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Jimmy Reed - Oldies Selection: Best of Collection, Vol. 1 (2021)

Jimmy Reed - Oldies Selection: Best of Collection, Vol. 1 (2021)

BAND/ARTIST: Jimmy Reed

  • Title: Oldies Selection: Best of Collection, Vol. 1
  • Year Of Release: 2021
  • Label: Pipe Dublin
  • Genre: Blues, R&B
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:39:26
  • Total Size: 606 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Jimmy Reed - A String to Your Heart
02. Jimmy Reed - Ain't That Lovin' Baby
03. Jimmy Reed - Aw Shucks, Hush Your Mouth
04. Jimmy Reed - Baby, Don't Say That No More
05. Jimmy Reed - Baby, What's on Your Mind
06. Jimmy Reed - Back Home at Noon
07. Jimmy Reed - Big Boss Man
08. Jimmy Reed - Blue Blue Water
09. Jimmy Reed - Blue Carnegie
10. Jimmy Reed - Boogie in the Dark
11. Jimmy Reed - Can't Stand to See You Go
12. Jimmy Reed - Bright Lights, Big City
13. Jimmy Reed - Caress Me Baby
14. Jimmy Reed - Close Together
15. Jimmy Reed - Come Love
16. Jimmy Reed - Down in Virginia
17. Jimmy Reed - Ends & Odds
18. Jimmy Reed - Ends and Odds
19. Jimmy Reed - Found Joy
20. Jimmy Reed - Found Love
21. Jimmy Reed - Go on to School
22. Jimmy Reed - Going by the River Part 1
23. Jimmy Reed - Going by the River Part 2
24. Jimmy Reed - Going to New York
25. Jimmy Reed - Good Lover
26. Jimmy Reed - High and Lonesome
27. Jimmy Reed - Hold Me Close
28. Jimmy Reed - Honest I Do
29. Jimmy Reed - Honey, Don't Let Me Go

There's simply no sound in the blues as easily digestible, accessible, instantly recognizable, and as easy to play and sing as the music of Jimmy Reed. His best-known songs "Baby, What You Want Me to Do," "Bright Lights, Big City," "Honest I Do," "You Don't Have to Go," "Going to New York," "Ain't That Lovin' You Baby," and "Big Boss Man" have become such an integral part of the standard blues repertoire, it's almost as if they have existed forever. Because his style was simple and easily imitated, his songs were accessible to just about everyone from high-school garage bands having a go at it, to Elvis Presley, Charlie Rich, Lou Rawls, Hank Williams, Jr., and the Rolling Stones, making him, in the long run, perhaps the most influential bluesman of all. His bottom-string boogie rhythm guitar patterns (all furnished by boyhood friend and longtime musical partner Eddie Taylor), simple two-string turnarounds, country-ish harmonica solos (all played in a neck-rack attachment hung around his neck), and mush-mouthed vocals were probably the first exposure most white folks had to the blues. And his music lazy, loping, and insistent, constantly built on the same sturdy frame was a formula that proved to be enormously successful and influential, both with middle-aged blacks and young white audiences for a good dozen years. Jimmy Reed records hit the R&B charts with amazing frequency and crossed over onto the pop charts on many occasions, a rare feat for an unreconstructed bluesman. This is all the more amazing simply because Reed's music was nothing special on the surface; he possessed absolutely no technical expertise on either of his chosen instruments and his vocals certainly lacked the fierce declamatory intensity of a Howlin' Wolf or a Muddy Waters. But it was exactly that lack of in-your-face musical confrontation that made Jimmy Reed a welcome addition to everybody's record collection back in the '50s and '60s. And for those aspiring musicians who wanted to give the blues a try, either vocally or instrumentally (no matter what skin color you were born with), perhaps Billy Vera said it best in his liner notes to a Reed greatest-hits anthology: "Yes, anybody with a range of more than six notes could sing Jimmy's tunes and play them the first day Mom and Dad brought home that first guitar from Sears & Roebuck. I guess Jimmy could be termed the '50s punk bluesman."


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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 13:04
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.