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Elmore James - Got To Move (1981)

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Elmore James - Got To Move (1981)

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A1 	Dust My Broom (60s Version) 	
A2 	Done Somebody Wrong 	
A3 	Knocking At Your Door 	
A4 	Fine Little Mama 	
A5 	Pickin' The Blues 	
A6 	Strange Angels 	
A7 	My Bleeding Heart 	
A8 	I've Got A Right To Love My Baby 	
B1 	Early One Morning 	
B2 	Look On Yonder Wall 	
B3 	Got To Move 	
B4 	Make My Dreams Come True 	
B5 	It Hurts Me Too (60s Version) 	
B6 	Elmore's Contribution To Jazz 	
B7 	Held My Baby Last Night 	
B8 	Everyday I Have The Blues

Elmore James – vocals, guitar
Johnny Jones – piano (tracks: A3, A4, B4, B6, B7)

 

Elmore James was an inspiration in the development of Rock ‘n’ Roll. As a young but talented musician, he shaped the sound and style of music in Mississippi. Elmore’s urge to play a guitar aided in his goal of becoming a star.

Elmore was a Mississippi native who was born in Richland on January 27, 1918, to Leora Brooks. His mother is one reason for his success. She encouraged Elmore to do what he enjoyed and to succeed in his choice of a career. With this encouragement, Elmore began to play a self-made guitar. With some success and the opportunity to play in various juke joints, Elmore befriended Rice Miller, who then became one of Elmore’s friends and colleagues. The friendship assisted Elmore in getting a record deal with Trumpet Records. With one goal accomplished, he began to search for a new success. James moved to Chicago, Illinois, where he formed a new band called The Broomdusters, which featured the piano of Jonny Jones and saxophone player J.T. Brown. The Broomdusters are known for such hits as “Dust My Broom,” “It Hurts Me Too,” and “The Sky Is Crying.” Throughout the years Elmore recorded more than one hundred songs for various record companies, including Modern, Chess, Chief, Fire, Fury, and Enjoy Records. He is known as the King of the Slide, and he helped to shape the rural sounds of the Mississippi Delta Blues into what became Rock ‘n’ Roll.

On May 24, 1963, James suffered a heart attack, which took his life at the age of 45. James not only began his career at an early age but was sadly taken from it at an early age. During his incredible years of creating Rock ‘n’ Roll, Elmore encountered and appeared with many famous musicians, but he has also inspired many musicians. Jimi Hendrix, Fleetwood Mac, and Brian Jones of the Rolling Stones are just a few of the many musicians that he influenced in the course of their careers. With their thanks and gratitude, they have shown their appreciation for James with musical tributes and their prayers. In 1980, long after Elmore’s death, he was elected into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame, and he was later inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame. ---Shannon Love, mswritersandmusicians.com

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Last Updated (Friday, 15 January 2021 18:14)

 

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