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Luther "Guitar Jr" Johnson - Luther's Blues (Reissue) (1977/2000)

Luther "Guitar Jr" Johnson - Luther's Blues (Reissue) (1977/2000)
  • Title: Luther's Blues
  • Year Of Release: 1977/2000
  • Label: Black And Blue
  • Genre: Blues, Modern Chicago Blues
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 57:14
  • Total Size: 139/387 Mb
  • WebSite:
Luther "Guitar Jr" Johnson - Luther's Blues (Reissue) (1977/2000)


Tracklist:

01. Back At The Chicken Shack (5:36)
02. You'd Better Watch Yourself (3:03)
03. Mother-In-Law Blues (4:40)
04. Luther's Blues (5:32)
05. Little Queenie (3:47)
06. Too Many Drivers (5:11)
07. I Can't Stop (5:26)
08. Sweet Home Chicago (4:40)
09. Come Baby (4:11)
10. Nobody Wants To Loose (5:23)
11. You'd Better Watch Yourself (2:39)
12. Boogin' In The Dark (3:16)
13. Little Queenie (3:50)

Line-up::
Luther "Guitar Jr." Johnson - vocal , guitar
Jerry Portnoy - harmonica
Pinetop Perkins - piano
Bob Margolin - guitar
Calvin Jones - bass
Willie "Big Eyes" Smith - drums

Of the three blues guitarists answering to the name of Luther Johnson, this West Side-styled veteran is probably the best known. Adding to the general confusion surrounding the triumvirate, like Luther "Snake Boy" Johnson, Luther "Guitar Junior" Johnson spent a lengthy stint in the top-seeded band of Muddy Waters (1972-1979). Gospel and blues intersected in young Luther Johnson's life while he was still in Mississippi. But after he moved to Chicago in the mid-'50s, blues was his main passion, working with Ray Scott and Tall Milton Shelton before taking over the latter's combo in 1962. Magic Sam was a major stylistic inspiration to Johnson during the mid-'60s (Johnson spent a couple of years in Sam's band). The West Side approach remained integral to Johnson's sound, even after he moved to the Boston area during the early '80s. Johnson's 1976 debut album, Luther's Blues, was cut during a European tour with Muddy Waters. By 1980, he was on his own, recording with the Nighthawks as well as four tracks on Alligator's second series of Living Chicago Blues anthologies. With his own band, the Magic Rockers, and the Roomful of Blues horn section, Johnson released Doin' the Sugar Too on Rooster Blues in 1984. In the early '90s, Johnson was signed to Ron Levy's Bullseye Blues logo; his three albums for the firm were sizzling, soul-tinged blues with a strong West Side flavor often slicing through. He subsequently recorded a series of albums for the Telarc label, including Slammin’ on the West Side (1996), Got to Find a Way (1998), and Talkin’ About Soul (2001).


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