| | Bill Magee Blues Band Steppin' Out CD Bill Magee Blues Band Discography of CDs
Born in Collins, Mississippi in 1943, blues guitarist/vocalist Bill Magee grew up listening to Muddy Waters, Elmore James and B.B. King on his father's small radio. At the age of 13, Bill moved to New York where he began to learn to play the blues. By ag
Recording information: Doubletime Studio.
Personnel includes: Bill Magee (vocals, guitar); Jack Stiteler (bass); Jasper Austin (harmonica); Boyd Gardiner.
Personnel: Bill Magee (vocals, guitar).
Bill Magee Blues Band Steppin' Out Songs | 1. | Listen Girl (I Want to Be Your Lover) |
| 2. | Girl Stop Teasing Me |
| 3. | I Got Me a Good Woman |
| 4. | Steppin' Out |
| 5. | Help Me |
| 6. | Next Time You See Me |
| 7. | Jasper Jam |
| 8. | Jimmy Reed Medley |
| 9. | Comin' Home |
| Steppin' Out Review
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Purchase Steppin' Out CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Joe Bonamassa Ballad Of John Henry CD (2009)
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| | Lightnin Hopkins Double Blues CD (1973)
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Digital remastering by Joe Tarantino (Fantasy Studios, Berkeley).
Lightnin' Hopkins' plaintive, soft-rolling blues style is exemplified on "Let's Go Sit on the Lawn," "Just a Wristwatch on My Arm," "I'm a Crawling Black Snake," Willie Dixon's "My Babe," and others. Accompanied only by himself on guitar (and oh what a guitar he plays), Leonard Gaskin (bass), and Herb Lovelle (drums), Hopkins' seductive, ...
| | Gordon Lightfoot Did She Mention My Name/Back Here On Earth (Bgo) CD (1994) (Import) United Kingdom
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| | Culture Production Something CD (1995)
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| | Ziggy Elman Issued Recordings: 1947-1949 CD (2000) (Import) United Kingdom
Steppin' Out music CDs
$18.55 This marvelous compilation brings together Ziggy Elman's issued recordings (as opposed to radio broadcast airchecks) made in New York during 1947 and Los Angeles in 1949. This material belongs to that interesting subgenre of big-band swing with elements of bop, suspended somewhere between entrenched traditions and trenchant trends. Notable jazz improvisers include trumpeter Charlie Shavers, clarinetist Buddy DeFranco, saxophonists Babe Russin and Boomie Richman, and drummer Louie Bellson. Aside from a couple of sweet vocals by Virginia Maxey and Bob Manning, this disc is packed with pleasant swing instrumentals based on arrangements by Larry Clinton and Sid Cooper. There are updated renditions of old tunes like "Me and My Shadow" and "Carolina in the Morning" along with acknowledgements of contemporary developments in jazz ("Boppin' with Zig") and Elman's famous reconstructions of old Jewish melodies, "And the Angels Sing" and "Bublitchki." A superb selection of great swing music recorded at a time when the entertainment industry was turning its back on big bands in general. ~ arwulf arwulf
the latest in the Malcolm Laycock series presents trumpeter fronting a fine combination of little known but highly competent musicians with outstanding arrangements by Sid Cooper & Larry Clinton, featuring the songs "How High The Moon," "Zaggin' With Zig
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| | Joe "Survival" Caruso I'll Never Get Out Of These Blues Alive CD (2001)
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| | Fartz Injustice: 15 Working Class Songs CD (2002)
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$9.09 Sounding exactly like they did in 1983, the Fartz, an old-school hardcore band from Seattle, hammer out a bunch of songs here that seem like they could only come from that era. But, in fact, these are new songs with titles like "Rich White American" and "Apathy is the Enemy." Strange that they didn't include any songs attacking Reagan. This is the most bareboned, simplistic music, the sort of thing four kids in a garage with no musical ability could produce over a weekend. During the early '80s there were some bands who played this sort of raw anti-music which were ...
| | Midnight Star Headlines/Midas Touch CD (2006) (Import)
Steppin' Out music CDs
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