Showing posts with label Vinyl Rip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vinyl Rip. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
Elmore James - Got To Move
All the stuff here was recorded in the early sixties.
This another vinyl rip, this time brought to you in another format, mp3s.
I've noticed that the high resolution files don't do well and that people might prefer smaller files.
A little feedback here will certainly be useful!
Tracks:
1.Dust My Broom (60's version)
2.Done SOmeone Wrong
3.Knocking At Your Door
4.Fine Little Mama
5.Pickin' The Blues
6.Strange Angels
7.Bledding Heart
8.I've Got A Right To Love My Baby
9.Early One Morning
10.Look Over Yonder Wall
11.Got To Move
12.Make My Dreams Come True
13.It Hurts Me Too (60's Version)
14.Elmore's Contribution To Jazz
15.Held My Baby Last Night
16.Every Day I Have The Blues
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
mp3 , 63 MB
http://ul.to/728c140d
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
B.B. King - Live In Cook County Jail
Here is another vinyl rip from my collection, this is an american (Pickwick SPC 3654) pressing brought to you in amazing 96 KHz / 24 Bit, this time instead of WAV files I bring you FLAC.
Enjoy smooth warm mids, big dynamic range and B.B. King at his very best!
Review:
B.B. King has cut a lot of albums since the success of Live at the Regal. And, like the live shows they document, none of them are any less than solid and professional, hallmarks of King's work aesthetic. But every so often B.B. truly catches fire; his playing and singing comes up an extra notch or two, and the result is a live album with some real sparks to it. Live in Cook County Jail is one of those great concerts that the record company was smart enough to be there to capture, documenting B.B. firing on all cylinders in front of an audience that's just damn happy for him to be there. Possibly the best live version of "The Thrill Is Gone" of all its many incarnations, and rock solid renditions of classics like "Everyday I Have the Blues," "How Blue Can You Get?," "Sweet Sixteen" and a great medley of "3 O'Clock Blues" and "Darlin' You Know I Love You." Live at the Regal is still the champ of King's live output, but many say this runs a close second, and they just may be right.
Password and Links:
mississippimoan
FLAC , 715 MB
http://www.filefactory.com/file/69q6x0xtvou9/bbk.part1.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/1k1j3v6l973p/bbk.part2.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/43eofas3llkx/bbk.part3.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/4q20baz9ipe7/bbk.part4.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/33b21d72icbd/bbk.part5.rar
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Champion Jack Dupree - The Legacy Of The Blues Vol.3
I bring you another fine vinyl rip, this time in glorious 96 KHz / 24 Bit.Champion Jack Dupree recorded this material in London in 1971.Champion Jack Dupree recorded this material in London in 1971.
Pick it!
Sam Charteer - Producer
Huey Flint - Drums
Benny Galagher - Bass
Peter Curtley - Guitar
Paul Rowan - Harmonica
Side 1
1.Vietnam Blues
2.Drunk Again
3.Found My Baby Gone
4.Anything You Want
5.Will It Be
Side 2
6.You're The One
7.Down And Out
8.Roamin' Special
9.The Life I Lead
10.Jit-A-Bug Jump
Password and Links:
mississippimoan
WAV 96 KHz / 24 Bit , 1.1 Gb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/2uf00z31ve9b/cjdlotb3.part1.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/jdb2q5qoenn/cjdlotb3.part2.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/1v9igrfnhrh5/cjdlotb3.part3.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/2m0cp7stbbz9/cjdlotb3.part4.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/2f8gapx8u405/cjdlotb3.part5.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/38iew1ikd5fj/cjdlotb3.part6.rar
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
Jimmy Yancey - Piano Solos
Here is another cool vinyl rip in high resolution for you.
This is an Italian-only collection of Jimmy's early (all tracks taken from a session done in New York in April 1939).
Tracks:
1.Jimmy's Stuff
2.Rolling The Stone
3.Steady Rock Blues
4.P.I.K Special
5.South Side Stuff
6.Yancey's Gateway
7.La Salle Street Breakdown
8.Two O'Clock Blues
9.Janie's Joys
10.Lean Bacon
11.Big Bear Train
12.Lucile's Lament
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
WAV File, 210 mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/xgzrx4kwwg3/jyps1939.rar
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Muddy Waters - At Newport 1960
More high resolution (98 KHZ / 24 Bit) stuff, another 180 gram vinil rip.
Review:
For many back in the early '60s, this was their first exposure to live recorded blues, and it's still pretty damn impressive some 40-plus years down the line. Muddy, with a band featuring Otis Spann, James Cotton, and guitarist Pat Hare, lays it down tough and cool with a set that literally had 'em dancing in the aisles by the set closer, a rippling version of "Got My Mojo Working," reprised again in a short encore version. Kicking off the album with a version of "I've Got My Brand on You" that positively burns the relatively tame (in comparison) studio take, Waters heads full bore through impressive versions of "Hoochie Coochie Man," Big Bill Broonzy's "Feel So Good," and "Tiger in Your Tank." A great breakthrough moment in blues history, where the jazz audience opened its ears and embraced Chicago blues. This album was in print almost continuously on vinyl for 20-plus years, and MCA reissued it in a fair CD version in 1986. At least one enterprising European bootlegger issued their version in the early '90s, but the real edition of this album to get is the March 2001 remastering from MCA. Transferred in high-resolution digital audio, it brings up the bass overall and the details of just about every aspect of the playing, as well as moving Muddy's singing several layers forward in the mix, so that one gets a very vivid stage ambience, making the original CD seem very ragged. The reissue has been augmented by the presence of four studio sides cut by the same group a month prior to the concert -- none hold a candle to the live material, but they do fill in a few holes in Muddy's U.S. discography. The new notes by Mary Katherine Aldin also give a much better picture of the background of the show and Muddy's performance (so where's the film of the performance that she mentions?)
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
WAV 850 MB
http://www.filefactory.com/file/4xbgpq2k669x/mwlan.rar
B.B. King - Live At The Regal - 1965
Here is another 96 KHZ/ 24 BIT rip. This time I bring you a 1965 german pressing.
Absolutely precious.
Review:
B.B. King is not only a timeless singer and guitarist, he's also a natural-born entertainer, and on Live at the Regal the listener is treated to an exhibition of all three of his talents. Over percolating horn hits and rolling shuffles, King treats an enthusiastic audience (at some points, they shriek after he delivers each line) to a collection of some of his greatest hits. The backing band is razor-sharp, picking up the leader's cues with almost telepathic accuracy. King's voice is rarely in this fine of form, shifting effortlessly between his falsetto and his regular range, hitting the microphone hard for gritty emphasis and backing off in moments of almost intimate tenderness. Nowhere is this more evident than at the climax of "How Blue Can You Get," where the Chicago venue threatens to explode at King's prompting. Of course, the master's guitar is all over this record, and his playing here is among the best in his long career. Displaying a jazz sensibility, King's lines are sophisticated without losing their grit. More than anything else, Live at the Regal is a textbook example of how to set up a live performance. Talking to the crowd, setting up the tunes with a vignette, King is the consummate entertainer. Live at the Regal is an absolutely necessary acquisition for fans of B.B. King or blues music in general. A high point, perhaps even the high point, for uptown blues.
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
WAV 850 MB
http://www.filefactory.com/file/6ktk0s4oanlb/bbklatr.rar
Friday, September 26, 2014
Big Maybelle - Blues Candy And Big Maybelle
Here is another high fidelity (96 KHZ / 24 Bit) vinyl rip I did for all those who love her 1956-1967 period.
Here you'll find 14 tracks that ranging from swing to raw tough blues.
This is a 1986 reissue released by SJ Records, Inc., New York.
Tracks Include:
Side A Candy, Ring Dang Dilly, Blues Early, A Little Bird Told Me, So Long, That's A Pretty Good Love, Tell Me Who
Side B Ramblin' Blues, Rock House, Don't Want to Cry, Pitiful, A Good Man is Hard To Find, Goin' Home, How It Lies
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
WAV files 96 KHZ, 24 BIT
http://www.filefactory.com/file/9k1q5kv18vj/bm.rar
Friday, April 8, 2011
Champion Jack Dupree - Blues from the Gutter - 1958 - REUPLOADED!
Review:
The 1958 masterwork album of Champion Jack Dupree's long and prolific career. Cut in New York (in stereo!) with a blasting band that included saxist Pete Brown and guitarist Larry Dale, the Jerry Wexler-produced Atlantic collection provides eloquent testimony to Dupree's eternal place in the New Orleans blues and barrelhouse firmament. There's some decidedly down-in-the-alley subject matter -- "Can't Kick the Habit," "T.B. Blues," a revival of "Junker's Blues" -- along with the stomping "Nasty Boogie" and treatments of the ancient themes "Stack-O-Lee" and "Frankie & Johnny."
Password and Link:
rukusjuice
FLAC - 725 Mb.
24 bit, 96 kHz Vinyl Rip.
http://www.filefactory.com/file/5hy4rdxnypfv/cjdbftg_rar
Monday, April 4, 2011
Freddie King - Freddy King Gives You a Bonanza of Instrumentals - 1965.
Review:
King’s second all-instrumental album, Freddy King Gives You a Bonanza of Instrumentals, originally released in 1965 on King Records’ Federal subsidiary, continued the artist’s winning streak, with such memorable King originals as “Manhole,” “Freeway 75,” “Low Tide” and “Funnybone.” The 12-song LP demonstrates once again why King was one of his generation’s most revered electric guitarists.
Password and Link:
rukusjuice
Sundazed 180g mono LP vinyl rip 24 Bit, 96 kHz
FLAC - 365 Mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/ca8c3e6/n/fkboofin.rar
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Tommy McClennan - Cotton Patch Blues - 1939- 1942.
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
mp3 128 kbps - 36 Mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b382cg9/n/tmcpb.rar
Monday, March 28, 2011
Freddy King - Let's Hide Away and Dance Away with Freddy King - 1961.
Review
The classic first all-instrumental Freddy King album, it was monstrously influential to succeeding generations of great artists.
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
FLAC - Sundazed 180g mono LP Mastered from the original mono master tapes, Vinyl rip in24/96Artwork, 380mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/ca58236/n/fk.rar
The classic first all-instrumental Freddy King album, it was monstrously influential to succeeding generations of great artists.
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
FLAC - Sundazed 180g mono LP Mastered from the original mono master tapes, Vinyl rip in24/96Artwork, 380mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/ca58236/n/fk.rar
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Elmore James - King Of The slide Guitar 1950, 1954 - Released in 1983 [ACE].
Bio
No two ways about it, the most influential slide guitarist of the postwar period was Elmore James, hands down. Although his early demise from heart failure kept him from enjoying the fruits of the '60s blues revival as his contemporaries Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf did, James left a wide influential trail behind him. And that influence continues to the present time -- in approach, attitude and tone -- in just about every guitar player who puts a slide on his finger and wails the blues. As a guitarist, he wrote the book, his slide style influencing the likes of Hound Dog Taylor, Joe Carter, his cousin Homesick James and J.B. Hutto, while his seldom-heard single-string work had an equally profound effect on B.B. King and Chuck Berry. His signature lick -- an electric updating of Robert Johnson's "I Believe I'll Dust My Broom" and one that Elmore recorded in infinite variations from day one to his last session -- is so much a part of the essential blues fabric of guitar licks that no one attempting to play slide guitar can do it without being compared to Elmore James. Others may have had more technique -- Robert Nighthawk and Earl Hooker immediately come to mind -- but Elmore had the sound and all the feeling.
Tracks:
1. Lost Woman Blues (Please Find My Baby) (3:07)
2. One More Drink (3:15)
3. Strange Kinda Feeling (2:31)
4. Sho Nuff I Do (3:41)
5. My Best Friend (2:39)
6. So Mean To Me (3:39)
7. Wild About You (2:36)
8. Sweet Little Woman (Vocal by Little Johnny Jones) (2:59)
9. Long Tall Woman (2:52)
10. Where Can My Baby Be (3:07)
11. Dark & Dreary (3:24)
12. My Baby's Gone (2:20)
13. I May Be Wrong (Vocal by Little Johnny Jones) (2:47)
14. Elmo's Shuffle (Part 2) (2:48)
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
mp3 320 kbps - 98 Mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b3ba1eb/n/ej.rar
No two ways about it, the most influential slide guitarist of the postwar period was Elmore James, hands down. Although his early demise from heart failure kept him from enjoying the fruits of the '60s blues revival as his contemporaries Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf did, James left a wide influential trail behind him. And that influence continues to the present time -- in approach, attitude and tone -- in just about every guitar player who puts a slide on his finger and wails the blues. As a guitarist, he wrote the book, his slide style influencing the likes of Hound Dog Taylor, Joe Carter, his cousin Homesick James and J.B. Hutto, while his seldom-heard single-string work had an equally profound effect on B.B. King and Chuck Berry. His signature lick -- an electric updating of Robert Johnson's "I Believe I'll Dust My Broom" and one that Elmore recorded in infinite variations from day one to his last session -- is so much a part of the essential blues fabric of guitar licks that no one attempting to play slide guitar can do it without being compared to Elmore James. Others may have had more technique -- Robert Nighthawk and Earl Hooker immediately come to mind -- but Elmore had the sound and all the feeling.
Tracks:
1. Lost Woman Blues (Please Find My Baby) (3:07)
2. One More Drink (3:15)
3. Strange Kinda Feeling (2:31)
4. Sho Nuff I Do (3:41)
5. My Best Friend (2:39)
6. So Mean To Me (3:39)
7. Wild About You (2:36)
8. Sweet Little Woman (Vocal by Little Johnny Jones) (2:59)
9. Long Tall Woman (2:52)
10. Where Can My Baby Be (3:07)
11. Dark & Dreary (3:24)
12. My Baby's Gone (2:20)
13. I May Be Wrong (Vocal by Little Johnny Jones) (2:47)
14. Elmo's Shuffle (Part 2) (2:48)
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
mp3 320 kbps - 98 Mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b3ba1eb/n/ej.rar
Muddy Waters - Sings "Big Bill" Broonzy - 1959.
Review
Waters's tribute album to the man who gave him his start on the Chicago circuit, this stuff doesn't sound much like Broonzy so much as a virtual recasting of his songs into Muddy's electric Chicago style. Evidently the first time Waters and his band were recorded in stereo, the highlights include high voltage takes on "When I Get to Drinkin'" and "The Mopper's Blues," with some really great harp from James Cotton as an added bonus.
Track Listings
1. Tell Me Baby
2. Southbound Train
3. When I Get to Thinking
4. Just a dream (On My Mind)
5. Double Trouble
6. I Feel So Good
7. I Done Got Wise
8. Mopper's Blues
9. Lonesome Road Blues
10. Hey, Hey
Personnel:
Muddy Waters - vocals & guitar
James Cotton – harmonica
Pat Hare – guitar
Otis Spann – piano
Andrew Stephenson – bass
Francey Clay – drums
Willie Smith - drums
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
FLAC - 24 Bit, 96 kHz vinyl Rip - 572 Mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b44a3dd/n/mwsbbb.rar
Waters's tribute album to the man who gave him his start on the Chicago circuit, this stuff doesn't sound much like Broonzy so much as a virtual recasting of his songs into Muddy's electric Chicago style. Evidently the first time Waters and his band were recorded in stereo, the highlights include high voltage takes on "When I Get to Drinkin'" and "The Mopper's Blues," with some really great harp from James Cotton as an added bonus.
Track Listings
1. Tell Me Baby
2. Southbound Train
3. When I Get to Thinking
4. Just a dream (On My Mind)
5. Double Trouble
6. I Feel So Good
7. I Done Got Wise
8. Mopper's Blues
9. Lonesome Road Blues
10. Hey, Hey
Personnel:
Muddy Waters - vocals & guitar
James Cotton – harmonica
Pat Hare – guitar
Otis Spann – piano
Andrew Stephenson – bass
Francey Clay – drums
Willie Smith - drums
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
FLAC - 24 Bit, 96 kHz vinyl Rip - 572 Mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b44a3dd/n/mwsbbb.rar
Magic Sam's Blues Band - West Side Soul - 1967.
Review
To call West Side Soul one of the great blues albums, one of the key albums (if not the key album) of modern electric blues is all true, but it tends to diminish and academicize Magic Sam's debut album. This is the inevitable side effect of time, when an album that is decades old enters the history books, but this isn't an album that should be preserved in amber, seen only as an important record. Because this is a record that is exploding with life, a record with so much energy, it doesn't sound old. Of course, part of the reason it sounds so modern is because this is the template for most modern blues, whether it comes from Chicago or elsewhere. Magic Sam may not have been the first to blend uptown soul and urban blues, but he was the first to capture not just the passion of soul, but also its subtle elegance, while retaining the firepower of an after-hours blues joint. Listen to how the album begins, with "That's All I Need," a swinging tune that has as much in common with Curtis Mayfield as it does Muddy Waters, but it doesn't sound like either -- it's a synthesis masterminded by Magic Sam, rolling along on the magnificent, delayed cadence of his guitar and powered by his impassioned vocals. West Side Soul would be remarkable if it only had this kind of soul-blues, but it also is filled with blistering, charged electric blues, fueled by wild playing by Magic Sam and Mighty Joe Young -- not just on the solos, either, but in the rhythm (witness how "I Feel So Good [I Wanna Boogie]" feels unhinged as it barrels along). Similarly, Magic Sam's vocals are sensitive or forceful, depending on what the song calls for. Some of these elements might have been heard before, but never in a setting so bristling with energy and inventiveness; it doesn't sound like it was recorded in a studio, it sounds like the best night in a packed club. But it's more than that, because there's a diversity in the sound here, an originality so fearless, he not only makes "Sweet Home Chicago" his own (no version before or since is as definitive as this), he creates the soul-injected, high-voltage modern blues sound that everybody has emulated and nobody has topped in the years since. And, again, that makes it sound like a history lesson, but it's not. This music is alive, vibrant, and vital -- nothing sounds as tortured as "I Need You So Bad," no boogie is as infectious as "Mama, Mama Talk to Your Daughter," no blues as haunting as "All of Your Love." No matter what year you listen to it, you'll never hear a better, more exciting record that year.
Password and Links:
mississippimoan
FLAC - 24 bit, 96 kHz Vinyl Rip - 838 Mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b491aed/n/msbwss.part1.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b491g53/n/msbwss.part2.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b4920fg/n/msbwss.part3.rar
To call West Side Soul one of the great blues albums, one of the key albums (if not the key album) of modern electric blues is all true, but it tends to diminish and academicize Magic Sam's debut album. This is the inevitable side effect of time, when an album that is decades old enters the history books, but this isn't an album that should be preserved in amber, seen only as an important record. Because this is a record that is exploding with life, a record with so much energy, it doesn't sound old. Of course, part of the reason it sounds so modern is because this is the template for most modern blues, whether it comes from Chicago or elsewhere. Magic Sam may not have been the first to blend uptown soul and urban blues, but he was the first to capture not just the passion of soul, but also its subtle elegance, while retaining the firepower of an after-hours blues joint. Listen to how the album begins, with "That's All I Need," a swinging tune that has as much in common with Curtis Mayfield as it does Muddy Waters, but it doesn't sound like either -- it's a synthesis masterminded by Magic Sam, rolling along on the magnificent, delayed cadence of his guitar and powered by his impassioned vocals. West Side Soul would be remarkable if it only had this kind of soul-blues, but it also is filled with blistering, charged electric blues, fueled by wild playing by Magic Sam and Mighty Joe Young -- not just on the solos, either, but in the rhythm (witness how "I Feel So Good [I Wanna Boogie]" feels unhinged as it barrels along). Similarly, Magic Sam's vocals are sensitive or forceful, depending on what the song calls for. Some of these elements might have been heard before, but never in a setting so bristling with energy and inventiveness; it doesn't sound like it was recorded in a studio, it sounds like the best night in a packed club. But it's more than that, because there's a diversity in the sound here, an originality so fearless, he not only makes "Sweet Home Chicago" his own (no version before or since is as definitive as this), he creates the soul-injected, high-voltage modern blues sound that everybody has emulated and nobody has topped in the years since. And, again, that makes it sound like a history lesson, but it's not. This music is alive, vibrant, and vital -- nothing sounds as tortured as "I Need You So Bad," no boogie is as infectious as "Mama, Mama Talk to Your Daughter," no blues as haunting as "All of Your Love." No matter what year you listen to it, you'll never hear a better, more exciting record that year.
Password and Links:
mississippimoan
FLAC - 24 bit, 96 kHz Vinyl Rip - 838 Mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b491aed/n/msbwss.part1.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b491g53/n/msbwss.part2.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b4920fg/n/msbwss.part3.rar
Buddy Guy And Junior Wells - Going Back To Acoustic.
Review By Hi Fi issue 45, By Reuben Parry
Fantastic transparency, a jaw dropping presentation of rough hewed vocal dynamic shifts and the kind of inner details that scream \"intimacy\" recreates the atmospheric roots of the Deep South - making this a must own record from a sonic perspective as well. Guy and Wells chew over those gristle and bone themes that have preoccupied generations (both through their own songs and those penned by the likes of John Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters and Sunny Joe) and in the process they reveal the full width, depth, scale and cultural impact of the blues legacy.
RECORDING 10/10
MUSIC 9/10
Tracklisting
Side 1: Boogie Chillen/I’m In The Mood/Don’t Leave Me/Give Me My Coat And Shoes*/ Medley:Baby What You Want Me To Do/That’s Allright**
Side 2: Big Boat(Buddy and Junior’s Thing)/High Heel Sneakers/My Home Is In The Delta/Wrong Doing Woman/Diggin’ My Potatoes
Personnel:
Buddy Guy : acoustic six strings guitar on all tunes except * on which he plays a twelve strings guitar. Vocals on all tracks Side 1.
Junior Wells: harmonica, vocals on ** and all tracks Side 2
All tunes selected by Buddy Guy and Junior Wells
Password and Links:
mississippimoan
FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz 180 g Vinyl Rip
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b499805/n/gandbgta.part1.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b499e51/n/gandbgta.part2.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b499g3f/n/gandbgta.part3.rar
George 'Harmonica' Smith - Now You Can Talk About Me - 1998.
Review
If you like great blues harmonica playing, you're going to love Now You Can Talk About Me. Add Smith's name to the list of all-time greats near the top with this one.
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
FLAC - 745 Mb - 24 bit , 96 khz Vinyl Rip!
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b4dfgef/n/ghs.rar
If you like great blues harmonica playing, you're going to love Now You Can Talk About Me. Add Smith's name to the list of all-time greats near the top with this one.
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
FLAC - 745 Mb - 24 bit , 96 khz Vinyl Rip!
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b4dfgef/n/ghs.rar
Junior Wells - Hoodoo Man Blues - 45 Rpm, 24/ 96 kHz Vinyl Rip.
Review
One of the truly classic blues albums of the 1960s, and one of the first to fully document the smoky ambience of a night at a West Side nightspot in the superior acoustics of a recording studio. Wells just set up with his usual cohorts -- guitarist Buddy Guy (billed as "Friendly Chap" on first vinyl pressings), bassist Jack Myers, and drummer Billy Warren -- and proceeded to blow up a storm, bringing an immediacy to "Snatch It Back and Hold It," "You Don't Love Me," "Chitlin con Carne," and the rest of the tracks that is absolutely mesmerizing.
Password and Link:
mississippimon
FLAC - 24 bit, 96 kHz 45 Rpm vinyl Rip!!! 771 Mb.
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b4hd982/n/jwhmb.rar
Sonny Terry - Sonny Is King - 1962.
Review
Although their styles were regions apart and they'd never performed together previously, Georgia harmonica ace Sonny Terry and Texas guitar titan Lightnin' Hopkins fit like foot in sock when producer Kenneth S. Goldstein paired them at Rudy Van Gelder's studio on October 26, 1960. As LeRoi Jones observed in the original album notes, "There is a meeting of ways, where the light and the sad seem to come together simply as blues." Selections six through 10 were recorded the following year, and Terry was back in the more familiar company of another great guitarist, his longtime partner Brownie McGhee.
Password and Links:
mississippimoan
FLAC - 24 bit, 96 kHz Vinyl Rip - 667 mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b51ac36/n/sik.part1.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b51afh8/n/sik.part2.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b51ah1e/n/sik.part3.rar
Mississippi Fred McDowell - I Do Not Play Rock 'N' Roll - 1969.
Review
Blues purists were disappointed to hear McDowell pick up an electric guitar for the first time on this LP, as well as work with a young, white rhythm section. To the rest of the listeners, this session sounds pretty good, McDowell's vocals, guitar playing, and integrity coming through just as strongly as it had on his acoustic work.
Password and Link:
mississippimoan
FLAC - 24 Bit, 96 kHz Vinyl Rip - 805 Mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b537cff/n/mmcd.rar
Chuck Berry - St. Louis to Liverpool
Review
This album puts the lie to the popular myth that Chuck Berry's music started to fade away around the same time that the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, et al. emerged covering his stuff. His songwriting is as strong here as ever -- side one is packed with now-familiar fare like "Little Marie" (a sequel to "Memphis, Tennessee"), "No Particular Place to Go," "Promised Land," and "You Never Can Tell," but even filler tracks like "Our Little Rendezvous" and "You Two" are among Berry's better album numbers, the latter showing off the slightly softer pop/R&B side to his music that many listeners forget about. Side two includes a bunch of tracks, including the hard-rocking "Go Bobby Soxer" and the even better "Brenda Lee," the slow blues "Things I Used to Do" (with a killer guitar break), and the instrumentals "Liverpool Drive" and "Night Beat," one fast and the other slow, that never get reissued or compiled anywhere.
Password and Links:
mississippimoan
FLAC - 607 Mb
24 Bit, 96 k Hz Vinyl Rip
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b540a6h/n/cb.part1.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b541f5c/n/cb.part2.rar
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b541ed0/n/cb.part3.rar
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