Shattered Dreams: Funky Blues
Shattered Dreams: Funky Blues
CD
CD (Compact Disc)
Herkömmliche CD, die mit allen CD-Playern und Computerlaufwerken, aber auch mit den meisten SACD- oder Multiplayern abspielbar ist.
lieferbar innerhalb 2-3 Wochen
(soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
(soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
EUR 15,99*
Verlängerter Rückgabezeitraum bis 31. Januar 2025
Alle zur Rückgabe berechtigten Produkte, die zwischen dem 1. bis 31. Dezember 2024 gekauft wurden, können bis zum 31. Januar 2025 zurückgegeben werden.
- Label: BGP, 1967-78
- Bestellnummer: 4961181
- Erscheinungstermin: 28.3.2011
In den späten 1960er Jahren hatte die Soul Music den Blues endgültig in
der Gunst des schwarzen Amerikas überholt. Wer in der Lage war auch
vor weißem Publikum zu spielen hatte damit eine attraktive Option. Aber
es blieben unzählige, alt hergebrachte Blues-Clubs mit ihrem Stammpublikum
das nach wie vor unterhalten werden wollte. Also wurden Zugeständnisse gemacht, ohne allerdings den neuen frischen Sound mit seinen funky licks etc. zu verleugnen. Buddy Guy, Lowell Fulsion, Al King, Smokey Wilson oder auch Icewater Slim waren Blues-Künstler die es verstanden für einflussreiche Labels wie Stax, Modern oder Jotis jenen ’Funky Blues’ zu kreieren wie er auf diesem Sampler aus den Jahren 1967-78 mit 21 ausgesuchten Tracks hervorragend repräsentiert wird. Und der mittlerweile unter vielen Sammlern heiß begehrt ist. Umfangreiche Linernotes mit vielen, seltenen Archiv-Fotos gibt es wie immer on top.
As soul became the music of black America in the late 60s, blues performers had to adapt to survive. Playing to the white rock crowd was an attractive option, but in hundreds of sweaty, run-down clubs across the US an older urban black audience was still there to be entertained. Blues musicians made a few concessions to the age, added funk licks and a few soul screams and created some seriously good music, which has often been ignored by blues scholars. “Shattered Dreams” is BGP’s celebration of that period.
In recent years funky blues has become a sought-after genre, especially with younger collectors. Numbers such as Finis Tasby’s ‘It Took A Long Time’, Slim Green’s ‘Shake It Up’ and Buddy Guy’s ‘I’m Not The Best’ can all fill a dancefloor with their wild energy. The blues guys could certainly hit a groove, but if this CD captures anything it is a sense of despair you can hear as Smokey Wilson sings ‘You Shattered My Dreams’ – despair for an age that was fading away.
Drawn from the vaults of such influential players as Stax, Modern and legendary producer Johnny Otis, this is exciting music from major names such as Little Milton, Lowell Fulson and Albert King, all using the nous gathered through years on the chitlin’ circuit to keep themselves relevant to record-buying audiences of the day. Elsewhere we have some terminally obscure names and cult heroes. Finis Tasby and Smokey Wilson create music of great worth that was rarely heard at the time, never mind 40 years later. This is music that has been hidden away, sometimes ignored for being neither one thing nor the other.
Put “Shattered Dreams” in the player and you will very quickly be brought into a world of older guys still making it in the world. There is a lot of tough talk, but despite being cool, they are still stuck in a world of trouble full of women that make it hard for them, or who are trying to use them. Listen to Albert King on ‘Playin’ On Me’ and you are listening to a man expounding themes that wouldn’t sound out of place on rap records recorded decades later. The same could be said of Smokey Wilson’s previously unreleased ‘High Time’ or Arthur K Adams’ ‘Gimme Some Of Your Lovin’’.
These 21 tracks define an era when bluesmen were not the big stars they had been a decade or so earlier, struggling to keep it together in a world where their music was fast becoming a thing of the past. (By Dean Rudland / acerecords. co. uk)
As soul became the music of black America in the late 60s, blues performers had to adapt to survive. Playing to the white rock crowd was an attractive option, but in hundreds of sweaty, run-down clubs across the US an older urban black audience was still there to be entertained. Blues musicians made a few concessions to the age, added funk licks and a few soul screams and created some seriously good music, which has often been ignored by blues scholars. “Shattered Dreams” is BGP’s celebration of that period.
In recent years funky blues has become a sought-after genre, especially with younger collectors. Numbers such as Finis Tasby’s ‘It Took A Long Time’, Slim Green’s ‘Shake It Up’ and Buddy Guy’s ‘I’m Not The Best’ can all fill a dancefloor with their wild energy. The blues guys could certainly hit a groove, but if this CD captures anything it is a sense of despair you can hear as Smokey Wilson sings ‘You Shattered My Dreams’ – despair for an age that was fading away.
Drawn from the vaults of such influential players as Stax, Modern and legendary producer Johnny Otis, this is exciting music from major names such as Little Milton, Lowell Fulson and Albert King, all using the nous gathered through years on the chitlin’ circuit to keep themselves relevant to record-buying audiences of the day. Elsewhere we have some terminally obscure names and cult heroes. Finis Tasby and Smokey Wilson create music of great worth that was rarely heard at the time, never mind 40 years later. This is music that has been hidden away, sometimes ignored for being neither one thing nor the other.
Put “Shattered Dreams” in the player and you will very quickly be brought into a world of older guys still making it in the world. There is a lot of tough talk, but despite being cool, they are still stuck in a world of trouble full of women that make it hard for them, or who are trying to use them. Listen to Albert King on ‘Playin’ On Me’ and you are listening to a man expounding themes that wouldn’t sound out of place on rap records recorded decades later. The same could be said of Smokey Wilson’s previously unreleased ‘High Time’ or Arthur K Adams’ ‘Gimme Some Of Your Lovin’’.
These 21 tracks define an era when bluesmen were not the big stars they had been a decade or so earlier, struggling to keep it together in a world where their music was fast becoming a thing of the past. (By Dean Rudland / acerecords. co. uk)
- Tracklisting
- Mitwirkende
Disk 1 von 1 (CD)
- 1 Slim Green: Shake 'em Up
- 2 Finis Tasby: It Took A Long Time
- 3 Al King: Bad Understanding
- 4 Lowell Fulson: Mellow Together
- 5 Johnny Otis Show: Country girl
- 6 Little Milton: That's What Love Will Make You Do
- 7 Icewater Slim: Your Love Is Good Enough For Me
- 8 Albert King: Playing On Me
- 9 Smokey Wilson: You shattered my dreams
- 10 Larry Davis: The Whole World's Down On You
- 11 Finis Tasby: Cloudy day
- 12 Buddy Guy: I'm not the best
- 13 Johnny Otis Show: Comin' at ya baby [Part 2]
- 14 Little Sonny: Eli's pork chop
- 15 Arthur K. Adams: Gimme Some Of Your Lovin'
- 16 Lowell Fulson: Welcome Home
- 17 Albert Washington: No matter what the cost may be
- 18 Smokey Wilson: High Time
- 19 Big Daddy Rucker: You Got Me Movin'
- 20 Freddy Robinson: Good Feeling
- 21 Ray Agee: Tough Competition
Shattered Dreams: Funky Blues
EUR 15,99*