The Butterfield Blues Band - Keep on Moving (CD)

Keep on Moving
$12.00
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Album Details: Keep on Moving

Release Date:01/01/1969
Label:Wounded Bird Records
UPC:664140405325

Track List: Keep on Moving

  1. Love March
  2. No Amount Of Loving
  3. Morning Sunrise
  4. Losing Hand
  5. Walking By Myself
  6. Except You
  1. Love Disease
  2. Where Did My Baby Go
  3. All In A Day
  4. So Far So Good
  5. Buddy's Advice
  6. Keep On Moving

Other Available Formats: Keep on Moving

Pro Reviews: Keep on Moving

  • All Music Guide

    Released in 1969, Keep on Moving was the fifth Elektra release by the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. During a fouryear span the group's namesake and leader was the only original member left from their first album in 1965. Morphing in a similar direction as Michael Bloomfield's Electric Flag, this edition of the Butterfield Blues Band prominently fronted the horn section of David Sanborn on alto sax, Gene Dinwiddie on tenor, and Keith Johnson on trumpet. The band's direction was full tilt, horndominated soul music, first explored on The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw, which took them farther away from the highly regarded gritty blues experimentation of EastWest and the duel guitar attack of Michael Bloomfield and Elvin Bishop. This album also signaled the final appearance of AACM and Art Ensemble of Chicago drummer Phillip Wilson, whose Butterfield swan song was the collaboration with Dinwiddie on the hippie gospel track "Love March," of which an appropriately disjointed live version app...eared on the Woodstock soundtrack album. The difference between Butterfield's 1965 street survival ode "Born in Chicago" ("My father told me 'son you'd better get a gun") and "Love March" ("Sing a glad song, sing all the time") left fans wondering if the band had become a bit too democratic. However, on cuts like "Losing Hand," some of the band's original fervor remains. Butterfield's harp intertwining with the horn section sounds like a lost Junior Parker outtake and the Jimmy Rogers' penned "Walking by Myself," is the closest this band comes to the gutsy Windy City blues of its heyday. The remaining tracks aren't horrible, but tend to run out of ideas quickly, unfortunately making what may have been decent material (with a little more effort) sound premature. Butterfield would make a few more personnel changes, release one final disc on Elektra, Sometimes I Just Feel Like Smilin', and then dump the band altogether to embark on a solo career. In 2006, Sundazed released a HighDefinition Vinyl LP version of Keep on Moving. - Al Campbell, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Paul Butterfield

Paul Butterfield was the first white harmonica player to develop a style original and powerful enough to place him in the pantheon of true blues greats. It's impossible to underestimate the importance of the doors Butterfield opened: before he came to prominence, white American musicians treated the blues with cautious respect, afraid of coming off as inauthentic. Not o... Read more