<< MP3 Big Joe Duskin - Big Joe Jumps Again
Big Joe Duskin - Big Joe Jumps Again
Category Sound
FormatMP3
SourceCD
Bitrate256kbit
GenreBlues
TypeAlbum
Date 1 decade, 2 years
Size 110.3 MB
 
Website http://www.allmusic.com/album/big-joe-jumps-again!-cincinnati-blues-session-mw0000715424
 
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When he was 17, Big Joe Duskin made a promise to his preacher father that he wouldn't play secular music on the piano until after his father had passed from this world, a promise he intended to keep, and did. Reverend Perry Duskin was 79-years-old at the time, and unfortunately for Big Joe's musical aspirations, the elder Duskin lived until 1963, finally dying at the age of 105, at which time Big Joe's piano skills had all but vanished. But he made up for lost time, and has been a fixture on the Cincinnati blues scene for some years, playing his boogie woogie piano, a last link to the barrelhouse tradition of the 1930s. Age and diabetes have caught up with Duskin, though, and his speed at the piano is now gone, but on Big Joe Jumps Again he compensates by tackling mostly mid-tempo shuffles, and lets his increasingly expressive voice carry the weight. Working with a no-frills rhythm section of Phillip Paul on drums and Ed Conley on bass (both veterans of countless King Records sessions), Duskin's loose and ragged piano has an endearing shakiness about it, and if the speed is gone, the heart is still there, and everything fits when he starts to sing. There aren't many surprises here (unless you count the presence of guitarist Peter Frampton on two cuts), as Duskin tackles several old blues standards, including Memphis Slim's "Every Day I Have the Blues" and a raggedly affecting version of the traditional blues piece,"Betty and Dupree." It's piano blues, pure and simple, and played by a man who has spent a lifetime loving it, and waited nearly half his life to get a chance to play it. All of that comes through here, but what is most interesting, perhaps, is the sudden churchy feel that comes in near the end of the album, and on the most unlikely of songs, a cover of Johnny Horton's "North to Alaska." In Duskin's hands the song takes on a strange spiritual tone, as if Alaska was standing in for Heaven, and it is the emotional centerpiece of Big Joe Jumps Again.

1 You're Gonna Miss Me
2 Every Day I Have the Blues with Peter Frampton
3 Get Out of My Way
4 Down The Road A Piece
5 Betty and Dupree with William Lee Ellis
6 One Dirty Rat
7 Mean & Strange
8 Key To the Highway with Peter Frampton
9 Sloppy Drunk Blues
10 Beer Drinking Woman
11 Black Mountain Blues with Larry Nager, Shawana Snyder, William Lee Ellis
12 Miss Ida B.
13 North to Alaska
14 Preacher and the Devil's Music
15 You're Gonna Miss Me,
16 Just a Closer Walk With Thee

veel luister plezier

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