| | Luther Allison Time CD - Import Luther Allison Discography of CDs
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Our Price: $15.95 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 1 available)
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Personnel: Luther Allison (vocals, guitar, harmonica); Bill Dye (guitar, lap steel guitar); Larry Martin, Paul Pechnaert (guitar); Eddie Boyd (keyboards); John "Pops" McFarlane (bass guitar). Luther Allison Time Songs | 1. | Time |
| 2. | Give It All  |
| 3. | Down South |
| 4. | I Can't Tell You What to Do |
| 5. | Compromizing For Your Needs |
| 6. | It's Partyin' Time |
| 7. | You're Doing a Super Homework |
| 8. | Just My Guitar (And Me) |
| Time Review
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Purchase Time CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Luther Allison Soul Fixin' Man CD (1994)
Time album
$14.15 All songs written or co-written by Luther Allison except "I Want To Know" (De Santo/Geddins/Badger), "She Was Born That Way," "Love String" (Mosley/Johnson) and "The Things I Used To Do" (Jones).
Soul Fixin' Man was blues guitarist/vocalist Luther Allison's first American recording in nearly 20 years. However, his domestic inactivity was not because Allison had stopped playing music. Far from it, since he was based in Paris and worked constantly on the European continent. A powerful player whose intensity on this set sometimes borders on rock (although remaining quite grounded in blues), Luther Allison (who contributed eight of the dozen songs) displays ...
| | Junior Wells Pleading The Blues CD (1979)
Time CD music
$10.59 All songs written by Junior Wells except "It Hurts Me Too" (Hudson Whittaker) and "I'll Take Care Of You" (Brook Brenton).
Recorded on Halloween night in 1979, this pairs up Wells and Guy in a fashion that hasn't been heard since Hoodoo Man Blues, their first, and best collaboration. Solid backing by the Philip Guy band (Buddy's brother) makes this album a rare treat. ...
| | Luther Allison Love Me Mama CD (1969)
Time music CDs
$13.29 LOVE ME MAMA contains two previously unreleased songs and several unreleased alternate takes.
Recorded in 1969. Includes liner notes by Bob Koester and Jim Fishel.
Although it has its moments -- particularly on the title track -- Luther ...
| | Junior Wells On Tap CD (1975)
Time songs
$9.69 Underrated mid-'70s collection boasting a contemporary, funky edge driven by guitarists Phil Guy and Sammy Lawhorn, keyboardist Big Moose Walker, and saxman ...
| | Otis Rush Cold Day In Hell CD (1976)
Time album
$12.75 Two previously unreleased tracks have been added to this re-release.
COLD DAY IN HELL is one of the standouts from Otis Rush's 1970s catalogue. Rush's anguished vocals, piercing guitar leads, and overall gutsy attack are in full effect here on galloping rockers ("Cut You a Loose") and loping groovers ("Mean Old World") alike. Rush specializes in slow-burn down-tempo numbers--"You're Breaking My Heart," "Society Woman," and the wiry title track fall into this category, and each of these tracks give the Chicago axe-master plenty of room to stretch out on the fretboard.
Unlike a lot of the post-'60s bluesmen, Rush never softened or commercialized his sound, and COLD DAY IN HELL upholds the artist's rough and raw ethos. His searing guitar work (which seems inseparable from his chunky amplifier tone) cuts a trail through the middle of these songs and is as appropriate on wrenching slow blues as it is on "Motoring Along," a sprightly, jazz-influenced instrumental. An alternate take of "You're Breaking My Heart" ...
| | Luther Allison Live In Paris CD (1979) (Import) Germany
Time CD music
$9.39 Live in Paris was recorded in the late '70s, shortly before Luther Allison decided to leave America for France because the U.S. blues scene was faltering. And, as Live in Paris attests, Allison ...
| | Lonnie Brooks Lone Star Shootout CD (1999)
Time music CDs
$10.85 Principally recorded at Arlyn Studios and GEM/Lonestar Studios, Austin, Texas. Includes liner notes by Michael Point and Bruce Iglaur.
Louisiana-born and Texas-toughened, Brooks (66), Hunter (68), and Walker (62) show what blues peers can do in what seem to be peaking years. There are three numbers where all three go full tilt together; the rest of the material varies in personnel, group and solo emphasis. The distinctive, gutsy voice of Brooks, Walker's loping guitar lines with his slighly rough, seasoned voice, and the riveting presence of Walker on all counts, musically and vocally, are showcased to consistently satisfying levels. Of the 15 cuts, there are a handful of rockers and boogies, a few pure soul tunes and ballads, a jump blues, a Cajun calypso, and some straight blues -- something for everyone. The hard-swinging "Street Walking Woman" and the slower shuffle "Feel Good Doin' Bad" are great musically, if lacking in message. Walker gets a back-to-back showcase on "I Can't Stand It No More/I Met the Blues in Person," and he tears it up. Brooks pleads and shouts on "This Should Go On Forever," while Hunter's highlights are the cautious "Alligators Around My Door" and the B.B. King cop on "Quit My Baby." Score some plus points for Kaz Kazanoff's sax and harp playing, and the horn charts are mighty fine throughout. Speaking of unsung heroes and heroines, credit pianist Marcia Ball on three cuts, Riley Osbourn playing keys on the others, and Ervin Charles, who does yeomanlike vocal and guitar work and gets two showcase cuts on his own, the best being the Muddy Waters closer "Two Trains Running." This is a historic joining of three blues legends, with so much talent you have to give huge props. Also, buy this simply for Bruce Iglauer's info-laden song notes, worth the price of the CD alone. ~ Michael G. Nastos
/Long John Hunter/Phillip Walker.
Personnel: Lonnie Brooks, Long John Hunter, Phillip ...
| | North Mississippi Allstars Shake Hands With Shorty CD (2000)
Time songs
$14.45 SHAKE HANDS WITH SHORTY was nominated for the 2001 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Blues Album.
Luther and Cody Dickinson, guitarist and drummer respectively for the hotter-than-Hades electric blues boogie trio the North Mississippi All Stars, have a tough rock & roll bloodline to live up to. Their father Jim is among the grandest and most multi-faceted figures to emerge from the Memphis music scene in the last 40 years, playing piano and producing records for a vast cross-section of legends, superstars and the historically notorious. The All Stars' sparkling debut, SHAKE HANDS WITH SHORTY, delivers hip swaying, juke joint blues boogie with teeth and bite.
Luther Dickinson's fingerpicking and bottleneck slide are the star attractions at these proceedings. While Cody and bassist Chris Chew lock down the simmering bottom, Luther slips and slides over the groove, glowing with exultant dancing lines that quote Duane Allman on "Po Black Maddie," and reeling and rocking like a freight train on "Goin' Down South." The syncopation points to the dance-floor even when the All Stars invoke their acoustic heritage; their take on Furry Lewis' "KC Jones (On the Road Again)" is a tragic story told with a sunny enthusiasm that must make their pappy proud.
Recorded at Zebra Ranch Studios, Tate County, Mississippi in 1999. Includes liner notes by Larry Brown.
Personnel: Luther Dickinson (vocals, guitar, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, ...
| | Indigenous Things We Do CD (1998)
Time album
$13.89
| | Silky Soul CDs (1996)
Time CD music
$15.15
| | Buck Owens Greatest Hits, Vol. 2: The Streets Of Bakersfield CD (1998)
Time music CDs
$9.39
| | Karaoke: Poster Boys Of Pop CD (2003)
$7.65 | | Lapse & Recover Blackstone 101 CD (2006)
Time songs
$12.55 Most of this album was written and recorded in a small bedroom apartment called Blackstone. The album is more electronic and experimental than the band ...
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