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Music CD - John Lee Hooker: It Serves You Right to Suffer

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Music CD: It Serves You Right to Suffer Artist: John Lee Hooker
List Price: $6.98
Our Price: $2.82
Your Save: $ 4.16 ( 60% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Mca Special Products
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Shake It Baby 2. Country Boy 3. Bottle Up & Go 4. You're Wrong 5. Sugar Mama 6. Decoration Day 7. Money 8. It Serves You Right To Suffer
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0008811202521 Format: Original recording remastered Label: Mca Special Products Manufacturer: Mca Special Products Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Mca Special Products Release Date: 1999-07-27 Studio: Mca Special Products
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Top Notch John Lee Hooker Comment: This is a great John Lee Hooker and probably one of the best blues albums period. The sound quality on this album is top notch (this is not true with all John Lee Hooker material or blues in general). This also includes some of Hooker's best songs, including "It Serves You Right to Suffer" and "Sugar Mama".
The real deal of this album is that Hooker is trying to mainstream himself here. This is not from the classic Hooker period (but it is a classic album). This album came out in the 60's after the start of the British Invasion and this is Hooker's attempt to make a mainstream album for those who were into British Invasion groups. This becomes evident during Hooker's version of "Money". Typically the blues artists that tried to make a mainstream/ pop album lost a lot of what makes them great but what is so amazing about this album is that Hooker makes a mainstream album and sounds like Hooker. One of Hooker's top five albums ever. You need to buy this.
Customer Rating:      Summary: It serves you right to suffer Comment: This is the real deal. John Lee Hooker with some of his strongest blues and at a rock bottom price. YOu can't beat it with a stick!
Customer Rating:      Summary: One of John Lee's best... Comment: Don't let the price fool you, this is not some bargain bin compilation, this was an official release from John Lee Hooker, and a great one. This disc is one of his strongest efforts from the 1965-1974 period. There isn't a weak song on here. "Shake It Baby" is one of my favorite John Lee songs and has an awesome high scream from him towards the middle. "Decoration Day" is another classic as is the title track. This CD captures all the moods of John Lee Hooker, the slow and brooding, the uptempo boogie, and everything in between. I would have spent three times as much on this great disc, but for $7 this is a STEAL.
Customer Rating:      Summary: hunker down with the hooker Comment: I dared to buy this and yes, I did it for the free shipping. Definitely worth it for the definitive Hooker sound. Tunes mostly written by Hooker himself. Originally released in 1966, before the commercialized later versions. A rough raspy "Money" more gritty than the Beatles. And a sweet rendition of Decoration Day that gives a glimpse of John Lee's deep sorrow and hunger wrought thru the blues. Whether it is the myth or the man, you can feel it. Go get lost in the blues. it's Short, sweet, somber and sassy. What have you got to lose?
Customer Rating:      Summary: good cd Comment: The review below is interesting, how is $5.99 a mere 5 bones?
Sounds more like 6 bones to me.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Originally released on Impulse in 1966, It Serves You Right to Suffer may not contain John Lee Hooker's better-known material, but it does serve up eight tracks of topnotch blues, complete with the boogie groove that Hooker does so well. The digital remastering for this CD is a blessing; the recording sounds almost as clean as one made today. That prevents the listener from being distracted from this album's many delights: the uptempo, low-key "Shake It Baby"; the relaxed but rhythmically tight "Country Boy"; the danceable "Bottle Up & Go"; and the slow, sexy shuffle of "Sugar Mama." Especially worth hearing, however, is the title track, which strikes a perfect tension between musicality and mood. --Genevieve Williams
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