Search - John Lee Hooker :: Real Folk Blues / More Real Folk Blues

Real Folk Blues / More Real Folk Blues
John Lee Hooker
Real Folk Blues / More Real Folk Blues
Genres: Blues, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (18) - Disc #1

Delta native son turned Detroit and Chicago electric-blues groove king John Lee Hooker had been recording for nearly 20 years (for at least a half-dozen labels under as many aliases) when he cut these tracks for Chess Reco...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: John Lee Hooker
Title: Real Folk Blues / More Real Folk Blues
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Chess
Original Release Date: 1/1/1966
Re-Release Date: 3/12/2002
Album Type: Original recording remastered
Genres: Blues, Pop
Styles: Contemporary Blues, Traditional Blues, Electric Blues
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 008811282127, 0008811282127

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Delta native son turned Detroit and Chicago electric-blues groove king John Lee Hooker had been recording for nearly 20 years (for at least a half-dozen labels under as many aliases) when he cut these tracks for Chess Records in the mid-'60s. If the original concept behind the Chicago label's Real Folk Blues series (also featuring collections by legends Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, and Sonny Boy Williamson) belatedly attempted to cash in on a '60s acoustic folk boom forever changed the minute Dylan strapped on an electric guitar, it yielded some blues gems nonetheless. Hooker's 1966 Chess sessions find him working in a band format, which could be a risky proposition for a musician all too happy to meditate endlessly on a single groove and often unrestrained by the niceties of meter and 12-bar form. But with the able and alert assistance of guitarist Eddie Burns, pianist Lafayette Leake, and drummer Fred Below, Hooker stretches out and turns in one of his most expressive and inventive vocal performances. Whether he's loping through the feverish boogie of "Let's Go Out Tonight," ruminating on romance in a sinister remake of his '51 hit "I'm in the Mood," or expanding the genre's very boundaries with the eerie "Waterfront" (a track liner-note writer Chris Morris astutely credits for inspiring Van Morrison's vocal style), Hooker makes you believe every word. This is also the session that yielded the original "One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer," long a staple of latter-day blues-rocker George Thorogood's act. --Jerry McCulley
 

CD Reviews

You can't go wrong with John Lee Hooker and a Clean Polished
A. Woodley | 01/13/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Some John Lee Hooker albums are hard on the ears. That is of course no fault of Mr. Hooker's but simply the recording quality. These are songs that Hooker recorded for the Chess label which sound great. Whether you've never heard John Lee Hooker or are a big fan, you really need this album. The reason is easily summed up in one word: singing. The man has such a mean howl. If Mr. Hooker's voice just dosen't grab you and squeeze your guts than it's possible your heartless. I'm not saying it's a fact but it would probably be a good indicator."
"Hey Mister Bartender...Come Here!"
Mark Barry at Reckless Records, Lon | UK | 02/10/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This 2002 Universal CD on MCA-Chess 088 112- 821-2 reissues two stunning albums from the mighty Hook at the height of his blues power. It's also part of the "Blues Classics - Remastered & Revisited" series of 10 titles and is an absolute blues peach.



Here's a detailed track breakdown first (79:47 minutes):



1. Let's Go Out Tonight

2. Peace Lovin' Man

3. Stella Mae

4. I Put My Trust In You

5. I'm In The Mood

6. You Know, I Know

7. I'll Never Trust Your Love Again

8. On Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer

9. The Waterfront



Tracks 1 to 9 are the album "The Real Folk Blues" issued October 1966 in the USA on Chess LP 1508 - all tracks were written by John Lee Hooker except "I'm In The Mood" which was co-written with Bernard Besman.



10. This Land Is Nobody's Land

11. Deep Blue Sea

12. Nobody Knows

13. Mustang Sally & GTO

14. Lead Me

15. Catfish

16. I Can't Quit You Baby

17. Want Ad Blues

18. House Rent Blues



Tracks 10 to 18 are the album "More Real Folk Blues" issued September 1991 in the USA on MCA-Chess 9329. All tracks were written by John Lee Hooker except "I Can't Quit You Baby", which is a Willie Dixon song 1st issued by OTIS RUSH on Cobra Records 5000 in 1956 (it was also famously covered by Led Zeppelin on their 1969 debut album).



The band on both sessions were:

JOHN LEE HOOKER - Guitar and Vocals

EDDIE BURNS - Guitar

LAFAYETTE LEAKE - Piano and Organ

FRED BELOW - Drums



ERICK LABSON of Universal Mastering (has over 800 mastering credits to his name) remastered the original master tapes and the sound is typically magnificent - fantastically clear. The drums, vocals, the bass and especially the duel guitar chugging of Burns and Hooker - all of it - muscular and in your face - and in all the right ways.



The 12-page booklet has a short essay on the album by CHRIS MORRIS of Billboard fame and then follows that with the album's original liner notes and reissue credits.



But the big surprise for fans will the 'afterthought' album of 1991 "More Real Folk Blues" - although it's essentially more of the same, the quality never lets up and it absolutely rocks. It isn't remotely "folk" in its blues approach - most of the tunes are full band work outs - funky blues - with an almost James Brown 1966 vibe to the rhythms - very, very cool stuff indeed. Check out "Mustang Sally & GTO" on iTunes for a taster - it perfectly compliments "Stella Mae" on the 1966 original. The solo performance on "The Waterfront" is beautiful - the tune is `so' quiet - yet the hiss level isn't that bad - a sweet remaster by Labson.



"I said the night time is the right time...I'm in the mood for love..." John Lee moaned on his famous sex song. Well on the evidence of this compilation - yeah baby is all I can say!



A much missed blues man - and a highly recommended reminder of why.



PS: This CD is also part of the "Blues Classics - Remastered And Revisited" Series. For a list of 10 titles in the Series - see my posting in Listmania.

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