Peter Green - Blues By Green

Peter Green - Blues By Green
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Album Details

Title: Blues By Green
Artist: Peter Green
Release Date: 6/10/2003
Label: Fuel 2000 Records
UPC: 030206130720
Genre: Rock
Styles: Modern Electric Blues, Blues-Rock, Psychedelic, Contemporary Pop/Rock, British Blues, Guitar Virtuoso, Contemporary Blues, British Psychedelia, Regional Blues
Moods: Rousing, Boisterous, Earnest, Earthy, Enigmatic, Laid-Back/Mellow, Melancholy, Organic, Passionate, Raucous, Reverent, Somber
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 5
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Walking the Road
  2. Same Old Blues
  3. Born Under a Bad Sign
  4. Last Train to San Antone
  5. Just for You
  6. A Fool No More
  7. Man of the World
  8. Time for Me to Go
  9. White Sky (Love That Evil Woman)
  10. Gotta See Her Tonight
  11. Baby When the Sun Goes Down
  12. Crying Won't Bring You Back
  13. Slabo Day
  14. Little Dreamer

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2003CDFuel 2000 Records061307

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Here is yet another Peter Green collection comprised mainly of material from 1979 through 1983, with the thoroughly enjoyable Fleetwood Mac A-side "Man of the World," from 1969, included for some inexplicable reason. The material here is culled from Green's first return to recording after a six-year hiatus for personal and mental health reasons. The Peter Green who returned to the scene on In the Skies was a leaner and meaner player. His concern was more with the atmospherics of playing blues-inflected material than with the attack of the blues themselves. The opening track from that album, "Slabo Day," with its four-chord repetitive minor-key figure and organic hand percussion, is an anomaly in the Green discography, with the possible exception of "Albatross." Like that track, "Slabo Day" is a showcase for Green's deeply lyrical and mysterious phrasing: taut, open-ended, and razor-sharp. Also from In the Skies come the spooky, mystifying "Just for You," which along with "Black Magic Woman" could have been recorded by Santana, and "A Fool No More," a scathing little blues jam with staccato phrasing that has the wheels coming off the track ever so slowly. And these are indicative. Green upped the production ante a little on his subsequent albums from the period, such as Little Dreamer from 1980, Whatcha Gonna Do? from 1981, White Sky from 1982, and Kolors from 1983, and he continued to develop his singing voice. In fact, cuts such as "Fool No More," "Last Train to San Antone," "Same Old Blues," "Born Under a Bad Sign," and "Gotta See Her Tonight" showcase Green as a consummate british blues singer. These 14 tracks reveal that Green might not have possessed his full self-confidence, but he was restless, adventurous, and in full grasp of his guitaristry. The liner notes by Greg Russo offer a solid if concise documentation of the songs themselves and their respective lineups, and the price is right. This is a true best-of from an overlooked middle period in Green's erratic yet musically wondrous career. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Greg RussoLiner Notes