His Best - Howlin' Wolf
Chester Burnett's ferocious growl was a staple of Chicago's electric-blues heyday. This
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20-song compilation ranges from his 1951 debut "Moanin' at Midnight" with Willie Johnson on guitar to 1964's "Killing Floor" with Buddy Guy on guitar. His scratchy, sawed-off vocal approach and his energetic harmonica grace original classics such as "How Many More Years" and "Smokestack Lightnin'". By 1960, he became, along with Muddy Waters, the foremost interpreter of Willie Dixon's songs, lending his coarse voice to legendary Dixon cuts such as "Wang Dang Doodle", "Back Door Man", "Spoonful", "The Red Rooster", and "I Ain't Superstitious". Wolf's style was based on primal raw power, and he ranks among the genre's most distinctive performers. --Marc Greilsamer
...This is a good and cheap selection of some of the greatest blues musicians ever. The collection opens predictably with a muddy waters track (rollin’ stone) although probably not his best and then there appears the great elmore james performance on slide guitar in ‘dust my broom’ – a fantastically modern style of blues for the time. The j l hooker song is not ‘boom, boom’ thank god and the howlin’ wolf track ‘smokestack lightning’ features as track 9, this is a great song and I think once a budweiser advert song. There is a beautifully rough recording of memphis slim’s ‘guess I’m a fool’ towards the end which is for me the pick of the tracks. This is a solid album, nothing too new, but touches all the bases and is successful....
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Ciao members have rated this review on average somewhat helpful
Advantages: Every one you can think of Disadvantages: none
...My taste in music is Catholic. In hat my taste in music is wide and varied. Which is why you will find me writing reviews on a wide range of musical styles and genres.
One of my passions is the Blues. This review is a review of Comin' Home to the Blues, volume II.
This really is a classic CD if its type. It sounds like a Whose Who in Blues Hall of Fame. There are tracks my Howlin' Wolf, Bo Didley, sonny Boy Williamson, Chuck Berry, Muddy Waters, Elmore James. Little Walter, Otis Rush, Etta James (who has one of the sexiest female voices ever. In any musical genre!) Willie Dixon, John Lee Hooker, Jimmy Rogers, Koko Taylor (who has the other sexiest female voices ever. In any musical genre!) Washboard Sam and Lowell Fulson.
The CD begins with Howlin' Wolf's Red Rooster. This is laid back blues, filled with everything that the blues...
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Advantages: Graet album from agreat artist Disadvantages: Not to everyones taste
...Following on from the success of his Unplugged album, Clapton serves up another album full of Blues.
Recorded live in the studio, with the usual rhythm section plus horns, it is spoilt only by Claptons insistence on using a growling voice in parts as if trying to emulate some of his hero’s gruff vocals (Howlin’ wolf to name one)
This is evident on the first track, Blues before sunrise, although it has some great electric slide from old Slowhand on this up tempo track.
Track two, Third degree, is a rather slow, almost dreary, blues with some intriguing lyrics, with Clapton’s voice back on form.
The third track, Reconsider baby, is without doubt the finest on the album, a medium pace tempo number with Clapton tearing out some intricate finger picking on electric guitar and a superb solo and great vocal, this is Clapton at his very best...
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helpful 01.03.2004
(02.03.2004)
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