Willie Dixon - Chess Box (1988)

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Willie Dixon - Chess Box (1988)

The Chess Box Willie Dixon (Disc-1) 

1. My Babe / Little Walter
2. Violent Love / The Big Three
3. Third Degree / Eddie Boyd
4. Seventh Son / Willie Mabon
5. Crazy For My Baby / Willie Dixon
6. Pain In My Heart / Willie Dixon
7. Hoochie Coochie Man / Muddy Waters
8. Evil / Howlin' Wolf
9. Mellow Down Easy / Little Walter
10. When The Lights Go Out / Jimmy Witherspoon
11. Young Fashioned Ways / Muddy Waters
12. Pretty Thing / Bo Diddley
13. I'm Ready / Muddy Waters
14. Do Me Right / Lowell Fulson
15. I Just Want To Make Love To You / Muddy Waters
16. Tollin' Bells / Lowell Fulson
17. 29 Ways / Willie Dixon
18. Walkin' The Blues / Willie Dixon

The Chess Box Willie Dixon (Disc-2) 

1. Spoonful / Howlin' Wolf
2. You Know My Love / Otis Rush
3. You Can't Judge A Book By It's Cover / Bo Diddley
4. I Ain't Superstitious / Howlin' Wolf
5. You Need Love / Muddy Waters
6. Little Red Rooster / Howlin' Wolf
7. Back Door Man / Howlin' Wolf
8. Dead Presidents / Little Walter
9. Hidden Charms / Howlin' Wolf
10. You Shook Me / Muddy Waters
11. Bring It On Home / Sonny Boy Williamson
12. 300 Pounds Of Joy / Howlin' Wolf
13. Weak Brain, Narrow Mind / Willie Dixon
14. Wang Dang Doodle / Koko Taylor
15. The Same Thing / Muddy Waters
16. Built For Comfort / Howlin' Wolf
17. I Can't Quit You Baby / Little Milton
18. Insane Asylum / Koko Taylor

 

"This was the most unusual, and probably the most difficult to assemble of MCA's Chess Box series, mostly because of the unusual nature of Willie Dixon's contribution to Chess Records. To be sure, Dixon rates a place in the history of the label right alongside that of Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, and Little Walter, but his role was more subtle than that of a performer (indeed, two of the half-dozen recordings here that feature Dixon as a singer were previously unreleased). So he is all over this two-CD set, as a songwriter, producer, and bassist, and occasionally as a singer as well, but the unifying element are the Dixon songs, and he is the only blues songwriter to be honored by a major label with a retrospective of this type. Since he was not the performer on most of this material, but, rather, was working to mesh his material with the styles and sensibilities of a vast range of players, the sounds contained on these two CDs are a lot more varied than on any of the other Chess Box releases -- amplified Delta blues, big band, Mills Brothers-style harmony blues, jazz-influenced jump blues, and near-pop style R&B are all here; guitar pyrotechnics by Muddy Waters or Hubert Sumlin (on the Wolf's records), vocal acrobatics by Little Walter, and rippling performances by Koko Taylor illuminate this set throughout. While some of it, such as Muddy Waters' single of "Hoochie Coochie Man"; Little Walter's "My Babe"; Howlin' Wolf's performances of "Evil," "Spoonful," "Little Red Rooster," and "Back Door Man"; and Lowell Fulson's version of "Do Me Right" are easily available elsewhere, a lot else of what's here is genuinely rare and most enticing -- Dixon's own renditions of "Violent Love," "Crazy For My Baby," and "Pain In My Heart," in particular, are great records, lacking perhaps only a slight measure of the energy that a Muddy Waters brought to recording. Most of the set is concentrated on his blues work -- a pair of hot Bo Diddley sides ("Pretty Thing," "You Can't Judge a Book by Its Cover") that Dixon wrote are represented, but since he didn't write anything for Chuck Berry, that side of Dixon's history is left out, despite his having played bass on most of Berry's early recordings. Still, it's difficult to imagine anyone complaining over an "excuse" to bring some of the best sides of Muddy, Walter, the Wolf, Diddley, Taylor, Lowell Fulson, Jimmy Witherspoon, Sonny Boy Williamson, Otis Rush, and even Dixon's own '40s outfit, the Big Three together in one release. The sound is impeccable, holding up to standards even a dozen years later, and the set includes a well-illustrated and annotated booklet." ---Bruce Eder, Rovi

 

May as well call this "Chess Greatest Hits (Except for Chuck Berry)". A nice collection. Most are in mono, and one of the stereo tracks is presented here twice: the original stereo version and a folded-to-mono version that I did for kicks. Stumbled across this at my local store. Seemed cheap enough :-)

All the tracks for this box were digitized in 1988 or so, and the LPs were made from that.

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Last Updated (Friday, 19 July 2013 19:41)