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The Very Best Of

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Download links and information about The Very Best Of by Lonnie Johnson. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Blues, Jazz genres. It contains 35 tracks with total duration of 01:36:20 minutes.

Artist: Lonnie Johnson
Release date: 2005
Genre: Blues, Jazz
Tracks: 35
Duration: 01:36:20
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Tomorrow Night 3:04
2. Feeling Low Down 2:05
3. I Am So Glad 2:36
4. Jelly Roll Baker 2:40
5. Jersey Belle Blues 3:03
6. Laplegged Drunk Again 2:44
7. Devil's Got the Blues 2:57
8. Mr. Johnson Swing 2:48
9. Fallin' Rain Blues 2:47
10. Backwater Blues 3:04
11. Me and My Crazy Self 2:35
12. I Want My Baby 2:42
13. Don't Be No Fool 2:57
14. Tell Me Little Woman 2:46
15. What a Woman 2:50
16. Drunk Again 2:55
17. Seven Long Days 3:10
18. She's So Sweet 2:32
19. Nothin Clickin' Chicken 2:32
20. Trouble Ain't Nothin But the Blues 2:42
21. Hard Times Ain't Gone Nowhere 2:39
22. Blue Ghost Blues 3:01
23. Feel So Lonesome 3:06
24. You Can't Buy Love 2:01
25. Careless Love 3:00
26. Friendless and Blue 3:19
27. Swing Out Rhythm 2:39
28. Nothing But Trouble 2:42
29. Working Man's Blues 2:53
30. Chicago Blues 1:55
31. Just Another Day 2:36
32. Man Killing Broad 2:32
33. Little Rockin' Chair 2:50
34. Friendless Blues 3:00
35. What a Real Woman 2:38

Details

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With an elegant guitar style that helped bridge country blues and the more modern urban R&B sound while at the same time keeping a dialogue going between jazz and the blues, Lonnie Johnson was one of the most important guitarists of his generation. He recorded hundreds of sides for OKeh, Decca, and Bluebird between 1925 and 1945, and participated in scores more as a session man for the likes of Duke Ellington and others. By the mid-'40s he had switched from acoustic to electric guitar and had signed with Cincinnati's King Records, recording several successful ballads for the label between 1947 and 1950, the period covered by this anthology. He never completely abandoned the blues, however, and while some of his King ballads are included here (like his big 1948 R&B hit "Tomorrow Night"), a good portion of these tracks are country blues standards posing in uptown clothes. Prime examples include the solo "Backwater Blues" and the Appalachian blues classic "Little Rockin' Chair," both of which have long lineages, and his cover of the Delmore Brothers' "Trouble Ain't Nothin' But the Blues," which doesn't have a long history as a song, but in Johnson's hands it sounds like it could have. Johnson left King in 1950, recording a few sides for Rama Records before the changing tastes of record buyers made his style seem obsolete, and he left the recording business in 1954, moving to Philadelphia, where he supported himself doing custodial work until the folk-blues revival of the 1960s brought him out of musical retirement. As a guitarist, Johnson's most important work will always be his early acoustic sides (Columbia's Steppin' On the Blues is a good set in that regard, as is Snapper's Playing With the Strings), although as a singer — and he was a very good vocalist, with a rough-edged yet easy elegance — his time with King, when he began to concentrate more on ballads, may well be his finest hour.