Ain't Enough Comin in
Editorial Reviews
<"b000001e2f7499"> Amazon.com
Otis Rush and Buddy Guy were hot young Chicago guitar slingers in the 1950s, when legends like Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf ruled the Second City. Rush was renowned for his nasty, over-amplified guitar sound, and songs like "All Your Love" and "Double Trouble" were seminal touchstones for such `60s British guitarists as Eric Clapton and Peter Green. Rush has lately been known more for live shows than records, and 1994's Ain't Enough Comin' In succeeded because it was programmed like a great concert set, with fat guitar solos that suggested Albert King in a sweat, and songs that drew from both the blues and soul songbooks. Rush sounds great singing Sam Cooke's good-news gospel ("Somebody Have Mercy" and "Ain't That Good News") and pays his propers to Ray Charles on "A Fool for You." Exciting takes on epic tunes associated with B.B. King ("It's My Own Fault") and Albert King ("As the Years Go Passing By") also leave no doubt that Rush hasn't forgotten how to burn down the house. --John Milward
Ain't Enough Comin in, Music, Otis Rush, Blues, Blues Music, Pop
Music:
Recommended Music:
Vol. 1-Beat Beat Beat [Import]
Cherubini: String Quartets 3 & 4
Gabber Gabber Hey!: A Loud And Fastpaced Tribute To The Ramones
Complete American Small Group Recordings [Import]