Memphis Slim - The Folkways Years: 1959-1973

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Album Details

Title: The Folkways Years: 1959-1973
Artist: Memphis Slim
Release Date: 2/22/2000
Label: Smithsonian Folkways Recordings
Duration: 65:51
Album Type(s): Greatest Hits, lyrics/libretto
UPC: 093074012826
Genre: Blues
Styles: Chicago Blues, Acoustic Blues, Piano Blues, Regional Blues
Moods: Earnest, Earthy, Gritty, Intimate, Exuberant, Passionate, Rollicking, Sophisticated, Yearning
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 3
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Joggie Boogie
  2. I Left That Town/Harlem Bound
  3. Key to the Highway
  4. Chicago House Rent Party Blues
  5. Stewball
  6. The Dirty Dozens
  7. Beer Drinking Woman
  8. Walking Blues
  9. Pinetop's Boogie Woogie
  10. San Juan Blues
  11. Prison Bound
  12. If the Rabbit Had a Gun
  13. Backwater Blues
  14. You Name It
  15. M & O Blues
  16. Every Day I Have the Blues
  17. Just a Dream
  18. Midnight Special
  19. The Bells
  20. Mean Old Frisco
  21. The Gimmick

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2000CDSmithsonian Folkways Recordings40128

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

Album Review

These 21 tracks, selected from the recordings Memphis Slim did for Folkways, tend to be in solo piano or sparsely accompanied arrangements, as one would figure since Folkways was a traditionally oriented label. Still, it doesn't sound like a forced or awkward attempt to steer the pianist toward an outdated approach. It's just on the quiet and restrained side, and not different from numerous recordings Memphis Slim did for more commercially minded labels throughout his career. Although half of the material is just Slim alone at the piano (sometimes singing, sometimes not), it does actually show him in a variety of contexts. Willie Dixon accompanies him on bass on a few numbers; Jazz Gillum does the vocal and harmonica for "Key to the Highway" (which is actually a track on which Memphis Slim was the sideman, not the featured artist); Matt Murphy plays electric guitar on a few songs; Pete Seeger joins Memphis Slim and Dixon on "Midnight Special"; and there are actually drums by Jump Jackson on a couple of tunes. It's assured piano blues whatever the situation, not among his very best recordings, but certainly respectable. Unfortunately, the liner notes, quite detailed in most respects, do not give the dates of recordings for the individual tracks; from the sound of things, most of these date from 1959 and the early 1960s, although the title indicates a timespan of 1959-1973. Three of the cuts were previously unreleased, including "Every Day I Have the Blues," the atypical organ instrumental "The Gimmick," and the piano instrumental "The Dirty Dozens." ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Anthony SeegerProduction Supervisor
Carla BordenEditorial Assistant
Charlie PilzerMastering
Christian BeckerProduction Assistant
D.A. SonnebornProduction Supervisor
Kip LornellAnnotation, Producer, Compilation Producer, Compilation
Mary MonseurCoordination
Pete ReinigerSound Supervision
Raeburn FlerlagePhotography