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Pee Wee Crayton - Blues After Hours (CD)

Blues After Hours
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Album Details: Blues After Hours

Release Date:01/01/2003
Label:P-vine Japan
UPC:4995879030288

Track List: Blues After Hours

  1. Texas Hop [Instrumental]
  2. Blues After Hours [Instrumental]
  3. I Love You So
  4. Got a Letter from My Baby
  5. Central Avenue Blues
  6. California Woman
  7. Bonce Pee Wee [Instrumental]
  8. Change Your Way of Lovin'
  9. Jack and the Beanstalk [Instrume...
  10. Please Come Back
  1. Dedicating the Blues to You
  2. Rockin' the Blues
  3. Crayton's Blues [Instrumental]
  4. Pee Wee's Boogie [Instrumental]
  5. Some Rainy Day
  6. Tired of Travelin'
  7. Mistreated Blues
  8. Oh Yeah Boogie [Instrumental]
  9. Blues for My Baby [Instrumental]

Pro Reviews: Blues After Hours

  • All Music Guide

    There are much better annotated Pee Wee Crayton anthologies out there, but the dark horse import Blues After Hours offers an extremely wellrounded collection of material, compiling sides from Crayton's memorable stints at both the Modern and Imperial labels (a feat that has yet to be accomplished by any domestic singleCD reissue of Crayton's work). This is a great starting point for blues guitar fans especially Texas and West Coaststyle enthusiasts who may be unfamiliar with Crayton's often overlooked career. The seven instrumentals alone (including the classics "Blues After Hours," "Texas Hop," and "Poppa Stoppa") are worth the price of admission, and the vocal cuts are just as impressive, with a young Crayton showing off his keen ability to switch from "over the top blues shouter" mode to "dapper RB crooner" mode at the drop of a downbeat. In addition to the tracks culled from the Modern and Imperial sessions (originally recorded between 1947 and 1955), Blues After Hours includes "...The Telephone Is Ringing," a slow blues that Crayton cut for VeeJay in 1956. Ignore the skimpy liner notes and the cheap cover art; the songs assembled in this package are all firstrate, and they represent an essential chapter in postwar electric blues. - Ken Chang, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Pee Wee Crayton

Although he was certainly inexorably influenced by the pioneering electric guitar conception of T-Bone Walker (what axe-handler wasn't during the immediate postwar era?), Pee Wee Crayton brought enough daring innovation to his playing to avoid being labeled as a mere T-Bone imitator. Crayton's recorded output for Modern, Imperial, and Vee-Jay contains plenty of dazzling... Read more