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Long John Baldry - Boogie Woogie: The Warner Bros. Recordings (CD)

Boogie Woogie: The Warner Bros. Recordings
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Album Details: Boogie Woogie: The Warner Bros. Recordings

Release Date:01/01/2005
Label:Rhino Handmade
UPC:603497789627

Track List: Boogie Woogie: The Warner Bros. Recordings

Disk 2

  1. Intro: Come Back Again
  2. Seventh Son
  3. Wild Mountain Thyme
  4. Iko Iko
  5. Jubilee Cloud
  6. Everything Stops for Tea
  7. You Can't Judge a Book
  8. Mother Ain't Dead
  1. Hambone
  2. Lord Remember Me
  3. Armit's Trousers
  4. Radio Spot #1 [*]
  5. Bring My Baby Back to Me [Live a...
  6. Only Love Can Break Your Heart [...
  7. I'm Just a Rake & Rambling Boy [...
  8. Radio Spot #2 [*]

Pro Reviews: Boogie Woogie: The Warner Bros. Recordings

  • All Music Guide

    This double pack, limited to 2500 copies, reissues Long John Baldry's long out of printat least in the StatesWarner Brothers albums from the early70s, adding a handful of additional tracks (alternate versions, radio spots, unreleased songs) to each. Both 1971's It Ain't Easy and 1972's Everything Stops for Tea were coproduced by Elton John and Rod Stewartneither whom had attained major popularity yet who worked on one album side per disc. Although Sid Griffin's generally insightful liner notes that describe these releases as "some of the best British blues rock to grace black vinyl" may be overstating their importance, there is a fair amount of genuinely solid music here. For the most part Baldry covered American blues in his uniquely ornate British style, which not surprisingly didn't resonate with US audiences the way say, The Rolling Stones did. His was a more studied albeit eclectic approach, dipping into New Orleans pop ("Iko Iko"), UK music hall ("Everything Stops for Tea"), trad...itional folk ("Mother Ain't Dead" with Rod Stewart on vocals and banjo) and gospel along with some memorable Willie Dixon tunes ("Seventh Son," "I'm Ready," "You Can't Judge a Book"). It Ain't Easy's first five selections feature members of what would later be Rod Stewart's Every Picture Tells a Story band backing up Baldry, and is considered a stepping stone to that classic recording. Baldry isn't the most magnetic performer, but his gruff voice has a certain charm, and even if the material is a bit erratic, he is obviously enjoying himself. A boisterous Baldry tears into the slow blues "Bring My Baby Back to Me" from 1972's MarYSol Festival as one of disc two's extras. He also goes country, rather convincingly, for a lovely cover of Neil Young's "Only Love Can Break Your Heart." The only clear classic here is the rollicking "Don't Try to Lay No Boogie Woogie on the King of Rock and Roll," a terrific rocking underground hit that was Baldry's only stab on American radio. While that may not be worth the rather inflated price of this limited edition reissue, these albums are both intermittently enjoyable and Rhino has done its usual classy job repackaging them with remastered sound and rare pictures. - Hal Horowitz, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Long John Baldry

Like Cliff Richard, Chris Farlowe, Slade, Blur, and eel pie, Long John Baldry is one of those peculiarly British phenomenons that doggedly resists American translation. As a historical figure, he has undeniable importance. When he began singing as a teenager in the 1950s, he was one of the first British vocalists to perform folk and blues music. In the early '60s, he sa... Read more