Folk Festival of the Blues

Folk Festival of the Blues

Folk Festival of the Blues

Folk Festival of the Blues

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record - Remastered / Spanish Import / 180 Gram Vinyl)

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Overview

This is a compilation album that isn't, a live album that isn't (at least in a couple of spots), and a Muddy Waters album that isn't, if one counts the appearances by four other artists on it. But for all things it isn't, it is also just happens to be one of the greatest and certainly most underrated live blues album of all time, unbelievably crude, raw, and as real as it gets. Originally issued on Chess' Argo label during the height of the folk music blues revival (hence the goofy title), this was a record that was aimed at a white market who responded in kind. But anybody purchasing it thinking they were getting some nice acoustic coffeehouse blues were in for the reality-check shock of their lives. Recorded on July 26, 1963 at a WPOA live radio broadcast emceed by local Chicago disc jockey Big Bill Hill emanating from the Copacabana Club (hence when this was reissued in 1967, it was retitled Blues From Big Bill's Copacabana), this features Buddy Guy's band as the backup band for everybody, augmented by Muddy's right hand man, pianist Otis Spann. Although Big Bill announces the presence of Little Walter and Sonny Boy Williamson on the album's intro, they're no-shows; the studio version of Williamson's "Bring It On Home" appears here with dubbed on applause (along with the studio version of Guy's "Worried Blues," one of the two bits of audio chicanery here). Everything else is just amazingly raw, crude and blistering, with some of the most electrifying Buddy Guy guitar ever committed to tape, droning saxes, thundering drums, and Otis Spann anchoring everything with consummate elegance, as nobody's bothered to check their tuning in the last half dozen drinks or more. The combination of performances of Guy, Howlin' Wolf, Willie Dixon, and Sonny Boy in tandem with Waters would certainly checklist this one into 'various artists' category, but with half of the 10 tracks here being fronted by Waters, it's clearly Muddy's show all the way. His performances of "I Got My Mojo Working," "She's 19 Years Old," "Clouds In My Heart," "Sitting And Thinking," and the vocal trio effort with Guy and Dixon on the show opening "Wee Wee Baby" are nothing less than exemplary. No matter how you slice it or end up filing it, one would be very hard pressed indeed to find a live blues album that captures the spirit and a moment in time the way this one does. Unavailable on compact disc as of press time, but worth tracking down in its vinyl incarnations at any cost. ~ Cub Koda

Product Details

Release Date: 04/20/2018
Label: Vinyl Lovers
UPC: 8436544171012
Rank: 5643

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Sonny Boy Williamson II   Primary Artist,Harmonica,Vocals
Howlin' Wolf   Primary Artist,Vocals
Buddy Guy   Primary Artist,Guitar,Vocals
Willie Dixon   Primary Artist,Vocals
Muddy Waters   Primary Artist,Vocals
Otis Spann   Piano
Jack Meyers   Bass
Jarrett Gibson   Sax (Tenor)
Donald Hankins   Sax (Baritone)
Al Duncan   Drums
Lafayette Leake   Organ
Fred Below   Drums
Matt Murphy   Guitar
Milton Rector   Bass

Technical Credits

Muddy Waters   Composer
John Lee Hooker   Composer
Robert Plant   Composer
Ralph Bass   Recording Supervision
Al Perkins   Composer
Buddy Guy   Composer
McKinley Morganfield   Composer
Pete Johnson   Composer
Ron Malo   Editing
Joe Turner   Composer
Jimmy Page   Composer
Pat Cerone   Engineer
Hally Wood   Composer
Willie Dixon   Composer
Chester Burnett   Composer
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