B.B. King: The Great B.B. King
The Great B.B. King
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 1-2 Wochen
(soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
(soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
EUR 11,99*
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: Ace
- Bestellnummer: 2237705
- Erscheinungstermin: 1.8.2005
Weitere Ausgaben von The Great B.B. King
The ninth instalment in Ace's attractively priced resuscitation and expansion of B. B. King's Crown albums, courtesy of series supervisor John Broven, showcases King's fifth LP for the budget label, originally issued in early 1960. It finds B. B. in full stride and reflects an eclecticism that displayed the breadth of B. B.'s music and talents, and represented attempts to cope with changing trends. Accordingly, the album presents the original mixture of mostly later RPM and early Kent singles anchored by the unified album version of the classic two-part single 'Sweet Sixteen' which ranks among B. B.'s most definitive and impassioned moments. It ranges through some of the signature 50s hits which were staples on ghetto jukeboxes and record players (five of the tracks charted either R&B or Pop); a couple of flip sides; and a handful of ballads and rock'n'roll flirtations, enhanced with eight mostly obscure bonus tracks.
The original LP reached back to 1952 for a Memphis alternate take of 'Some Day Somewhere' (B. B.'s rendition of Lowell Fulson's 'Midnight Showers Of Rain', also covered in Memphis by Willie Nix). But the heart of the album presented B. B. in a more fully-developed mode, at his peak of vocal range and suppleness and closer to the crystallisation of a guitar style that rapidly became established as the model for contemporary blues, framed by the nuanced, stylish arrangements of Maxwell Davis and occasionally topped off with his tenor sax solos. Plas Johnson, the New Orleans transplant who supplanted Davis as the first call R & B tenor in Los Angeles as blues was elbowed out by rock'n'roll, makes a rousing contribution similar to his solo on T-Bone Walker's 'Two Bones And A Pick' on the RPM single and bonus track 'Bim Bam'. It was an unabashed rock'n'roll outing, with lyric references to hits of the day, which B. B. disparages. Controversy almost drips from the grooves despite Plas' efforts, although the jive dancers will almost certainly lap it up.
One of B. B.'s greatest and favourite foils, pianist Lloyd Glenn, also graces several tracks, perhaps most notably on the alternate take of 'Down Now' which was in part B. B.'s lament about his Internal Revenue Service problems. The 1955 session-mate ballads 'Sneakin' Around' and 'I Was Blind' (with a vocal chorus by some "Kings Men" who couldn't have got much further from 'Louie Louie') remind us how early a softer side of B. B. was evident. On more solid blues ground, it's worth noting Otis Rush's adaptation of 'Be Careful Of A Fool' into his version of 'Mean Old World' and B. B.'s sanitisation of Dr Clayton's song of homicidal intent, 'Cheating And Lying Blues', into 'Quit My Baby'.
The rest of the bonus cuts reflect equal obscurity and diversity. Why the ultra-saccharine string-laden 'Young Dreamers' was redone for ABC is a question we will leave to others to ponder. The alternates of 'Trouble In Mind' (complete with a nice Maxwell Davis solo not on the Kent single and his usual classy chart) and the strong first take of 'Down Now' evoke more commitment from B. B. and no doubt less ambivalence from most listeners. The set is rounded out with new stereo mixes of the traditionally rooted 'Broke And Hungry' and 'Shot Gun Blues', 'What A Way To Spend The Night' (whose passing resemblance to B. B.'s 'Treat Me Right' ends after the opening two bars of each verse) and a pre-horn-overdubs 'A Woman Don't Care' from 1965, when B. B. was settling up with the Biharis for his move to ABC.
The songwriting by Ahmet Ertegun (who wrote 'Sweet Sixteen' for Big Joe Turner), Dr Clayton and Lowell Fulson went uncredited originally, while other tracks reflect B. B.'s ongoing awareness of his roots and contemporaries. But through the highs and lows of outside composers, and of influences and flirtations with varying commercial concepts, one thing shines through it all and elevates every track in some way: the individual brilliance of B. B. King, at best at a pinnacle for himself and for the blues and entitled to a few reaches to keep his place with record buyers. Completists, the frugal, and fans of the great B. B. King in his prime can all rejoice, add one more Crown album and a few rarities, and wait for the next instalment in the series.
The original LP reached back to 1952 for a Memphis alternate take of 'Some Day Somewhere' (B. B.'s rendition of Lowell Fulson's 'Midnight Showers Of Rain', also covered in Memphis by Willie Nix). But the heart of the album presented B. B. in a more fully-developed mode, at his peak of vocal range and suppleness and closer to the crystallisation of a guitar style that rapidly became established as the model for contemporary blues, framed by the nuanced, stylish arrangements of Maxwell Davis and occasionally topped off with his tenor sax solos. Plas Johnson, the New Orleans transplant who supplanted Davis as the first call R & B tenor in Los Angeles as blues was elbowed out by rock'n'roll, makes a rousing contribution similar to his solo on T-Bone Walker's 'Two Bones And A Pick' on the RPM single and bonus track 'Bim Bam'. It was an unabashed rock'n'roll outing, with lyric references to hits of the day, which B. B. disparages. Controversy almost drips from the grooves despite Plas' efforts, although the jive dancers will almost certainly lap it up.
One of B. B.'s greatest and favourite foils, pianist Lloyd Glenn, also graces several tracks, perhaps most notably on the alternate take of 'Down Now' which was in part B. B.'s lament about his Internal Revenue Service problems. The 1955 session-mate ballads 'Sneakin' Around' and 'I Was Blind' (with a vocal chorus by some "Kings Men" who couldn't have got much further from 'Louie Louie') remind us how early a softer side of B. B. was evident. On more solid blues ground, it's worth noting Otis Rush's adaptation of 'Be Careful Of A Fool' into his version of 'Mean Old World' and B. B.'s sanitisation of Dr Clayton's song of homicidal intent, 'Cheating And Lying Blues', into 'Quit My Baby'.
The rest of the bonus cuts reflect equal obscurity and diversity. Why the ultra-saccharine string-laden 'Young Dreamers' was redone for ABC is a question we will leave to others to ponder. The alternates of 'Trouble In Mind' (complete with a nice Maxwell Davis solo not on the Kent single and his usual classy chart) and the strong first take of 'Down Now' evoke more commitment from B. B. and no doubt less ambivalence from most listeners. The set is rounded out with new stereo mixes of the traditionally rooted 'Broke And Hungry' and 'Shot Gun Blues', 'What A Way To Spend The Night' (whose passing resemblance to B. B.'s 'Treat Me Right' ends after the opening two bars of each verse) and a pre-horn-overdubs 'A Woman Don't Care' from 1965, when B. B. was settling up with the Biharis for his move to ABC.
The songwriting by Ahmet Ertegun (who wrote 'Sweet Sixteen' for Big Joe Turner), Dr Clayton and Lowell Fulson went uncredited originally, while other tracks reflect B. B.'s ongoing awareness of his roots and contemporaries. But through the highs and lows of outside composers, and of influences and flirtations with varying commercial concepts, one thing shines through it all and elevates every track in some way: the individual brilliance of B. B. King, at best at a pinnacle for himself and for the blues and entitled to a few reaches to keep his place with record buyers. Completists, the frugal, and fans of the great B. B. King in his prime can all rejoice, add one more Crown album and a few rarities, and wait for the next instalment in the series.
- Tracklisting
- Mitwirkende
Disk 1 von 1 (CD)
- 1 Sweet Sixteen [Parts 1 & 2]
- 2 Quit My Baby
- 3 I Was Blind
- 4 What Can I Do
- 5 Someday, Somewhere
- 6 Sneakin' Around
- 7 Ten Long Years
- 8 Be Careful With A Fool
- 9 Whole Lotta Love
- 10 Days Of Old
- 11 Young Dreamers (Previously Unissued Take 1)
- 12 Bim Bam (Previously Unissued Take 1)
- 13 Trouble In Mind (Previously Unissued Take 1)
- 14 Down Now (Previously Unissued Take 1)
- 15 Broke And Hungry (Previously Unissued Take 2)
- 16 Shotgun Blues
- 17 What A Way To Spend The Night (Previously Unissued Take 1)
- 18 A Woman Don't Care (Previously Unissued Take 4)
B.B. King
The Great B.B. King
EUR 11,99*