Год: 1969
Стиль: Chicago Blues/Traditional Blues
Страна: USA
Формат: mp3, 256 kbps, 44 khz, Joint-Stereo
Размер: 138 Mb
Треклист:
1. All Aboard
2. Mean Disposition
3. Blow Wind Blow
4. Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had
5. Walkin' Through The Park
6. Forty Days And Forty Nights
7. Standin' Round Cryin'
8. I'm Ready
9. Twenty Four Hours
10. Sugar Sweet
11. Country Boy (previously unreleased)
12. I Love The Life I Live, I Live The Life I Love (previously unreleased)
13. Oh Yeah (previously unreleased)
14. I Feel So Good (previously unreleased)
15. Long Distance Call
16. Baby Please Don't Go
17. Honey Bee
18. The Same Thing
19. Got My Mojo Working (Part 1)
20. Got My Mojo Working (Part 2)
Состав:
Muddy Waters (vocals, guitar)
Mike Bloomfield, Paul Asbell (guitar)
Paul Butterfield, Jeff Carp (harmonica)
Otis Spann (piano)
Donald "Duck" Dunn, Phil Upchurch (bass)
Buddy Miles, Sam Lay (drums)
Rolling Stone: "Chess' much-vaunted Fathers and Sons 2-LP set, which documents the studio (1st LP) and live (2nd LP) encounters between the old guard and the new Turks of the Chicago blues, is an attractive, unpretentious success and should do well commercially. Certainly it's one of the finest sets of performances from Muddy in quite a while and will do much to offset the bad taste left by the previous Electric Mud and After the Rain albums..."
Cosmik Debris: "Fathers And Sons put Waters and his longtime keyboardist Otis Spann together with three members of the best young blues band Chicago produced in the sixties, the Butterfield Blues Band. Harp-meister Paul Butterfield himself, guitarist Michael Bloomfield and drummer Sam Lay were joined by Donald "Duck" Dunn, bassist for the MGs and the bottom end on countless Stax/Volt soul sessions. This group assembled in the studio and prepared ten tracks for release, which are supplemented here by four previously unreleased cuts from the same sessions. Bloomfield and Butterfield were sons of Muddy and Otis in a very real sense, having been schooled by the masters in the Southside clubs they began to frequent even before it was exactly legal for them to do so..."