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://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/867.html Tue, 23 Apr 2024 09:49:04 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb Magic Sam – Chi-Town Boogie & Other Favorites (2014) http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/867-magicsam/18397-magic-sam-chi-town-boogie-a-other-favorites-2014.html http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/867-magicsam/18397-magic-sam-chi-town-boogie-a-other-favorites-2014.html Magic Sam – Chi-Town Boogie & Other Favorites (2014)

Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility.


01 – Chi-Town Boogie
02 – Sly And Sleazy
03 – Creole ‘n’ Roll
04 – Blues ‘nooze
05 – E.J.’s Thing
06 – F.P. Blues
07 – P.J. Blues
08 – West Madison Street Blues
09 – Boppin’ The Blues
10 – 43rd And S. Park Blues
11 – Scatter Blues
12 – Black Magic Blues

 

Known for his distinctive tremolo guitar sound, Chicago blues legend Samuel “Magic Sam” Maghett made a big splash on the blues scene beginning with his first record "All Your Love," which was released in 1957. His career was cut short when he suffered a fatal heart attack at the age of 32 in 1969. His guitar style, vocals, and unique songwriting have inspired and influenced many blues musicians over the years. Presented here are rare recordings featuring all original compositions, including “West Madison Street Blues,” “Chi-Town Boogie” and “Black Magic Blues.” All selections have been newly remastered. --- megaonlinestore.com

download (mp3 @320 kbs):

yandex mega mediafire uloz.to solidfiles global.files workupload

 

back

]]>
administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Magic Sam Mon, 07 Sep 2015 19:37:41 +0000
Magic Sam’s Blues Band – Black Magic (1968) http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/867-magicsam/2267-blackmagic68.html http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/867-magicsam/2267-blackmagic68.html Magic Sam’s Blues Band – Black Magic (1968)


01.  I Just Want a Little Bit   3:04  
02.  What Have I Done Wrong?   3:11  
03.  Easy Baby   3:57  
04.  You Belong to Me  Magic Sam  4:07  
05.  It's All Your Fault   4:55  
06.  I Have the Same Old Blues   3:35  
07.  You Don't Love Me, Baby   3:32  
08.  San-Ho-Zay   3:57  
09.  Stop! You're Hurting Me   4:52  
10.  Keep Loving Me Baby   3:54  

Magic Sam - guitar, vocals
Mighty Joe Young - guitar
Eddie Shaw - tenor sax
Lafayette Leake - piano
Mack Thompson - bass
Odie Payne – drums

 

This album's color cover photo is an action shot, showing Magic Sam in the process of choking and bending his strings, a good hike up the fretboard. It isn't clear exactly what he is playing from the picture, although that certainly didn't stop dozens of pimply hippie guitar players from trying to figure it out. In the meantime, the record goes on and the first soloist out of the gate is Eddie Shaw, playing tenor sax. He is blowing over the top of an R&B riff that, although not out of the syntax of Chicago blues, would also have been quite fitting on a Wilson Pickett record. It is unfortunate that Magic Sam's recording career came to such an abrupt end, as he was one of the best artists working in the musical area between the urban blues tradition and newly developing soul music forms. This fusion was on the minds of many blues artists during the late '60s, and not just because it was aesthetically conceivable. It was also a matter of commerce, as audiences -- particularly black audiences -- didn't want to hear any blues that sounded too much like something their parents might have listened to. The harmonica player Junior Wells was another one who decided to get a bit of James Brown into his act, not always with great results. What listeners have here, on the other hand, is frankly delicious, the results of the surplus of talent Magic Sam possessed, a triple threat as a guitarist, singer, and songwriter. Yet with all this talent, the label should also get some credit. This period of the Delmark discography set a high standard for blues recordings, the sound quality and tight interplay among the musicians every bit the equal of the classic jazz recordings on labels such as Blue Note and Prestige. There is nothing fancy about the production, and no gimmicks. It is just a great band, allowed to play the music exactly the way it wanted to. The musicians have obviously worked together a great deal and either had these arrangements down cold from live gigs or had plenty of time to get things tight. This doesn't mean that the music doesn't breathe, as there are plenty of little touches such as drum fills and turnarounds that show the presence of musicians thinking on their feet.

The passage of time also increases the musical value of this music, as the eventual popularity of commercial projects such as the Blues Brothers has only served to dilute the power of urban blues. Labels big and small have forsaken this type of honest and straightforward production, preferring to try concocting a higher level of funkiness through extravagent over-production, boring superstar guest appearances, and insipid studio practices such as prerecorded rhythm tracks and dipstick guitar solos punched in a note at the time. Forget all this jive and check out a track such as "You Belong to Me," where the guitarist cuts loose with a restrained solo that sometimes dances ahead of the beat like a country fiddler while the band pumps away on a superb riff. The players here, including the fine guitarist Mighty Joe Young, pianist Lafayette Leake, and a muscular rhythm section, are the best of the best. No information is provided on the songwriting, so the assumption is that these tunes are all originals by Magic Sam. None are too obviously adopted from standards, but the opening "I Just Want a Little Bit" was much copied by other blues artists. "I Have the Same Old Blues" has a medium, loping blues tempo that swings so perfectly it should be used as an instruction course for lame blues bar bands. ---Eugene Chadbourne, allmusic.com

download (mp3 @256 kbs): yandex

mediafire uloz.to solidfiles global.files workupload

 

back

]]>
administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Magic Sam Thu, 29 Oct 2009 10:15:21 +0000
Magic Sam’s Blues Band – West Side Soul (1967) http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/867-magicsam/2266-magicsamwestsidesoul.html http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/867-magicsam/2266-magicsamwestsidesoul.html Magic Sam’s Blues Band – West Side Soul (1967)

Side A:

      "That's All I Need" - (Magic Sam) – 3:40
      "I Need You So Bad" - (B.B. King/Sam Ling) – 4:51
      "I Feel So Good (I Wanna Boogie)" – 4:36
      "All Your Love" - (Magic Sam/Otis Rush) – 3:43
      "I Don't Want No Woman" - (Don Robey) – 3:38

Side B:

      "Sweet Home Chicago" - (Robert Johnson) – 4:11
      "I Found a New Love" – 4:03
      "Every Night and Every Day" - (Jimmy McCracklin) – 2:19
      "Lookin' Good [instrumental]" - (Magic Sam) – 3:11
      "My Love Will Never Die" – 4:04
      "Mama Talk to Your Daughter" - (J. B. Lenoir) – 2:40

Magic Sam – vocals, guitar
Might Joe Young – guitar
Stockholm Slim – piano
Earnest Johnson – bass
Odie Payne – drums
Marc Thompson – bass(1,3,8)
Odie Payne, III – drums(1,3,8)

 

To call West Side Soul one of the great blues albums, one of the key albums (if not the key album) of modern electric blues is all true, but it tends to diminish and academicize Magic Sam's debut album. This is the inevitable side effect of time, when an album that is decades old enters the history books, but this isn't an album that should be preserved in amber, seen only as an important record. Because this is a record that is exploding with life, a record with so much energy, it doesn't sound old. Of course, part of the reason it sounds so modern is because this is the template for most modern blues, whether it comes from Chicago or elsewhere. Magic Sam may not have been the first to blend uptown soul and urban blues, but he was the first to capture not just the passion of soul, but also its subtle elegance, while retaining the firepower of an after-hours blues joint. Listen to how the album begins, with "That's All I Need," a swinging tune that has as much in common with Curtis Mayfield as it does Muddy Waters, but it doesn't sound like either -- it's a synthesis masterminded by Magic Sam, rolling along on the magnificent, delayed cadence of his guitar and powered by his impassioned vocals. West Side Soul would be remarkable if it only had this kind of soul-blues, but it also is filled with blistering, charged electric blues, fueled by wild playing by Magic Sam and Mighty Joe Young -- not just on the solos, either, but in the rhythm (witness how "I Feel So Good [I Wanna Boogie]" feels unhinged as it barrels along). Similarly, Magic Sam's vocals are sensitive or forceful, depending on what the song calls for. Some of these elements might have been heard before, but never in a setting so bristling with energy and inventiveness; it doesn't sound like it was recorded in a studio, it sounds like the best night in a packed club. But it's more than that, because there's a diversity in the sound here, an originality so fearless, he not only makes "Sweet Home Chicago" his own (no version before or since is as definitive as this), he creates the soul-injected, high-voltage modern blues sound that everybody has emulated and nobody has topped in the years since. And, again, that makes it sound like a history lesson, but it's not. This music is alive, vibrant, and vital -- nothing sounds as tortured as "I Need You So Bad," no boogie is as infectious as "Mama, Mama Talk to Your Daughter," no blues as haunting as "All of Your Love." No matter what year you listen to it, you'll never hear a better, more exciting record that year. ---Stephen Thomas Erlewine, allmusic.com

download (mp3 @256 kbs):

"yandex mediafire uloz.to solidfiles global.files workupload

 

back

]]>
administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Magic Sam Thu, 29 Oct 2009 10:12:43 +0000
Magic Sam – All Your Love – Blues Collection 21 http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/867-magicsam/2265-magicsamallyourlove.html http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/867-magicsam/2265-magicsamallyourlove.html Magic Sam – All Your Love – Blues Collection 21 (1995)


01. Magic Sam - All Your Love (2:56) 
02. Magic Sam - Everything Gonna Be Alright (2:54) 
03. Magic Sam - Look Watcha Done (2:13) 
04. Magic Sam - Easy Baby (3:23) 
05. Magic Sam - All My Whole Life (2:15) 
06. Magic Sam - Love Me with a Feeling (2:09) 
07. Magic Sam - She Belongs to Me (2:33) 
08. Magic Sam - Out of Bad Luck (2:24) 
09. Magic Sam - Roll Your Moneymaker (2:46) 
10. Magic Sam - Call Me if You Need Me (3:03) 
11. Magic Sam - Magic Rocker (2:31) 
12. Magic Sam - All Night Long (2:49) 
13. Magic Sam - 21 Days in Jail (2:43) 
14. Magic Sam - Love Me This Way (2:50) 
15. Magic Sam - My Love Is Your Love (2:41) 
16. Magic Sam - Mr. Charlie (2:36) 
17. Magic Sam - Blue Light Boogie (2:39) 
18. Magic Sam - You Don't Have to Work (2:39)

 

Samuel Gene Maghett Magic Sam (1937.02.14/Grenada, MS – 1969.12.01/Chicago, IL) was generally acknowledged as among the most brilliant of the young up-and-coming guitarists on a crowded Chicago blues scene in the 1950s and 1960s. Along with players like Otis Rush and Buddy Guy, Magic Sam helped introduce a more modern sound on electric guitar to the blues. He also was a gifted, expressive singer who was certainly capable of producing music with crossover appeal, much as B.B. King had done.

Growing up in a farming family in the Delta, young Sam Maghett made his own primitive instruments from cigar boxes and wire, and taught himself to play the songs he heard on the radio. When he was thirteen, the family moved to Chicago. Within a few years, Maghett was playing gigs around town in Homesick James’s band. By the time he was eighteen, Maghett was leading his own band under the stage name of Good Rockin’ Sam. By age twenty, Magic Sam had both his new, permanent stage name and his first recording session, for the Cobra label. That first session produced All Your Love which for many years was his signature song (the melody of which was, by most accounts, reworked into quite a few of his other songs as well).

Sam recorded several other 45s for Cobra during the next few years, finding local success with 21 Days in Jail and Easy Baby. Cobra, however, folded in 1960. Around the same time, Maghett was drafted into the Army.

download (mp3 @VBR kbs):

yandex mediafire uloz.to solidfiles global.files workupload

 

back

]]>
administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Magic Sam Thu, 29 Oct 2009 10:11:10 +0000