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Charles Brown - Evening Shadow (2018)

Charles Brown - Evening Shadow (2018)

BAND/ARTIST: Charles Brown

  • Title: Evening Shadow
  • Year Of Release: 2018
  • Label: nagel heyer records
  • Genre: Blues, R&B
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 1:17:55
  • Total Size: 323 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Evening Shadows
02. Fool's Paradise
03. Please Don't Drive Me Away
04. It Ain't Gonna Be Like That
05. Hard Times
06. It's Nothing
07. Cryin' Mercy
08. I Wanna Go Home
09. How High the Moon
10. Trouble Blues
11. Baby, Do You Know the Game
12. Still Water
13. I Lost Everything
14. So Long
15. Love's Like a River
16. With My Heart in My Hand
17. Seven Long Days
18. Johnny's Boogie
19. Lonesome Feeling
20. Driftin' Blues
21. In the Evening When the Sun Goes Down
22. Honey Sipper
23. More Than You Know
24. I'll Always Be in Love with You
25. Cryin' and Driftin' Blues
26. Don't Fool with My Heart
27. Hot Lips and Seven Kisses
28. Homesick Blues

How many blues artists remained at the absolute top of their game after more than a half-century of performing? One immediately leaps to mind: Charles Brown. His incredible piano skills and laid-back vocal delivery remained every bit as mesmerizing at the end of his life as they were way back in 1945, when his groundbreaking waxing of "Drifting Blues" with guitarist Johnny Moore's Three Blazers invented an entirely new blues genre for sophisticated postwar revelers: an ultra-mellow, jazz-inflected sound perfect for sipping a late-night libation in some hip after-hours joint. Brown's smooth trio format was tremendously influential to a host of high-profile disciples -- Ray Charles, Amos Milburn, and Floyd Dixon, for starters.

Classically trained on the ivories, Brown earned a degree in chemistry before moving to Los Angeles in 1943. He soon hooked up with the Blazers (Moore and bassist Eddie Williams), who modeled themselves after Nat "King" Cole's trio but retained a bluesier tone within their ballad-heavy repertoire. With Brown installed as their vocalist and pianist, the Blazers' "Drifting Blues" for Philo Records remained on Billboard's R&B charts for 23 weeks, peaking at number two. Follow-ups for Exclusive and Modern (including "Sunny Road," "So Long," "New Orleans Blues," and their immortal 1947 Yuletide classic "Merry Christmas Baby") kept the Blazers around the top of the R&B listings from 1946 through 1948, until Brown opted to go solo.

One More for the RoadIf anything, Brown was even more successful on his own. Signing with Eddie Mesner's Aladdin logo, he visited the R&B Top Ten no less than ten times from 1949 to 1952, retaining his mournful, sparsely arranged sound for the smashes "Get Yourself Another Fool," the chart-topping "Trouble Blues" and "Black Night," and "Hard Times." Despite a 1956 jaunt to New Orleans to record with the Cosimo's studio band, Brown's mellow approach failed to make the transition to rock's brasher rhythms, and he soon faded from national prominence (other than when his second holiday perennial, "Please Come Home for Christmas," hit in 1960 on the King label). Occasionally recording without causing much of a stir during the '60s and '70s, Brown began to regroup by the mid-'80s. One More for the Road, a set cut in 1986 for the short-lived Blue Side logo, announced to anyone within earshot that Brown's talents hadn't diminished at all while he was gone (the set later re-emerged on Alligator). Bonnie Raitt took an encouraging interest in Brown's comeback bid, bringing him on tour with her as her opening act (thus introducing the blues vet to a whole new generation or two of fans). His recording career took off too, with a series of albums for Bullseye Blues (the first entry, 1990's All My Life, is especially pleasing), and more recently, a disc for Verve.

So Goes LoveIn his last years, Brown finally received at least a portion of the recognition he deserved for so long as a genuine rhythm and blues pioneer. But the suave, elegant Brown was by no means a relic, as anyone who witnessed his thundering boogie piano style will gladly attest; he returned in 1998 with So Goes Love before dying on January 21, 1999. ~ Bill Dahl


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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 14:03
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Many thanks for lossless.