I Want To Boogie
Download links and information about I Want To Boogie by Eddie Cusic. This album was released in 1998 and it belongs to Blues genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 48:35 minutes.
Artist: | Eddie Cusic |
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Release date: | 1998 |
Genre: | Blues |
Tracks: | 15 |
Duration: | 48:35 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Pretty Thing | 3:06 |
2. | Reconsider Baby | 3:22 |
3. | Catfish Blues | 3:43 |
4. | Worry You Off My Mind | 5:22 |
5. | Cut You Loose | 2:44 |
6. | Ludella | 4:00 |
7. | Little Angel Child | 3:28 |
8. | Big Boss Man | 2:52 |
9. | You Don't Have To Go | 2:34 |
10. | Hoochie Coochie Man | 3:13 |
11. | I Walk the Water | 2:39 |
12. | Stop Arguing Over Me | 2:42 |
13. | Good Morning Little School Girl | 2:54 |
14. | Feelin' Good | 2:43 |
15. | You Don't Love Me | 3:13 |
Details
[Edit]Eddie Cusic is the Mississippi bluesman who taught a young Little Milton Campbell to play. But until this 1998 debut, Cusic had amazingly gone unrecorded. This field recording, done live at Cusic's house, rectifies that situation and consequently brings another fine acoustic blues artist to the light. Cusic's music is pure Mississippi blues, and that stylistic derivation can't be stressed strongly enough. Even when Eddie is playing urban electric blues tunes like Muddy's "Hoochie Coochie Man," and Lowell Fulson's "Reconsider Baby," Willie Cobb's "You Don't Love Me" or Jimmy Reed's "Pretty Thing" (wrongly credited on this disc to Cusic), "You Don't Have to Go," or "Big Boss Man," the sound and style delivered is pure back-porch country-blues. The large part of his repertoire relies on old warhorses like "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl," "Ludella," "Feelin' Good," and "Catfish Blues," but the individual stamp Cusic brings to these old standbys with nothing more than his rough-hewn voice and simple but driving guitar makes this previously unrecorded bluesman a wonderful repository of tradition with his own wrinkle to it. A strong debut that also makes the first new "blues discovery" since the halcyon days of the 1960s.