zhconst · 25-Сен-10 20:41(14 лет 11 месяцев назад, ред. 25-Сен-10 21:35)
Smoky Babe & Herman E. Johnson / Louisiana Country Blues Жанр: blues Страна-производитель диска: USA Год издания диска: 1996 Издатель (лейбл): Arhoolie Номер по каталогу: CD 440 Аудио кодек: APE (*.ape) Тип рипа: image+.cue Битрейт аудио: lossless Продолжительность: 78:46 Источник (релизер): Macchia (original ripper) - ed2k Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: да Треклист: 01. I'm Broke And I'm Hungry [0:02:57.19]
02. Too Many Women [0:02:46.03]
03. Two Wings [0:02:13.20]
04. Mississippi River [0:03:16.60]
05. My Baby She Told Me [0:02:36.12]
06. Rabbit Blues [0:03:25.64]
07. Black Ghost [0:05:02.57]
08. Ain't Got No Rabbit Dog [0:03:18.27]
09. Bad Whiskey [0:02:42.68]
10. Black Gal [0:03:50.41]
11. My Baby Put Me Down [0:03:14.48]
12. Going Back Home [0:02:49.70]
13. Regular Blues [0:02:34.43]
14. I Just Keeps On Wanting You [0:02:48.52]
15. You Don't Know My Mind [0:03:52.16]
16. Motherless Children [0:04:04.32]
17. Depression Blues [0:04:45.27]
18. She's A-Looking For Me [0:03:20.49]
19. She Had Been Drinking [0:02:31.25]
20. I'm Growing Older [0:05:09.48]
21. Po' Boy [0:03:20.74]
22. Leavin' Blues [0:03:14.33]
23. Piano Blues [0:02:19.07]
24. Where The Mansion's Prepared For Me [0:02:30.27]
EAC log
EAC extraction logfile from 22. January 2008, 17:41 for CD Smoky Babe & Herman E. Johnson / Louisiana Country Blues Used drive : HL-DT-STDVDRAM GSA-4163B Adapter: 3 ID: 1 Read mode : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache Read offset correction : 667 Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No Used output format : Internal WAV Routines 44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; Stereo Other options : Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No Installed external ASPI interface Range status and errors Selected range Filename D:\Valvola di Scarico\Release Smoky\Smoky Babe & Herman E. Johnson - Louisiana Country Blues.wav Peak level 98.8 % Range quality 99.9 % CRC 06998CDD Copy OK No errors occured End of status report
auCDtect log
----------------------- DON'T MODIFY THIS FILE ----------------------- PERFORMER: auCDtect Task Manager, ver. 1.5.1RC3 build 1.5.1.4 Copyright (c) 2008-2010 y-soft. All rights reserved http://y-soft.org ANALYZER: auCDtect: CD records authenticity detector, version 0.8.2 Copyright (c) 2004 Oleg Berngardt. All rights reserved. Copyright (c) 2004 Alexander Djourik. All rights reserved. FILE: Smoky Babe & Herman E. Johnson - Louisiana Country Blues.ape Size: 350992272 Hash: C5BFAE4F222DD6514735C07AD0F02101 Accuracy: -m0 Conclusion: CDDA 100% Signature: 2F56EB33CE877AABE1E08EE692B6ACBDC6D5C19B
A reissue (on compact disc) of a reissue (on Arhoolie) of an album originally released on the Folk Lyric label, this combines two albums of Louisiana country blues material on one CD. Smoky Babe may have been a semi-pro musician, but the feel of the 12 sides suggests that he was full command of his powers when folklorist Dr. Harry Oster hit the "record" button. Combined with another album's worth of material from the equally obscure Herman E. Johnson (who performs four tracks on electric guitar in a most chaotic manner), this is back porch country blues of the highest order. Just because neither is a "famous name," don't let that keep you checking this superlative release out. Smoky Babe - Biography
Robert Brown aka Smoky Babe is a shadowy figure from the early days of the '60s folk-blues revival. The scant details of his life read like a prototypical country bluesman's bio; born in Itta Bena, MS, in 1927, raised on a plantation, had a hard life of sharecropping, picked up the guitar along the way, spent several years hoboing throughout the South, moved to the big city and found life no better there. He apparently only worked sporadically as a semi-pro musician for a spell in New Orleans in the '50s, returning to his adopted home base of Scotlandville to work as a garage mechanic at the time of his discovery. His brief recording career was limited to a pair of album-length releases recorded as "in the field" location sessions in 1960 and 1961 for the Folk Lyric
and Bluesville labels. His few recordings display a strong rhythmic sense in his guitar playing with a strong thumping bass line with the occasional foray into slide guitar. His vocals were nothing less than rich, strong and authoritative. After a few years of playing at picnics and local parties for friends around Baton Rouge in the early '60s, he seemingly disappeared, never to be seen or heard from again. His death in 1975 still remains unconfirmed at the time of this writing. Herman E. Johnson - Biography
Another of the many performers briefly illuminated by the spotlight of the folk-blues revival of the 1960s, Louisiana-born country bluesman Herman E. Johnson was the product of a highly religious family environment, a background which heavily informed the spiritual imagery which was a hallmark of his later work as a performer. His early adult years were spent in a fruitless search for steady work which led him from the country to the city and back again; he picked up the guitar around 1927 as a respite from jobs ranging from picking cotton to pouring concrete to working at a scrap metal yard. Eventually, Johnson landed work at the Esso refinery in Baton Rouge, where he worked for 15 years before being unexpectly fired; scrambling to find work -- an experience memorably recalled in his song "Depression Blues" -- he finally was hired as a janitor at Southern University in nearby Scotlandville. He held the same job at the time of his lone recording session, cut in Baton Rouge by Dr. Harry Oster in 1961; after suffering a stroke in 1970, Johnson went into retirement, and died on February 2, 1975.
Доп. информация: Скачал с демона, первоисточник указал выше. Проверил auCDtect и AccurateRip.
Это переиздание двух старых LP, записи 1060 и 1961 года, я уже послушал - визг и писк Настоящий Country Blues! Настоятельно рекомендую, ребята! Приятного прослушивания! МОИ РАЗДАЧИ