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Dupree 'N' McPhee: The 1967 Blue Horizon Session

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Download links and information about Dupree 'N' McPhee: The 1967 Blue Horizon Session by Champion Jack Dupree, T. S. McPhee. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues, Acoustic genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 42:14 minutes.

Artist: Champion Jack Dupree, T. S. McPhee
Release date: 2005
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues, Acoustic
Tracks: 16
Duration: 42:14
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Get Your Head Happy 2:20
2. Sick In Bed 2:43
3. Papa Told Mama 2:09
4. Easy Is the Way 2:47
5. Who Was Here a While Ago 2:32
6. Down In Clarksdale 3:00
7. Baby Don't You Put Me Out 1:59
8. My Baby Told Me 2:17
9. No Meat Blues 3:14
10. My Darling 3:09
11. Dead Cat On the Line 2:38
12. Talk All In My Sleep 3:27
13. Got My Ticket 2:23
14. My Home In Mississippi 3:24
15. Black Snake Breakdown 2:16
16. The Snow Is On the Ground 1:56

Details

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The session at which these 16 tracks were recorded (in 1967, though there's some speculation it might have been done earlier) was a most unusual one for Champion Jack Dupree, and to a lesser degree for T.S. McPhee. Although Dupree was a pianist, not only does he play no piano here — there is no piano to be heard. Instead, the sole accompaniment is the acoustic guitar of T.S. McPhee, soon to become famous as the figurehead of the British blues-rock band the Groundhogs. It's an unusual combination, and not the best or most characteristic Dupree recording. That doesn't mean, however, that it isn't worthwhile, particularly for some of the more open-minded fans of traditional-styled acoustic blues. Dupree's vocals are characteristically warm and inviting on this set of pretty downhome, rootsy blues, all written by Dupree and McPhee themselves. McPhee's guitar work might be the most noteworthy aspect of this recording date, however, even if he didn't get lead billing. His playing is both proficient and moving, particularly when he unleashes the snakiest of his slide guitar lines, as he does on "Get Your Head Happy," "No Meat Blues," and the brisk "Got My Ticket" in particular. It's a low-key group of recordings, but a pleasantly earthy one. Two of them, "Get Your Head Happy" and "Easy Is the Way," came out on a limited-edition 1967 single, and another on a 1997 CD, but all of the others made their first appearance anywhere on this 2005 compilation.