• logo

Crown Prince Waterford - Blues & Rhythm Series Classics 5024: The Chronological Crown Prince Waterford 1946-1950 (2002) [CD Rip]

Crown Prince Waterford - Blues & Rhythm Series Classics 5024: The Chronological Crown Prince Waterford 1946-1950 (2002) [CD Rip]
  • Title: Blues & Rhythm Series Classics 5024: The Chronological Crown Prince Waterford 1946-1950
  • Year Of Release: 2002
  • Label: Classics Records
  • Genre: Blues, R&B, Jazz
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks+cue+log+scans)
  • Total Time: 67:16
  • Total Size: 170 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:
01. Girl Friend Blues (2:48)
02. Satisfied Blues (2:49)
03. The Prince Strikes Back (2:27)
04. Washboard Blues (3:04)
05. Whistler's Blues (3:05)
06. Undercover Blues (2:55)
07. Move Your Hand Baby (2:25)
08. L..A. Blues (2:40)
09. Coal Black Baby (2:45)
10. Weeping Willow Blues (3:03)
11. Strane Woman's Blues (3:00)
12. P.I. Blues (3:01)
13. Crown Prince Blues (2:40)
14. Leaping Boogie (2:43)
15. Eatin' Watermelom (3:03)
16. Love Awhile (2:23)
17. All Over Again (3:02)
18. You Turned Your Back On Me (2:55)
19. Get Away From My Door (2:53)
20. Pow-Wow Boogie (2:33)
21. I'm Sweet On You (2:42)
22. Kissing Bug Boogie (2:35)
23. Hard Driving Woman (2:50)
24. Time To Blow (2:43)

b. Charles Waterford, 21 October 1919, Jonesboro, Arkansas, USA. Waterford’s parents, who were both musicians, taught their son to sing. His first professional jobs were with Andy Kirk’s 12 Clouds Of Joy and Leslie Sheffield’s Rhythmaires. Waterford became known as ‘the Crown Prince Of The Blues’ during his brief stay with Jay McShann’s Orchestra, during which time he recorded for Philo/Aladdin and Premier/ Mercury. Usurped by Jimmy Witherspoon, Waterford went solo in 1946 to record in Chicago for Hy-Tone, and the following year recorded his most celebrated tracks in Los Angeles for Capitol Records with Pete Johnson’s band. These included the salacious ‘Move Your Hand Baby’. Waterford rejoined McShann at a 1949 recording session for Jack Lauderdale and made four superb tracks for King with young Harold Land And His All-Stars, and another four with the Joe Thomas Orchestra. A mid-50s session for Excello Records resulted in two tracks of prime blues shouting, but later records for Orbit and Stampede tried to appeal to the twist craze and sank into obscurity. By contrast, Waterford’s earlier sides show him to be an original blues singer; most of his songs were self-penned and featured highly original and evocative lyrics. Waterford is still alive, and much of his time over the past 30 years had been devoted to the church until 2003, when he recorded an all-new album. ~AMG



My Blog
For requests/re-ups, please send me private message.

Download:
IsraCloud

As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
  • Unlimited high speed downloads
  • Download directly without waiting time
  • Unlimited parallel downloads
  • Support for download accelerators
  • No advertising
  • Resume broken downloads
  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 00:26
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless!
  • User offline
  • bearfromdelaware
  •  wrote in 04:56
    • Like
    • 0
Thank you for sharing this