Search:dimples
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- B6: I Need Love So Bad
- A6: I Need Love So Bad
- A1: Baby I'm Gonna Miss You
- A2: Half A Stranger
- A3: Shake, Holler And Run
- A4: Down Child
- A5: Gotta Boogie
- A7: No More Doggin
- A8: Boogie Chillen
- B1: Bad Boy
- B2: Rock House Boogie
- B3: Let's Talk It Over
- B4: Baby You Ain't No Good
- B5: Looking For A Woman
- B7: Moon Is Rising
- B8: Dimples
A remarkable release in John Lee Hooker's vast catalogue, Folk Blues, released by the Crown label in 1962, puts together tracks originally recorded for Modern Records between 1951 and 1954.
Among its many highlights are Bad Boy, one of the finest examples of Hooker's wordless humming and singing in unison with his guitar figures, and Rock House Boogie, which offers a sampling of Hooker's use of bottleneck style.
"Essential in any collection of postwar blues." - ***** Downbeat:
f A6. I Need Love So Bad Solo Version
[n] B6. I Need Love So Bad [Group Version]
[f] A6. I Need Love So Bad [Solo Version]
[n] B6. I Need Love So Bad [Group Version]
[f] A6 | I Need Love So Bad [Solo Version]
[n] B6 | I Need Love So Bad [Group Version]
- A1: Boom Boom (Feat. Jimmie Vaughan)
- A2: I'm Bad Like Jesse James
- A3: Same Old Blues Again (Feat. Robert Cray)
- A4: Sugar Mama
- A5: Trick Bag (Shoppin' For My Tombstone)
- B1: Boogie At Russian Hill (Feat. Albert Collins)
- B2: Hittin' The Bottle Again
- B3: Bottle Up And Go
- B4: Thought I Heard (Feat. Charlie Musselwhite)
- B5: I Ain't Gonna Suffer No More
- B6: Dimples (Bonus Track)
- B7: Ain’t No Love In This House (Bonus Track)
Nach seinem Comeback mit „The Healer“ (1989) begab sich John Lee Hooker zu Russian Hill Recording in San Francisco und The Record Plant in Sausalito, um einige seiner bekanntesten Songs neu zu
interpretieren, darunter „Boom Boom“, das diesem Album seinen Titel gibt. Eine Starbesetzung zeitgenössischer Bluesgrößen nahm an den Sessions teil, darunter Charlie Musselwhite, Jimmie Vaughan, Robert
Cray und Albert Collins.
- 5: Flyin' High
- 1: Further On Up The Road
- 2: Dimples
- 3: Driftin' And Driftin
- 4: All Your Love
- 6: How Did I Ever Get This Blue
- 7: I'm Burnin' Up
- 8: When I Was Your Man
- 9: Rumour Has It
- 10: Feels Like Rain
- 11: Memphis, Tennessee
- A1: Get Away From Me - The Angels
- A2: The Hoochy Coo - The Fatimas
- A3: Ask Me - Debbie Williams & The Unwritten Law
- A4: Grave Digger - Unknown Group
- A5: Give Me Rhythm And Blues - The Mysteries
- A6: Bus Stop - The Hairem
- A7: Pink Dominos - Chiyo & The Crescents
- B1: I Got My Mojo Working – Joyce Harris & The Daylighters
- B2: Chico's Girl - The Girls
- B3: If You Wanna Be Happy - The Debutantes
- B4: Dimples - The Missfits
- B5: Skinny Minnie - The Beat-Chics
- B6: Mary Had A Little Kiss - The Tomboys
- B7: Glue - The Ace Of Cups
Bona fide all-girl bands the Hairem, the Girls, the Debutantes, the Missfits, the Beat-Chics and the Ace Of Cups are stars of the show on this new vinyl volume in our ear-grabbing “Girls With Guitars” series, providing further confirmation that girls can do what the guys do.
This collection opens with ‘Get Away From Me’ by the mean-sounding Angels (probably not the ‘My Boyfriend’s Back’ group of that name), a slice of feisty she-rock recorded circa 1965 that remained on the shelf at Philadelphia’s Swan Records until Ace rescued it about 40 years later, and closes with ‘Glue’ by the Ace Of Cups, a hippy outfit raved about by Jimi Hendrix in a Melody Maker interview back in 1967.
Elsewhere, ballsy-voiced Joyce Harris (think Wanda Jackson meets Tina Turner) teams up with Texas bar band the Daylighters to tear the roof off ‘I Got My Mojo Working’, teenage ice skater Debbie Williams sings lead with male garage band the Unwritten Law, guitarist Chiyo fronts the Crescents on the instrumental ‘Pink Dominos’ and, well, you get the picture. Those so inclined can learn more about all the tracks on the swanky inner bag containing a picture-packed 3,000-word track commentary by series compiler Mick Patrick
Mixed LP:
tracklist:
A1 Dimples D– Sucker DJ
A2 The KLF– 3 AM Eternal
A3 Nomad– Devotion
A4 2 Brothers On The 4th Floor– Can't Help Myself
A5 Twenty 4 Seven– Are You Dreaming?
A6 Afrika Bambaataa– Just Get Up And Dance
A7 FPI Project– Everybody
A8 Real McCoy– Don't Stop
A9 Quadrophonia– Quadrophonia
A10 A Homeboy, A Hippie & A Funki Dredd– Total Confusion
A11 DJ Dick– Weekend
B1 Various– Radio Mix Version
B2 Various– Dimples Beat (112 Bpm)
B3 Various– Twenty Beat (124 Bpm)
B4 Various– Two Beat (123 Bpm)
B5 Various– Devotion Beat (120 Bpm)
B6 Various– Afrikan-Baataa Beat (123 Bpm)
B7 Various– Mc Beat (122 Bpm)
B8 Various– Replay Beat (122 Bpm)
B9 Various– Get Bussy With Skateboard 2
• It was standard practice in the 1960s for British beat groups to pepper their repertoires with American R&B songs. Formed by five music-loving schools from Blackpool, the Missfits were no exception. Although they group released no records during their time together, for two brief years they were the toast of Blackpool clubland. They played at the same veues as local bands such as the Rockin’ Vickers, including some gigs at the famous Oasis Club in Manchester and at the short-lived Blackpool branch of the Twisted Wheel.
• In February 1964, they won a recording test in a talent competition and travelled to London that summer to commit some of their favourite songs to tape. The tape reel was soon forgotten and thought lost but Janet had thankfully kept it safe, enabling the appearance of the four tracks on this 60s-style vinyl EP. Drummer Janet Baily provides lead vocals on their version of John Lee Hooker’s ‘Dimples’, and bass player Pauline Moran sang lead on Bo Diddley’s ‘You Can’t Judge A Book By The Cover’, Chuck Berry’s ‘I’m Talking About You’ and Ray Charles’ ‘What’d I Say’, with guitarists Andrea Hine, Carola Daish and Liz Hall joining in on backing vocals.
- A1: Easter Woman
- A2: Perfect Love
- A3: Picnic Boy
- A4: End Of Home
- A5: Amber
- A6: Japanese Watercolor
- A7: Secrets
- A8: Die In Terror
- A9: Red Rider
- A10: My Second Wife
- A11: Floyd
- A12: Suburban Bathers
- A13: Dimples And Toes
- A14: The Nameless Souls
- A15: Love Leaks Out
- A16: Act Of Being Polite
- A17: Medicine Man
- A18: Tragic Bells
- A19: Loss Of Innocence
- A20: The Simple Song
- B1: Ups And Downs
- B2: Possessions
- B3: Give It To Someone Else
- B4: Phantom
- B7: Birds In The Trees
- B8: Handfull Of Desire
- B9: Moisture
- B10: Love Is
- B11: Troubled Man
- B12: La La
- B13: Loneliness
- B14: Nice Old Man
- B15: The Talk Of Creatures
- B16: Fingertips
- B17: In Between Dreams
- B18: Margaret Freeman
- B19: The Coming Of The Crow
- B20: When We Were Young
- C1: Coms 1-3 Rdx Suite Pt 1
- (The ‘Commercial Album’ Multi-Track Tapes)
- D1: Coms 1-3 Rdx Suite Pt 2
- (The ‘Commercial Album’ Multi-Track Tapes)
- B5: Less Not More
- B6: My Work Is So Behind
THE LEGENDARY 1980 ALBUM REMASTERED FROM THE ORIGINAL TAPES.
• 2LP SET WITH 12” X 12” BOOKLET.
• INLCUDES THE PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED ‘COMS 1-3 RDX SUITE’ (TAKEN FROM THE ‘COMMERCIAL
ALBUM’ MULTITRACK TAPES).
• PRODUCED WITH THE RESIDENTS AND THE CRYPTIC CORPORATION.
• THE SEVENTH IN A SERIES OF VINYL RE-ISSUES OF THE RESIDENTS’ CLASSIC 70S ALBUMS.
Formed in the early 1970s, The Residents have now been charting a unique path through the
musical landscape for 50 years. In celebration of that remarkable and unlikely anniversary, we
present an expanded vinyl edition of the classic 1980 LP ‘Commercial Album’.
Following almost a decade spent attempting to redefine what pop music could be, but with zero
hit singles to show for it, The Residents finally caved and produced their own pop music album as
the 80s dawned. But rather than have each song repeat the same minute of music three times as
per the traditional pop format, The Residents produced no less than 40 one-minute pop
masterpieces, and invited the listener to do the repeating bit themselves if they felt the need.
The resulting ‘Commercial Album’ both showcased the incredible depth of the group’s musical
palette and proved definitively that they could easily be as big as The Beatles if they wanted to.
Probably bigger, actually.
Featuring a breathless collage of toe-tappers, memorable melodies, instrumental experiments
and guest performers (Fred Frith, Chris Cutler and XTC’s Andy Partridge among them), the
record has since acquired legendary status among both fans and confused onlookers alike.
Alongside the original album, this 2LP edition presents the ‘COMS 1-3 RDX Suite’ – a brand new
interpretation of (almost) the entire album, produced by the group using the original multi-track
tapes – and a brand new sleevenote essay shedding new light on the album’s production.
‘Commercial Album’ is the latest in The Residents’ extensive ongoing pREServed series – expect
more throughout 2023 and 2024. Possibly even 2025 too, the way things are going.
- A1: Muddy Waters - Rollin' Stone
- A2: Chuck Berry - Come On
- A3: Howlin' Wolf - The Red Rooster
- A4: Bo Diddley - Mona
- A5: John Lee Hooker - Dimples
- A6: Jimmy Reed - Honest I Do
- A7: Little Walter - Confessin' The Blues
- A8: Slim Harpo - I'm A King Bee
- A9: Robert Johnson - Love In Vain Blues
- A10: Elvis Presley - My Baby Left Me
- A11: Buddy Holly & The Crickets - Not Fade Away
- A12: Cliff Richard & The Shadows - You Don't Know
- A13: Eddie Cochran - 20 Flight Rock
- A14: Jerry Lee Lewis - Money (That's What I Want)
- A15: The Everly Brothers - Wake Up Little Susie
- A16: Dale Hawkins - Susie-Q
- A17: Johnny Kidd & The Pirates - I Can Tell
- A18: Alexis Korner's Blues Incorporated - I Got My Mojo Working
- B1: Ray Charles - I'm Movin' On
- B2: Marvin Gaye - Hitch Hike
- B3: The Temptations - Oh Mother Of Mine
- B4: Smokey Robinson & The Miracles - Mighty Good Lovin
- B5: The Coasters - Poison Ivy
- B6: Larry Williams - She Said Yeah
- B9: Buster Brown - Fannie Mae
- B10: Otis Redding - These Arms Of Mine
- B11: Solomon Burke -Cry To Me
- B12: The Drifters - Save The Last Dance For Me
- B13: Don Covay - I'm Coming Down With The Blues
- B14: Benny Spellman - Fortune Teller
- B15: Arthur Alexander - You Better Move On
- B16: Bob & Earl - Oh Baby Doll
- B17: Alvin Robinson - Oh Red
- B18: Gene Allison - You Can Make It If You Try
- B7: Irma Thomas - Don't Mess With My Man
- B8: Amos Milburn - Down The Road Apiece
- A1: Got My Mojo Working
- A2: Jailhouse Rock
- A3: Tell Me What You’re Gonna Do
- A4: Green Onions
- A5: Hit The Road Jack
- A6: I Just Want To Make Love To You
- A7: Rawhide
- A8: Twistin’ The Night Away
- A9: Fever
- A10: Do You Love Me?
- B1: Are You Sure?
- B2: Dimples
- B3: Let Me Be Your Boy
- B4: Last Night
- B5: It’s Gonna Work Out Fine
- B6: Shake A Tail Feather
- B7: Respectable
- B8: Louie, Louie
- B9: New Orleans
- B10: Peter Gunn Theme
- A1: Boom Boom
- A2: Boogie Chillun
- A3: Crawling King Snake
- A4: I Love You Baby
- A5: Hobo Blues
- A6: Little Wheel
- A7: Drive Me Away
- A8: I'm Gonna Kill That Woman
- B1: I'm A Boogie Man
- B2: I Need Some Money
- B3: Bundle Up & Go
- B4: Mad Man Blues
- B5: You Can Lead Me Baby
- B6: Worried Life Blues
- B7: Will The Circle Be Unbroken
- B8: No More Doggin
- C1: Dimples
- C2: Please Don't Go
- C3: I Love You Honey
- C4: I Don't Want Your Money
- C5: High Priced Woman
- C6: Just Me & My Telephone
- C7: I'm Goin' Upstairs
- C8: Walkin' The Boogie
- D1: I'm In The Mood
- D2: Shake, Holler & Run
- D3: Leave My Wife Alone
- D4: Blues Before Sunrise
- D5: I'm Ready
- D6: Wandering Blues
- D7: Sally Mae
- D8: Boogie Rambler
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