name-check B.B. King, Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B Goode” and mention a visit to New York State, playfully rhymed with steak.


“Everything I did when I was going to school was just an imitation of Carl Perkins singing ‘Don’t be Cruel’,” he sings, no doubt well aware the Elvis Presley hit did not figure in Perkins’ usual repertoire. Once Presley hit big, Perkins was firmly relegated to playing second fiddle. Bolan was subverting history’s hierarchy. “This Is My Life” found Bolan reflecting on who he was and who he had become.