|
|
Music CD - Muddy Waters: His Best: 1947 to 1955

|
Music CD: His Best: 1947 to 1955 Artist: Muddy Waters
List Price: $13.98
Our Price: $10.25
Your Save: $ 3.73 ( 27% )
Availability:
Manufacturer: Chess
|
Average Customer Rating:     

|
|
Tracks:
|
1. I Can't Be Satisfied 2. I Feel Like Going Home 3. Train Fare Blues 4. Rollin' And Tumblin', Part 1 5. Rollin' Stone 6. Louisiana Blues 7. Long Distance Call 8. Honey Bee 9. She Moves Me 10. Still A Fool 11. Standing Around Crying 12. Baby Please Don't Go 13. I Want You To Love Me 14. I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man 15. I Just Want To Make Love To You 16. I'm Ready 17. Young Fashioned Ways 18. Mannish Boy 19. Sugar Sweet 20. Trouble No More
|
|
|
Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0076732937020 Format: Original recording remastered Label: Chess Manufacturer: Chess Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Chess Release Date: 1997-03-25 Studio: Chess
|
|
|
|
|
|
Spotlight customer reviews:
|
Customer Rating:      Summary: Back Down to the Roots of Rock Comment: There may be slightly (and I do mean slightly) better produced Muddy Waters CDs, but this stands out as my favorite. It has an intimate, yet at the same time outstanding, archival feel. Without R+B musicians like Muddy Waters its hard to imagine the evolution of mainstream Rock.
This CD has got to be in any music anthology, and certainly in any R&B collection.
It is a cultural treasure.
Martin Scorsese Presents the Blues: Muddy Waters
At Newport
Let's Roll
Lady Day: The Best of Billie Holiday
The Ultimate Collection
The Essential Bessie Smith
The Definitive Soul Collection
Customer Rating:      Summary: The foundation of hard rock is right here! Comment: If it weren't for Muddy Waters, hard rock might look totally different...if it would have even come about. So many classic bands took inspiration from Muddy or covered his songs. Just look at the Rolling Stones (who took their name from one of his songs and covered "I Just Wanna Make Love to You"), the Allman Brothers ("Trouble No More"), Aerosmith (who covered two songs on their recent HONKIN' ON BOBO), Ted Nugent ("Baby Please Don't Go"), Eric Clapton ("I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man") and many others.
But, that statement ignores the quality of this music, which is great. The early tracks like "I Can't Be Satisfied" and "Rollin' and Tumblin' (Pt. 1)" are raw and intimate, just Muddy backed with acoustic guitar and stand-up bass. But the later electric tracks are even better. "I'm Ready," "Mannish Boy," "I Want You to Love Me," and more are stone cold blues classics. Muddy's backing band of the time included Willie Dixon and Little Walter and their great ensemble playing on these tracks contribute to their greatness.
This is a mandatory CD for fans of blues and rock. Get it now.
Customer Rating:      Summary: "I gotta ax handle pistol/On a graveyard frame/That shoots tombstone bullets/Wearing balls and chain" Comment: Anyone besides me love this line? Anyway...
Though it's hard to say who invented rock, bluesmen can be given much credit for it. I really find it surprising that my friends who are, like me, rock fans aren't into the blues, since blues pretty much shaped rock.
Okay, onto the album itself. It's a damned good one, if you're a fan of the blues and this isn't in your collection, the Ghost of Muddy Waters will be coming for you, and he'll be pissed... especially if it's after a long night of him drinkin' T.N.T and smokin' dynamite. Believe me. You need classics like I Can't Be Satisfied, Rollin' and Tumblin', Rollin' Stone, Baby Please Don't Go, I Just Want to Make Love to You, Hoochie Coochie Man, I'm Ready, Mannish Boy and Trouble No More in your collection. And though some rock bands covered these songs excellently, Muddy's versions win out nine times of ten. Oh, and did I mention Willie Dixon plays bass on, and writes, most of these songs?
Customer Rating:      Summary: There really isn't much to say. Comment: I don't see how anyone could improve. In a talent competition he'd obliterate the competitors on his first note.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Muddy Is The Man!!! Comment: If you are a blues fan you have to have at least one Muddy Waters CD and this would be the one. "Mannish Boy" is probably my favorite. This is the first Muddy Waters song I ever heard although I had heard plenty of his songs done by other artists. It was used in a beer commercial (Budweiser I believe)back in the early '90's and I had to find out who it was. His version of the often recored "Baby Please Don't Go" is my favorite version of this song. This is an essential CD if you are just getting into blues. Also see Howling Wolf's "Rocking Chair album" and "Moaning at Midnight." And for Delta Blues, Robert Johnson's complete recordings since it is only two CDs and Son House's "Father of the Delta Blues."
|
|
|
Editorial Reviews:
|
One of the best recordings in Chess Records' 50th Anniverary series is the first of two bookend Muddy Waters collections, His Best 1947-55. Documenting Waters's most creatively and commercially successful years at Aristocrat/Chess, this CD begins with his formative years and ends with Waters at his peak. So you're in for a lot of terrific bottleneck slide guitar work as well as electric Chicago blues. What's to criticize? Superb remasterings of "I Can't Be Satisfied," "Rollin' and Tumblin'," "I'm Ready," and "Mannish Boy" are simply beyond reproach. With simple bass accompaniment from Ernest "Big" Crawford, Waters's bottleneck tracks are spare, haunting and, quite frankly, perfect country blues. And listening to Waters, Little Walter, Willie Dixon, and Jimmy Rogers piece together (and perfect very quickly) the classic Chicago sound is pure blues epiphany. At the very least, this collection shows you why Waters's rollicking stop-time classics like "Mannish Boy" and "I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man" have sparked endless imitations over the years--and why nobody has played them better since. --Ken Hohman
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|