Post Description
Buddy Guy - Can't get the Blues
Deze set omvat 3 cd's:
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
14. Totally out of Control
Disc: 3
1. Nobody Understands Me But My Guitar Listen
2. Baby Please Don't Leave Me Listen
3. Done Got Old Listen
4. Honey Bee [#] Listen
5. Tramp Listen
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. The Price You Gotta Pay
[Review / Amazon]
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
Met dank aan Motormuijs.
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