Blowing The Fuse - Classics That Rocked The Jukebox In 1954

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Blowing The Fuse - Classics That Rocked The Jukebox In 1954 (2004)

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1. Gee - Davis
2. You're So Fine - Jacobs, W.
3. Saving My Love for You - Johnson, S.
4. I'll Be True - Morris, Joe
5. I Didn't Want to Do It - Smith, A.
6. A Sunday Kind of Love - Bell, Barbara
7. I Do - Pauling
8. I'm Just Your Fool - Johnson, Woodrow
9. The Things That I Used to Do - Guitar Slim
10. Lovey Dovey - Curtis, Eddie
11. It Should Have Been Me - Curtis, Memphis
12. Goodnite Sweetheart, Goodnite - Carter, Calvin
13. Big Heavy (Blue Light Boogie) - Eggleston, C.
14. Work With Me Annie - Ballard, H.
15. Jock-A-Mo - Crawford, James "Su
16. I Just Want to Make Love to You - Dixon, Willie 
17. I Feel So Sad - Willis, C. 
18. Sh-Boom - Edwards, William
19. Shake, Rattle and Roll - Calhoun, Charles
20. Oh What a Dream - Willis, Chuck 
21. Riot in Cell Block #9 - Leiber, Jerry
22. Honey Love - McPhatter, C.
23. Evil Is Goin' On - Dixon, Willie 
24. Opp Shoop - Gunter, Shirley						play
25. Jump Children - Bartholomew, Dave				play
26. Gloria - Navarro, Esther
27. You Upset Me Baby - Josea, J.
28. Hearts of Stone - Jackson
29. All Night Long - Gray, J.

 

Blowing the Fuse is a killer series of compilation CDs issued by Germany's premier archivist label, Bear Family. Subtitled "R&B Classics That Rocked the Jukebox," each volume is compiled by year. 1954 was a boom year for jukeboxes across the United States as rhythm & blues and rock & roll maintained their collision course. This volume contains 29 affirmed classics of the early postwar years. The more well-known tunes of the era are given great balance by some nearly forgotten gems that are juxtaposed in the brilliant sequencing -- by producer Dave "Daddy Cool" Booth. Highlights from this volume are the Spiders' "I Didn't Want to Do It," the Cadillacs' "Gloria," the Chords' "Sh-Boom," Ray Charles' "It Should Have Been Me," and Dave Bartholomew's "Jump Children." The package is beautiful with Colin Escott's liner notes detailing every cut, accompanied by photographs and a lovely digipack. Sound quality is as good as it can be for archival material, making this a fine introduction to postwar R&B for the novice and a killer chronological listen for the connoisseur. ---Thom Jurek, allmusic.com

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Last Updated (Wednesday, 09 September 2020 16:59)