Blues The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/4037.html Wed, 24 Apr 2024 22:04:36 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb Bobby Rush - Blind Snake (2009) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/4037-bobby-rush/17651-bobby-rush-blind-snake-2009.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/4037-bobby-rush/17651-bobby-rush-blind-snake-2009.html Bobby Rush - Blind Snake (2009)

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1	Blind Snake	4:58
2	Hard Feelin' with Me	4:57
3	Swing Low Sweet Chariot	4:23
4	If You Don't Treat Me Better	5:00
5	Tell Me What's Going On	3:40
6	She Alright, She Alright	4:20
7	People Don't Do	5:07
8	Little by Little	4:56
9	Make Love to You	4:00
10	Chinkipen Tree	4:47

Bobby Rush - Guitar, Composer, Harp, Vocals
Fred Young -  Vocals (Background)
Tommy Harris - Bass, Vocals (Background)
Stevie J. -  Guitar, Vocals (Background)
Terry Richardson - Bass
Dexter Witherspoon - Vocals (Background)
Al Hollis - Vocals (Background)
Cedric Vance - Piano, Drums, Horn, Finger Snaps, Vocals (Background), Keyboards

 

I'm a big Bobby Rush fan. Blind Snake is the best record of his recent catalog. The title track is another of Bobby's signature soul-funk tunes with the barely-subtle lyrical innuendo he's famous for. If you are familiar with his hits "Night Fishin" and "I Ain't Studdin Ya" (aka "Hen Pecked" in his live shows) then you know what "Blind Snake" is like.

While the whole record is fantastic, there are some particular standouts: a couple well-known blues tunes reworked in the classic Bobby Rush style, such as Willie Dixon's "Make Love to You" and the standard "Catfish Blues", titled here (with different lyrics) as "She Alright, She Alright"; the gospel standard "Swing Low Sweet Chariot"; my particular favorite "Chinkapin Huntin", an intimate half-spoken, half-sung story about Rush's dad teaching him about playing guitar and chasing big women -- it's irreverent and silly, and still quite touching.

I've been listening to this record for years -- I bought it from the Man himself after one of his annual King Biscuit shows. I have yet to get tired of it, and it's my favorite of the many Bobby Rush albums I own. --- thxman, amazon.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Bobby Rush Wed, 22 Apr 2015 16:02:51 +0000
Bobby Rush - Down In Louisiana (2013) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/4037-bobby-rush/15352-bobby-rush-down-in-louisiana-2013.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/4037-bobby-rush/15352-bobby-rush-down-in-louisiana-2013.html Bobby Rush - Down In Louisiana (2013)

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1. Down in Louisiana
2. You Just Like a Dresser
3. I Ain't the One
4. Tight Money
5. Don't You Cry
6. Boogie in the Dark
7. Raining in my Heart
8. Rock This House
9. What is the Blues
10. Bowlegged Woman
11. Swing Low

Musicians:
Bobby Rush – guitar, harmonica, vocals
Lou Rodriguez – guitar
Paul Brown - Fender Rhodes, Hammond B3, piano, vocals, Wurlitzer
Terry Richardson – bass
Pete Mendillo – drums, percussion

 

A chittlin’ circuit trailblazer, unlike contemporaries like Bobby Bland, Latimore, Little Milton and Johnnie Taylor, Bobby Rush’s career has thrived for more than five decades without the aid of a bona fide hit—well, “Chicken Heads” charted briefly in 1970. Rush has managed this via his energetic and “colorful” shows as well as a steady string of solid, down-home R&B releases. On Down in Louisiana, Rush has outdone himself. The opening/title track here is brilliant. Complete with an accordion, it’s a stew of blues, funk and zydeco that really cooks.

This track should get plenty of radio attention in Southwest Louisiana. It’s followed by “Just Like a Dresser,” which tackles a common blues theme, as does “I Ain’t the One,” with Rush dispensing some frank advice to his ex. He also plays an attractive harmonica solo over a catchy ska-like arrangement. “Tight Money” not only addresses a timely theme and Rush’s—again he plays a timely solo and interjects some Howlin’ Wolf moans. The rousing shuffle “Boogie in the Dark” draws on two impressive Chicago influences—Jimmy Reed and Magic Sam—aka blues gods. Other standout tracks include “Raining in My Heart” (not the Slim Harpo song), which oddly reminds one of Ann Peebles’ 1970s material. So too is the humorous reprise of “Bowlegged Woman,” a song long a part of Rush’s repertoire. Down in Louisiana ends with a rather haunting, nontraditional version of “Swing Low” that somehow works. There’s not a stinker in the bunch here. This is a five-star release and what contemporary blues is all about. --- Jeff Hannusch, offbeat.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Bobby Rush Thu, 02 Jan 2014 20:55:00 +0000