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Big Maybelle - Complete Okeh Sessions 1952-'55 (1994)

Big Maybelle - Complete Okeh Sessions 1952-'55 (1994)

BAND/ARTIST: Big Maybelle

Big Maybelle - Complete Okeh Sessions 1952-'55 (1994)


Tracklist:

01. Just Want Your Love
02. So Good to My Baby
03. Gabbin' Blues (Don't Run My Business)
04. My Country Man
05. Rain Down Rain
06. Way Back Home
07. Please Stay Away from My Sam
08. Jinny Mule
09. Send for Me
10. Maybelle's Blues
11. I've Got a Feelin'
12. You'll Never Know
13. No More Trouble Out of Me
14. My Big Mistake
15. Ain't No Use
16. I'm Getting 'Long Alright
17. You'll Be Sorry
18. Hair Dressin' Women
19. One Monkey Don't Stop No Show
20. Don't Leave Poor Me
21. Ain't to Be Played With
22. New Kind of Mambo
23. Ocean of Tears
24. Whole Lot of Shakin' Goin' On
25. The Other Night
26. Such a Cutie

Line-up:
Big Maybelle (Mabel Louise Smith) - Vocals
Quincy Jones - Arranger, Conductor
Leroy Kirkland - Arranger, Conductor
Danny Mendelsohn - Arranger, Conductor
Lee Anderson, Ernie Hayes, Al Williams, Fletcher Smith - Piano
Mickey Baker, James Cannady, Brownie McGhee - Guitar
Jimmy Crawford, Panama Francis, Herb Lovelle, Marty Wilson, Charles Smith - Drums
Al Hall, Norman Keenan, Grachan Moncur II, Lloyd Trotman - Bass
Billy Byers, Alfred Cobbs, Eli Robinson - Trombone
Haywood Henry, Leslie Johnakins, Dave McRae - Sax (Baritone)
Budd Johnson, Dave McRae, Sam "The Man" Taylor, Maurice Simon - Sax (Tenor)
Paul Ricci, Jerome Richardson - Sax (Alto)
Joe Wilder, Taft Jordan - Trumpet

Her mountainous stature matching the sheer soulful power of her massive vocal talent, Big Maybelle was one of the premier R&B chanteuses of the 1950s. Her deep, gravelly voice was as singular as her recorded output for Okeh and Savoy, which ranged from down-in-the-alley blues to pop-slanted ballads. In 1967, she even covered ? & the Mysterians' "96 Tears" (it was her final chart appearance). Alleged drug addiction leveled the mighty belter at the premature age of 47, but Maybelle packed a lot of living into her shortened lifespan.

Born Mabel Louise Smith, the singer strolled off with top honors at a Memphis amateur contest at the precocious age of eight. Gospel music was an important element in Maybelle's intense vocal style, but the church wasn't big enough to hold her talent. In 1936, she hooked up with Memphis bandleader Dave Clark; a few years later, Maybelle toured with the International Sweethearts of Rhythm. She debuted on wax with pianist Christine Chatman's combo on Decca in 1944, before signing with Cincinnati's King Records in 1947 for three singles of her own backed by trumpeter Hot Lips Page's band.

Producer Fred Mendelsohn discovered Smith in the Queen City, re-christened her Big Maybelle, and signed her to Columbia's OKeh R&B subsidiary in 1952. Her first Okeh platter, the unusual "Gabbin' Blues" (written by tunesmith Rose Marie McCoy and arranger Leroy Kirkland) swiftly hit, climbing to the upper reaches of the R&B charts. "Way Back Home" and "My Country Man" made it a 1953 hat trick for Maybelle and OKeh. In 1955, she cut a rendition of "Whole Lot of Shakin' Goin' On" a full two years before Louisiana piano pumper Jerry Lee Lewis got his hands and feet on it. Mendelsohn soon brought her over to Herman Lubinsky's Savoy diskery, where her tender rendition of the pop chestnut "Candy" proved another solid R&B hit in 1956. Maybelle rocked harder than ever at Savoy, her "Ring Dang Dilly," "That's a Pretty Good Love," and "Tell Me Who" benefiting from blistering backing by New York's top sessioneers. Her last Savoy date in 1959 reflected the changing trends in R&B; Howard Biggs' stately arrangements encompassed four violins. Director Bert Stern immortalized her vivid blues-belting image in his documentary Jazz on a Summer's Day, filmed in color at the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival.

Maybelle persevered throughout the '60s, recording for Brunswick, Scepter (her "Yesterday's Kisses" found her coping admirably with the uptown soul sound), Chess, Rojac (source of "96 Tears"), and other labels. But the good years were long gone when she slipped into a diabetic coma and passed away in a Cleveland hospital in 1972.




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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 20:32
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Many thanks for lossless.
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  • myto
  •  wrote in 00:15
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Many thanks for good blues
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  • tommy554
  •  wrote in 16:37
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thanks for lossless