Memphis Slim London, Brussels, Paris, Baden Baden Live 1964 CD

Memphis Slim London, Brussels, Paris, Baden Baden Live 1964 CD

£6.00

BBC Jazz Club London May 23rd 1964

Memphis Slim p, voc, Pete Blannin b, Eddie Taylor d.

I’m Lost Without You

I’ll Just Keep Singing The Blues

El Capitan

This Is A Good Time To Write A Song

Big Bertha

Train Has Gone

Going Down Slow

All By Myself

BR2 Jazz Prisma Brussels February 2nd 1964

Memphis Slim p, voc, Matt “Guitar” Murphy g, Billy Stepney d.

The Blues Is Everywhere

All By Myself

My Gal Keeps Me Crying

Matt’s Guitar Boogie

I’m Lost Without You

Wish Me Well

French TV Paris 1964

Memphis Slim p, voc, Unknown d.

It’s Too Late

American Folk Blues Festival Baden Baden

Memphis Slim p, voc, Matt “Guitar” Murphy g, Willie Dixon b, Billy Stepney d.

I’ll Just Keep Singing The Blues

American Folk Blues Festival Manchester October 21st 1962

Memphis Slim p, voc, Willie Dixon b, Jump Jackson d.

Just A Dream

SKU: RANDB070 Categories: , , , , Tags: ,

Description

When Memphis Slim first visited Europe in 1960, he was already a twenty year veteran recording artist, with many US 78 rpm releases behind him and a very solid reputation leading small bands in the 1940s and ‘50s. It’s no wonder that he was able to captivate an entirely new kind of audience when he crossed the Atlantic, first as a visitor, then as a permanent resident, settling in Paris from 1962. The studios and concert halls of Europe were very different from the juke joints of the South or the nightclubs of Chicago, but it was all the same to Memphis Slim, who could grab and hold his listeners’ attention wherever he played. Throughout the remainder of his life – he died in Paris in 1988, and was buried back home in Memphis – Slim made a great many albums, in all sorts of company, from duetting with Sonny Boy Williamson, to fronting big bands, or French beat groups, or Nashville session musicians. There were so many that the quality inevitably suffered. A blandness crept in, the performances sometimes seeming routine and even perfunctory, and his stock fell among many diehard blues fans. This is a great shame, as he deserves to be numbered among the true greats of the blues. Recordings such as the ones on this disc should help to restore him to his rightful place, as they capture him at the very start of that new era of his career, still sounding fresh, his rich and expressive voice still in its prime, still full of enthusiasm for sharing his own personal heritage of blues and boogie piano.

Notes by Ray Templeton

‘1964 Live…is splendid.’ Trevor Hodgett Blues In Britain