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Rufus Thomas - Walking the Dog (CD)

Walking the Dog
$29.50
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Album Details: Walking the Dog

Release Date:01/18/2005
Label:Atlantic
UPC:075678225420

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Pro Reviews: Walking the Dog

  • All Music Guide

    One of the artists who defined Memphis soul and put Stax Records on the map, Rufus Thomas is known for liking his RB hard-edged, gritty and earthy. That approach served him impressively well on his debut album Walking the Dog. In contrast to the sleeker, more elaborate production style favored by the Northern soulsters of Motown, Thomas rejects pop elements altogether and thrives on rawness on his hits "Walking the Dog" and "The Dog," as well as inspired versions of "Land of 1000 Dances" (which became a major hit for Wilson Pickett), Lee Dorsey's "Ya Ya" and John Lee Hooker's "Boom Boom." Thomas was in his mid-40s when these fun, infectious recordings were made, and he definitely lives up to his title "The World's Oldest Teenager" (a title later given to Dick Clark as well). Reissued on CD in the early 1990s, Walking the Dog is an album Memphis soul aficionados shouldn't overlook.

    - Alex Henderson, All Music Guide

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Biography

Rufus Thomas

Few of rock roll's founding figures are as likable as Rufus Thomas. From the 1940s onward, he has personified Memphis music; his small but witty cameo role in Jim Jarmusch's Mystery Train, a film which satirizes and enshrines the city's role in popular culture, was entirely appropriate. As a recording artist, he wasn't a major innovator, but he could always be depended... Read more