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Jesse Thomas 1948 - 1958

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Download links and information about Jesse Thomas 1948 - 1958 by Jesse Thomas. This album was released in 1994 and it belongs to Blues, Acoustic genres. It contains 28 tracks with total duration of 01:13:39 minutes.

Artist: Jesse Thomas
Release date: 1994
Genre: Blues, Acoustic
Tracks: 28
Duration: 01:13:39
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Same Old Stuff 2:54
2. Double Due Love You 2:40
3. Zetter Blues 2:32
4. Mountain Key Blues 2:42
5. Melody In C 2:36
6. You Are My Dreams 2:49
7. I Wonder Why 2:37
8. Another Friend Like Me 2:26
9. Guess I'll Walk Alone 3:08
10. Let's Have Some Fun 3:00
11. Gonna Write You a Letter 2:51
12. Meet Me Tonight Along the Avenue 2:50
13. Tomorrow I May Be Gone 2:37
14. Texas Blues 2:53
15. I Can't Stay Here 2:27
16. Xmas Celebration 2:35
17. Now's the Time 2:49
18. It's You I'm Thinking Of 2:41
19. It's You I'm Thinking of (Alternate Take) 2:45
20. I Am So Blue 2:11
21. Long Time 2:42
22. Cool Kind Lover 2:05
23. When You Say I Love You 2:46
24. Jack of Diamonds 2:12
25. Another Fool Like Me 2:25
26. Gonna Move to California 2:21
27. Take Some and Leave Some 2:57
28. Blow My Baby Back Home 2:08

Details

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This 28-song compilation is a serious listening workout, in the best possible meaning of the description. Assembled here are all of the post-World War II sides by Jesse Thomas, recorded variously for Miltone Records, his own short-lived Club label, Freedom, Modern, Swing Time, Specialty, Elko, and Hollywood, across a period of ten years. This was a period in which Thomas embraced a vast range of sounds, all of them with remarkable effectiveness but without a lot of consistency. One of Thomas' virtues and problems was that he may have been too versatile for his own good — based on the evidence of this collection, on which no two groups of recordings, even done within the same year (albeit for different labels) sound the same, he seems not to have stuck with a sound long enough to have built an audience. The Miltone sides which open this set, all done by Thomas solo on vocals and electric guitar, are a case in point — his singing is fine, and the second Miltone side, in particular, "D. Double Due Love You," is notable not only for the vocal acrobatics in which Thomas engages, but also his guitar pyrotechnics anticipate elements of Chuck Berry's playing a decade hence, on numbers such as "Guitar Boogie" (which, itself, became the basis for the Yardbirds' "Jeff's Boogie"). But when Thomas cut sides for release on his own Club label, he was accompanied by a pianist (identity unknown); and these show him in a much more interesting role, playing off of the unknown pianist on the instrumental "Melody in C," while "You Are My Dreams" captures him stretching out better as a singer than the Miltone sides; and "I Wonder Why" and "Another Friend Like You" demonstrate Thomas developing a much more accessible edge to his singing, closer to RIB than pure country blues. And on the Freedom sides, which follow, he's working with saxmen Sam Williams and Conrad Johnson, and he's reaching for notes and effects as a singer that seemingly weren't in his repertory a year or two before. But then, on the early Modern sides — two of which were unissued until the release of this CD — he's working solo again. Finally, on Swing Time two years later, in 1951, he's plucking along with a small band working in dance rhythms, and he's never sounded better. But by this time, anyone who'd heard Thomas' previous records might wonder precisely what he was offering musically. And, amazingly, what he was offering by then happened to be amazingly close (for 1951) to what soon became rock & roll — even the appropriately titled "I Am so Blue," with its rippling piano figure (player unknown), could have qualified as a pretty hot dance number for teenagers. And then there's the guitar-driven "Long Time," with its brittle, amplified guitar figure, out in front with Thomas' vocal — which sounds as though Willie Johnson sneaked out of a Howlin' Wolf session to play here; whatever Hollywood Records hoped to attract in listenership with this or its hotter B-side, "Cool Kind Lover," was never clear, but the latter song, in particular, could have slotted right in as a Chess Records release circa 1955. Thomas' Specialty sides are among the most restrained of his early-'50s output — "Jack of Diamonds" has a great beat, but "When You Say I Love You" is a slow, mournful blues ballad. The Elko sides from 1955 could easily have charted either R&B or pop in 1955, and his 1958 Hollywood sides could have hit, the 46-year-old Thomas effectively competing with the rock & roll sides of the era, right down to the off-kilter guitar and harmonica break and adding a few unexpected curves to the road already traveled by Chuck Berry's "Maybellene"." Except for the first two Club sides, the sound is clean, bright, and crisp on everything, even the previously unissued tracks, and the annotation is amazingly full, given how little is actually known about Thomas and his life.