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The Tradition Masters

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Download links and information about The Tradition Masters by Lightnin’ Hopkins / Lightnin' Hopkins. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Blues genres. It contains 27 tracks with total duration of 01:25:43 minutes.

Artist: Lightnin’ Hopkins / Lightnin' Hopkins
Release date: 2002
Genre: Blues
Tracks: 27
Duration: 01:25:43
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. In the Evening, The Sun Is Going Down 4:13
2. Trouble in Mind 2:53
3. Mama and Papa Hopkins 4:43
4. The Foot Race Is On 2:43
5. That Gambling Life 4:52
6. When the Saints Go Marching In 2:44
7. Get off My Toe 4:59
8. 75 Highway 4:12
9. Bottle up and Go 3:42
10. Short Haired Woman 3:39
11. So Long Baby 1:47
12. Santa Fe Blues 3:10
13. Long Time 1:36
14. Rainy Day Blues 3:07
15. Baby! 3:05
16. Long Gone Like a Turkey Through the Corn 3:41
17. Prison Blues Come Down on Me 3:24
18. Backwater Blues 2:45
19. Gonna Pull a Party 3:38
20. Bluebird, Bluebird 1:27
21. See, See Rider 3:10
22. Worrying My Mind 3:26
23. Til the Gin Gets Here 1:02
24. Bunion Stew 1:55
25. You Got to Work to Get Your Pay 2:30
26. Go Down Ol' Hannah 3:31
27. Hear My Black Dog Bark 3:49

Details

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Lightnin' Hopkins' career, recording history, and music remain fascinating. Like John Lee Hooker, he served as a bridge between older country blues and the newer electric variety; like Hooker, he played in both styles while never losing the idiosyncratic nature of the earlier method (his electric music sounds like country blues on an electric guitar). Hopkins' long career also produced a terribly confusing discography, making the task of choosing a particular introductory disc a daunting one. The Tradition Masters, a two-disc set recorded by folklorist Mack McCormick around 1959-1960, is a good place to start for a couple of reasons. First, Hopkins is in his element here, relaxed and comfortable with the material. McCormick's desire to record him "pure and unplugged" also adds to the intensity of these sets, keeping the music focused and intimate. There are fun pieces like "Mama and Papa Hopkins" and "Get Off My Toe," and more familiar ones like "Trouble in Mind" and "See See Rider." Hopkins is joined on vocals by Luke "Long Gone" Miles on cuts like "Baby" and "Prison Blues Come Down on Me" on the second disc. The song credits are bit puzzling, with most of these pieces attributed to Hopkins and McCormick. While these songs may be arranged differently than earlier versions, it's doubtful that either party had a good excuse to take credit for "When the Saints Go Marching In." Regardless of who wrote these songs, The Tradition Masters is a fine set of pure country blues. ~ Ronnie D. Lankford Jr., Rovi