Walking Blues

Walking Blues

Walking Blues

more information about Walking Blues

Editorial Reviews
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By the time these sessions were recorded in the early '60s (as Studio Blues and Blues for Nine Strings), the sounds of Big Joe Williams's thundering voice and his extraordinary nine-string guitar had been heard from the levee camps of the Delta to the freight yards of old Chicago. Once rediscovered by the folks at Prestige/Bluesville (like so many blues artists), he was placed in the studio with an understandably nervous young harp player named Larry Johnson and legendary bassist Willie Dixon. What resulted was a down-home jam session in which Big Joe dragged the others to wherever his personal muse led. Highly personalized versions of ancient ballads are the norm here, with Big Joe's fluid fingerpicking weaving its way around Dixon's deep, syncopated groove. It's incredible how tight the trio is and how original each song sounds considering the improvised nature of the sessions. But then, the great ones always make it sound easy. --Ken Hohman

Walking Blues, Music, Big Joe Williams, Acoustic Blues, Blues, Blues Music, Delta Blues, Electric Delta Blues, Pop, Prewar Country Blues

Walking Blues

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Music:

  1. What the Hell Is This [Extra tracks] [Import]
  2. Wild Cat Boogie, Vol. 4: Complete Sensation Recordings
  3. Wild Irish Rose (reverences of George Jones)
  4. You Better Keep Still
  5. You Don't Know Me
  6. 3 The Hard Way
  7. Antonio
  8. B.B. King Tribute
  9. Back To Eden
  10. Basically Blues

Music

music

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