Create account Log in

Gone With the Blues

[Edit]

Download links and information about Gone With the Blues by Jimmy Witherspoon. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Blues, Jazz genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 51:50 minutes.

Artist: Jimmy Witherspoon
Release date: 2002
Genre: Blues, Jazz
Tracks: 18
Duration: 51:50
Buy on iTunes $7.99
Buy on Amazon $5.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Gone With the Blues (featuring Jimmy Witherspon & Jay Mc Shann'band) 2:44
2. Ernestine (featuring Jimmy Witherspon & Jay Mc Shann'band) 2:51
3. Roll On Katy (featuring Jimmy Witherspon & Jay Mc Shann'band) 3:07
4. Voodoo Woman Blues (featuring Jimmy Witherspon & Jay Mc Shann'band) 2:39
5. I Want a Little Girl (featuring Jimmy Witherspon & Jay Mc Shann'band) 2:39
6. Have You Ever Loved a Woman? (featuring Jimmy Witherspon & Jay Mc Shann'band) 2:49
7. Confessing the Blues (featuring His Jazz Men) 3:12
8. Hard Working Man's Blues (featuring His Jazz Men) 3:23
9. Shipyard Woman Blues (featuring Jimmy Witherspon & Jay Mc Shann's Sextett) 3:05
10. Cain River Blues (featuring Jimmy Witherspon & Jay Mc Shann Orchestra) 2:48
11. Hey Mr.Landlord (featuring Jimmy Witherspon & Jay Mc Shann Orchestra) 2:47
12. All My Geets Are Gone (featuring Jimmy Witherspon & Jay Mc Shann'band) 2:34
13. Practice What You Preace (featuring Jimmy Witherspon) 2:49
14. Strange Woman Blues (featuring Jimmy Witherspon) 3:09
15. Third Floor Blues (featuring Jimmy Witherspon) 2:57
16. Geneva Blues (featuring Jimmy Witherspon) 2:27
17. Wee Baby Blues (featuring Jimmy Witherspon) 3:07
18. Daddy Pinocchio (featuring Maxwell Davis, Jimmy Witherspon) 2:43

Details

[Edit]

A budget compilation of Witherspoon's early years, this material has been subjected to many collections, but rarely has it received the thoughtfulness of track selection exhibited here. Most fans consider Witherspoon's early sides with Jay McShann to be a pinnacle of the artist's career, and listening to these selections, from "Confessin' the Blues" to "Big Fine Girl," it's hard to disagree. Witherspoon's style is already evolving, and by the end of these sessions he emerges as a confident and powerful singer. Gone With the Blues is as good an introduction as any to this material, and it's a necessary purchase to any new fan not yet familiar with this material.