Etta James - Rocks The House (Live, 1964) @flacseeders: 5
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Etta James - Rocks The House (Live, 1964) @flac (Size: 302.25 MB)
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Simply one of the greatest live blues albums ever captured on tape. Cut in 1963 at the New Era Club in Nashville, the
set finds Etta James in stellar shape as she forcefully delivers her own "Something's Got a Hold on Me" and "Seven Day Fool" interspersed with a diet of sizzling covers ("What'd I Say," "Sweet Little Angel," "Money," "Ooh Poo Pah Doo"). The CD incarnation adds three more great titles, including an impassioned reprise of her "All I Could Do Is Cry." Guitarist David T. Walker is outstanding whenever he solos.(AMG) Searing stuff -- easily one of Etta James' greatest albums! The set is a non-stop jam, recorded live at the New Era Club in Nashville before a small and screaming crowd -- a perfect performance all the way through, one that showcases Etta as she rarely sounded on vinyl during the 1960s. The whole album runs away like a train on fire, and it's filled with incredibly lively readings of tracks like "Something's Got A Hold On Me", "Baby What You Want Me To Do", "Money", "Seven Day Fool", and "Woke Up This Morning" -- all taken at versions longer than the usual under-3 minute single takes! Though the studio albums Etta James made for Chess in the 1960s usually had the blues singer surrounded by lush production and string-heavy arrangements, this live date finds her performing with only a rhythm section, organist, guitarist, and tenor saxophonist. The singer seems to respond to both the stripped-down setting and the enthusiastic audience with noticeable abandon. In fact, James the classy balladeer, a role she sometimes plays on her studio albums, is nowhere to be found on this blazing set. The only time the band slows down is on the tearjerker story-song "All I Could Do Is Cry" (though what the tune lacks in tempo it makes up for in emotional intensity). The rest of the set is straight-edged blues and R&B, including covers of some hits of the day, like "Money (That's What I Want)" and Ray Charles's "What'd I Say." Jimmy Reed's "Baby What You Want Me To Do" (on which James does a growling, harmonica-imitating vocal solo) steps up the blues quotient, as does the band's finale of Willie Dixon's "I Just Want To Make Love to You," with James's gospel-drenched pipes wailing all the while. ETTA JAMES ROCKS THE HOUSE indeed. http://i42.tinypic.com/359badl.jpg 01. Something's Got A Hold On Me 02. Baby What You Want Me To Do 03. What'd I Say 04. Money (That's What I Want) 05. Seven Day Fool 06. Sweet Little Angel 07. Ohh Poo Pah Doo 08. Woke Up This Morning 09. Ain't That Lovin' You Baby (previously unreleased) 10. All I Could Do Is Cry (previously unreleased) 11. I Just Want To Make Love To You (previously unreleased) Personnel: Etta James (vocals); David Walker (guitar); Gavrell Cooper (tenor saxophone); Vonzell Cooper (organ); Marion Wright (bass); Freeman Brown, Richard Waters (drums). Recorded live at The New Era Club, Nashville, Tennessee on September 27 and 28, 1963. Originally released on Argo (4032), 1964 Includes liner notes by Ralph Bass and by Don Snowden. Digitally remastered by Paul Elmore (MCA Studios, North Hollywood, California). Label: Chess/MCA Date: 1992 Codec: Flac Compression Level: 3 Quality: High My cd-rip (EAC and Flac) Covers IncludedEnjoy, Seed and Share Related Torrents
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