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Chris Smither - Still on the Levee (2014) Lossless

Chris Smither - Still on the Levee (2014) Lossless

BAND/ARTIST: Chris Smither

  • Title: Still on the Levee
  • Year Of Release: 2014
  • Label: Homunculus Music
  • Genre: Folk Rock, Acoustic Folk Blues
  • Quality: Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 46:17 + 47:04
  • Total Size: 1,2 Gb (full scans)
  • WebSite:
Chris Smither - Still on the Levee (2014) Lossless


Tracklist:

CD 1:
01. Devil Got Your Man 04:39
02. Don't It Drag On 03:12
03. No More Cane on the Brazos (Trad.) 01:57
04. Love You Like a Man 02:32
05. Rosalie 04:22
06. Lonesome Georgia Brown 02:26
07. Song for Susan 04:05
08. Another Way to Find You 03:32
09. 'Deed I Do 03:35
10. Like of Chain 04:16
11. Train Home 04:17
12. Lola 03:54
13. Leave the Light On 03:31

CD 2:
01. Hold On 03:49
02. Shillin’ for the Blues 04:04
03. No Love Today (with Allen Toussaint) 04:47
04. What They Say (with Loudon Wainwright III) 02:44
05. Slow Surprise 03:16
06. Can’t Shake These Blues 03:53
07. Call Time 03:23
08. Up on the Lowdown 03:37
09. Seems So Real 04:42
10. Small Revelations 04:12
11. Winsome Smile (withRusty Belle) 04:12
12. Leave the Light On (with Rusty Belle) 04:24

Like John Hammond and a handful of other musicians whose careers began in the 1960s blues revival, guitarist, singer, and songwriter Chris Smither can take pride in the fact that he's been there since the beginning. Except for a few years when he was away from performing in the '70s, Smither has been a mainstay of the festival, coffeehouse, and club circuits around the U.S., Canada, and Europe since his performing career began in earnest in the coffeehouses in Boston in the spring of 1966. Smither is best known for his great songs, items like "Love You Like a Man" and "I Feel the Same," both of which have been recorded by Bonnie Raitt. Raitt and Smither got started at about the same time in Boston, though Smither was born and raised in New Orleans, the son of university professors.

Smither's earliest awareness of blues and folk music came from his parents' record collection. In a 1992 interview, he recalled it included albums by Josh White, Susan Reed, and Burl Ives. After a short stint taking piano lessons, Smither switched to ukulele after discovering his mother's old instrument in a closet. The young Smither was passionately attached to the ukulele, and years later it helps to explain the emotion and expertise behind his unique fingerpicking guitar style. Smither discovered blues music when he was 17 and heard a Lightnin' Hopkins album, Blues in the Bottle. The album was a major revelation to him and he subsequently spent weeks trying to figure out the intricate guitar parts. Smither moved to Boston after realizing he was a big fish in a small pond in the New Orleans folk/coffeehouse circuit of the mid-'60s. Also, acoustic blues pioneer Ric Von Schmidt had recommended Smither check out the Boston folk-blues scene.

I'm a Stranger Too!Smither recorded his first couple of albums for the Poppy label in 1970 and 1971, I'm a Stranger Too and Don't It Drag On. In 1972, Smither recorded a third album, Honeysuckle Dog, for United Artists, which finally saw release on the Heavenly label in the mid-2000s. On the sessions for that album, he was joined in the studio by his old friends Bonnie Raitt and Mac Rebennack, aka Dr. John. After a long bout with alcoholism, Smither launched his recording career again in the late '80s, although he hadn't stopped performing. His return to a proper recording career, due to a deal with Flying Fish Records, didn't happen again until 1991, when the label released Another Way to Find You, a folk-blues album. Smither recorded It Ain't Easy for the Adelphi label in 1984; the album was re-released on CD ten years later.
Happier Blue Since then, he's more than proved his mettle as an enormously gifted songwriter, releasing albums mostly of his own compositions for the Flying Fish, Hightone, and Signature Sounds labels. Smither's albums during the '90s and into the 21st century include Happier Blue (1993, Flying Fish), Up on the Lowdown (1995, Hightone), Drive You Home Again (1999, Hightone), Live as I'll Ever Be (2000, Hightone), Train Home (2003, Hightone), Leave the Light On (2006, Signature Sounds), and Time Stands Still (2009, Signature Sounds), a career highlight.
Hundred Dollar ValentineSmither concentrated on two separate projects in 2011: a collection of live tracks called Lost and Found, and a covers album titled What I Learned in School. The full-length Hundred Dollar Valentine followed in 2012. Smither celebrated his 50th anniversary as a performing musician in 2014 with the compilation Still on the Levee and the book Chris Smither Lyrics 1966-2012. Call Me Lucky, his first album of original material since 2009, arrived in March 2018.
Any of Smither's releases are worthy of careful examination by guitarists and students of all schools of blues and folk music. Smither is still, to some extent, an unheralded master of modern acoustic blues. Fortunately, his recordings and festival bookings from the '90s into the 21st century have elevated his profile to a higher level than he ever enjoyed previously.


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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 13:09
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Many thanks for lossless.
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  • santino71
  •  wrote in 19:05
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much appreciated!
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 22:47
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Many Thanks