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Classic Mood Experience The best masterpieces ever recorded in the music history.
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Little Walter - Roller Coaster [1955]
Marion Walter Jacobs (May 1, 1930 – February 15, 1968), known as Little Walter, was an American blues musician, singer, and songwriter, whose revolutionary approach to the harmonica and impact on succeeding generations has earned him comparisons to such seminal artists as Django Reinhardt, Charlie Parker and Jimi Hendrix. His virtuosity and musical innovations fundamentally altered many listeners' expectations of what was possible on blues harmonica. He was inducted into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2008, the first and, to date, only artist to be inducted specifically as a harmonica player.
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J.B. Hutto - guitar, vocals
Lee Jackson - guitar
Maurice McIntyre - tenor sax
Herman Hassell, Dave Myers, Junior Pettis - bass
Sunnyland Slim - organ, piano
Frank Kirkland - drums
J.B. Hutto ''Pretty Baby'' (1983)
Provided to YouTube by Elektra Asylum
I Got a Mind to Give up Living · The Paul Butterfield Blues Band
East West
℗ 1968 Elektra Entertainment Company
Guitar: Elvin Bishop
Bass Guitar: Jerome Arnold
Organ: Mark Naftalin
Guitar: Mike Bloomfield
Vocals: Paul Butterfield
Producer: Paul Rothchild
Drums: Sam Lay
Writer: BB King
Writer: Cliff Adams
Arranger: Paul Butterfield
Auto-generated by YouTube.
North Sea Jazz
🙃
Umas das maiores canções gravadas por BB king, "The thrill Is Gone" está no nosso set list desde o primeiro dia. Então, por que não misturar ela com outra grande obra, como a "Summertime" do George Gershwin? Se fizer direitinho, elas até que podem ficar boas juntas, o que vocês acham?
Milk´n Blues:
Aline Mota - Voz
Anne Glober - Voz
Eduardo Machado - Baixo e Voz
Indiara Sfair - Gaita Harmônica e Voz
Piatan Sfair - Bateria e Voz
Tiago Juk - Guitarra e Voz
Áudio
Captação de som, mixagem e masterização: Paulo Bueno em Click Audioworks
Vídeo:
Direção de Fotografia: Vinícius Lima
Câmeras: Vinícius Lima e Leonardo Silva
Produção: Mariana Kauchakje
Edição: Rodrigo Fragata
From the album 'Live At Cottiers Theatre Glasgow' 2004
Ally Venable (USA) performing "Comfort in my Sorrows" at the Moulin Blues Festival 2023 in Ospel, the Netherlands. Every year the first weekend of May - www.moulinblues.nl! Video by s-e-p.
Blues.
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Fenton Robinson........................ Checking On My Woman
Festival gig France: Wrong title on clip (Going Up And Going Down) BTW.. Mighty Joe Young - gtr and vocal; with Kenny Saydak pno; Alvino; Cornelius Boyson - bass; Alvino Bennett - drums;
Eric Clapton, B.B. King, Jimmy Vaughan, Robert Cray - Every Day I Have The Blues (LIVE) (2013)
https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UCcDXAvYHOm3MA8Ab2
Montreux 1990
Provided to YouTube by Isabel Records
Ruff Times · Jimmy Dawkins
Hot Wire 81 (feat. Richard Kirch, Sylvester Boines, Jimmy Schutte) (Blues Power)
℗ Didier Tricard
Released on: 1981-01-01
Composer: Jimmy Dawkins
Lyricist: Jimmy Dawkins
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Provided to YouTube by Isabel Records
Welfare Line · Jimmy Dawkins
Hot Wire 81 (feat. Richard Kirch, Sylvester Boines, Jimmy Schutte) (Blues Power)
℗ Didier Tricard
Released on: 1981-01-01
Composer: Jimmy Dawkins
Lyricist: Jimmy Dawkins
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Good Rockin Charles Edwards backed by the amazing band 'The Aces' live at legendary Eddies Place* (the new 1815 club) on the 28th January 1976.
Good Rockin' Charles is best-known for a solo he didn't play. Suffering from a bad case of studio fright, Charles chickened out of playing on guitarist Jimmy Rogers' 1956 Chess waxing of "Walking by Myself" -- leaving the door wide-open for Big Walter Horton to blow a galvanic solo that rates among his very best. Charles' domestic solo discography consists of one nice album for Steve Wisner's short-lived Mr. Blues logo in 1975.
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Good Rockin Charles Edwards: Vocals & Harmonica
Dave Myers: Bass
Louis Myers: Guitar
Fred Below: Drums
Good Rockin' Charles (March 4, 1933 – May 17, 1989) was an American Chicago blues and electric blues harmonicist, singer and songwriter. He released one album in his lifetime and is best known for his work with Johnny "Man" Young, Otis "Big Smokey" Smothers, Arthur "Big Boy" Spires and Jimmy Rogers.
He was born Henry Lee Bester in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and was later known as Charles Edwards. He relocated from his birthplace to Chicago, Illinois, in 1949, and was inspired by the harmonica players Sonny Boy Williamson I, Sonny Boy Williamson II and Little Walter.
Inspired by both Sonny Boys and Little Walter, Charles Edwards began playing harp shortly after hitting Chicago in 1949. He played with a plethora of local luminaries -- Johnny Young, Lee Jackson, Arthur Spires, Smokey Smothers -- before joining Rogers's combo in 1955. Cobra Records also tried and failed to corral him for a session in 1957.
In the following decade, Charles found steady work with the Chicago blues musicians Johnny "Man" Young, Otis "Big Smokey" Smothers and Arthur "Big Boy" Spires. In 1955 he was a member of the backing band for the blues singer Jimmy Rogers. Two years later, the short-lived independent record label Cobra Records offered Charles the opportunity to record his own work, but he turned it down.
Because of his wariness of working in a recording studio, he had been replaced at the last minute as the harmonica player on Jimmy Rogers's recording of "Walking by Myself" (1956). The role fell to Big Walter Horton, who greatly enhanced his reputation by playing on the track.
In 1975, Charles was persuaded to record his own album. Bassist Hayes Ware was instrumental in finally convincing the elusive Good Rockin' into a studio for Mr. Blues, where he shook the walls with revivals of classics by both Sonny Boys, Rogers, and Jay McShann. Unfortunately, it would prove the extent of the mysterious harpist's recorded legacy. The eponymous album was released by Mr. Blues Records in 1976, having been recorded the previous November. It was subsequently reissued by P-Vine Records. Charles also featured on the American Blues Legends '79 tour of Europe organised by Big Bear Records, and the album of the same name.
Charles later suffered from ill health and was unable to record any significant further work.
Charles died in Chicago in May 1989, aged 56.
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*For a number of years Eddie Shaw operated the biggest blues club on the West Side (aswell as playing with Howlin Wolf, Magic Sam, Muddy Waters), Eddie’s Place (The New 1815 Club), which featured such top-notch blues acts as Wolf, Otis Rush, Jimmy Reed, Luther Allison, James Cotton, Mighty Joe Young and Little Johnny Taylor.
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