Little Walter - The Electric Harmonica Genius (1990)
BAND/ARTIST: Little Walter
- Title: The Electric Harmonica Genius
- Year Of Release: 1990
- Label: Blues Encore
- Genre: Chicago Blues, Harmonica Blues
- Quality: FLAC (tracks+cue+log) | MP3 320 kbps
- Total Time: 72:06
- Total Size: 402 MB | 194 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Juke (2:42)
02. Can't Hold Out Much Longer (2:57)
03. Blue Midnight (2:24)
04. Mean Old World (2:53)
05. Sad Hours (3:10)
06. Quarter To Twelve (3:10)
07. Blues With A Feeling (3:04)
08. Last Night (2:42)
09. Mellow Down Easy (2:42)
10. My Babe (2:39)
11. Hate To See You (2:17)
12. Going Down Slow (2:57)
13. It's Too Late, Brother (2:40)
14. Everybody Needs Somebody (2:51)
15. Confessin' The Blues (3:00)
16. Key To The Highway (2:45)
17. Walkin' On (2:37)
18. Everything's Going To Be Alright (2:50)
19. Blue And Lonesome (4:51)
20. I Don't Play (2:19)
21. Peppers Thing (4:44)
22. Off The Wall (2:21)
23. You're So Fine (3:10)
24. Rocker (4:09)
01. Juke (2:42)
02. Can't Hold Out Much Longer (2:57)
03. Blue Midnight (2:24)
04. Mean Old World (2:53)
05. Sad Hours (3:10)
06. Quarter To Twelve (3:10)
07. Blues With A Feeling (3:04)
08. Last Night (2:42)
09. Mellow Down Easy (2:42)
10. My Babe (2:39)
11. Hate To See You (2:17)
12. Going Down Slow (2:57)
13. It's Too Late, Brother (2:40)
14. Everybody Needs Somebody (2:51)
15. Confessin' The Blues (3:00)
16. Key To The Highway (2:45)
17. Walkin' On (2:37)
18. Everything's Going To Be Alright (2:50)
19. Blue And Lonesome (4:51)
20. I Don't Play (2:19)
21. Peppers Thing (4:44)
22. Off The Wall (2:21)
23. You're So Fine (3:10)
24. Rocker (4:09)
Who's the king of all post-war blues harpists, Chicago division or otherwise? Why, the virtuosic Little Walter, without a solitary doubt. The fiery harmonica wizard took the humble mouth organ in dazzling amplified directions that were unimaginable prior to his ascendancy. His daring instrumental innovations were so fresh, startling, and ahead of their time that they sometimes sported a jazz sensibility, soaring and swooping in front of snarling guitars and swinging rhythms perfectly suited to Walter's pioneering flights of fancy.
Marion Walter Jacobs was by most accounts an unruly but vastly talented youth who abandoned his rural Louisiana home for the bright lights of New Orleans at age 12. Walter gradually journeyed north from there, pausing in Helena (where he hung out with the wizened Sonny Boy Williamson), Memphis, and St. Louis before arriving in Chicago in 1946.
The thriving Maxwell Street strip offered a spot for the still-teenaged phenom to hawk his wares. He fell in with local royalty -- Tampa Red and Big Bill Broonzy -- and debuted on wax that same year for the tiny Ora-Nelle logo ("I Just Keep Loving Her") in the company of Jimmy Rogers and guitarist Othum Brown. Walter joined forces with Muddy Waters in 1948; the resulting stylistic tremors of that coupling are still being felt today. Along with Rogers and Baby Face Leroy Foster, this super-confident young aggregation became informally known as the Headhunters. They would saunter into Southside clubs, mount the stage, and proceed to calmly "cut the heads" of whomever was booked there that evening. ~Bio by Bill Dahl
Marion Walter Jacobs was by most accounts an unruly but vastly talented youth who abandoned his rural Louisiana home for the bright lights of New Orleans at age 12. Walter gradually journeyed north from there, pausing in Helena (where he hung out with the wizened Sonny Boy Williamson), Memphis, and St. Louis before arriving in Chicago in 1946.
The thriving Maxwell Street strip offered a spot for the still-teenaged phenom to hawk his wares. He fell in with local royalty -- Tampa Red and Big Bill Broonzy -- and debuted on wax that same year for the tiny Ora-Nelle logo ("I Just Keep Loving Her") in the company of Jimmy Rogers and guitarist Othum Brown. Walter joined forces with Muddy Waters in 1948; the resulting stylistic tremors of that coupling are still being felt today. Along with Rogers and Baby Face Leroy Foster, this super-confident young aggregation became informally known as the Headhunters. They would saunter into Southside clubs, mount the stage, and proceed to calmly "cut the heads" of whomever was booked there that evening. ~Bio by Bill Dahl
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