Gene Phillips & His Rhythm Aces - Drinkin' and Stinkin'

Gene Phillips & His Rhythm Aces - Drinkin' and Stinkin'
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Album Details

Title: Drinkin' and Stinkin'
Artist: Gene Phillips & His Rhythm Aces
Release Date: 7/22/2003
Re-Released On: 6/17/2003
Label: Ace
UPC: 029667189422
Genre: Blues
Styles: Early R&B, Urban Blues, Jump Blues
Moods: Earnest, Exuberant, Fun, Joyous, Rollicking, Rousing, Amiable/Good-Natured, Boisterous, Earthy, Freewheeling
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Boogie Everywhere [Take 1][#]
  2. I've Been Fooled Before [Take 3][#]
  3. Stinkin' Drunk
  4. Hey Lawdy Mama [Take 3][#]
  5. You Can't Come Back Home
  6. Hey Now [#]
  7. Royal Boogie [Take 1][#]
  8. Getting Down Wrong
  9. I Want a Little Girl
  10. Women Women Women [Take 1][#]
  11. I Could Make You Love Me
  12. Rock Bottom
  13. Just a Dream
  14. Superstitious Woman [Take 1][#]
  15. Rear End Blues [Live]
  16. What's the Matter [Live]
  17. You Gotta Toe the Line
  18. 304 Boogie
  19. Three O'Clock in the Morning [Take 1][#]

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2003CDAce894

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

The cream of Phillips' recordings for Modern in the late '40s and early '50s was collected on the previous Ace anthology Swinging the Blues. Inevitably, there's a little bit of a sweep-up-the-leftovers feeling about this subsequent compilation, which combines sides from 1947-1951 singles that didn't make it onto Swinging the Blues with eight previously unissued alternate takes and three tracks from the era that didn't appear until a 1988 Ace reissue. Musically, however, it's about on par with the pieces chosen for Swinging the Blues, again revealing Phillips as one of the ablest just-post-World War II artists performing in the good-humored Louis Jordan style. Sometimes that humor gets a bit of a womanizing and risqué edge, as on "Stinkin' Drunk," "Rear End Blues," and "Women Women Women," but it's subservient to the ebullient boogie and jump blues, with some ballads thrown in for a change of pace. Phillips doesn't show off on guitar often, but when he does solo, as he does briefly on a part of the instrumental "Royal Boogie," he sparkles as an early pioneer of r&b electric guitar. The sound is good, though there's quite a bit of surface noise on some cuts due to the unavailability of pristine source tapes. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Al WichardDrums
Arthur EdwardsBass
Bill DavisBass
Charlie ThompsonDrums
Clarence JonesBass
Gene PhillipsGuitar (Steel), Vocals, Guitar
Jack McVeaSax (Tenor)
Jake "Vernon" PorterTrumpet
Lee JonesPiano
Lloyd GlennPiano
Marshall RoyalSax (Alto)
Maxwell Street Jimmy DavisSax (Tenor)
Peter GibbonResearch
Ray ToppingResearch
Russ WapenskyResearch
Sammy YatesTrumpet
Tony RounceAssembly, Liner Notes, Research
William StreetserDrums