Create account Log in

The Boogie Woogie Trio Vol. 2

[Edit]

Download links and information about The Boogie Woogie Trio Vol. 2 by Albert Ammons, Meade " Lux " Lewis. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Blues, Jazz genres. It contains 23 tracks with total duration of 55:18 minutes.

Artist: Albert Ammons, Meade " Lux " Lewis
Release date: 1997
Genre: Blues, Jazz
Tracks: 23
Duration: 55:18
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Pinetop Blues (featuring Meade) 2:15
2. G Flat Blues (featuring Meade) 2:09
3. Washington Blues (featuring Meade) 2:18
4. Jesse James (featuring Meade) 1:46
5. Has Anyone See Corrine (featuring Meade) 2:16
6. St. Louis Blues (featuring Meade) 2:49
7. Woo Woo (featuring Meade) 1:39
8. Saturday Night Struggle (featuring Meade) 2:08
9. Hersal Blues (featuring Meade) 2:36
10. Bear Car Crawl (featuring Meade) 2:17
11. Pete's Blues (featuring Meade) 2:42
12. Try Again (featuring Meade) 1:46
13. Mama's Blues (featuring Meade) 2:29
14. Shout for Joy (featuring Meade) 1:27
15. Boogie Woogie Prayer (featuring Meade) 2:36
16. Boogie Woogie (featuring Meade) 2:42
17. Boogie Woogie Jump (featuring Meade) 2:43
18. Jo J O (featuring Meade) 3:33
19. Four O'Clock Blues (featuring Meade) 2:43
20. Dupree Blues (featuring Meade) 3:18
21. Monday Struggle (featuring Meade) 2:13
22. Chapel Blues (featuring Meade) 2:47
23. Clsoing Time (featuring Meade) 2:06

Details

[Edit]

Although The Boogie Woogie Trio is the title of this two-CD compilation, boogie-woogie pianists Albert Ammons, Pete Johnson, and Meade "Lux" Lewis are featured as a trio on just 12 of the 45 tracks in this collection. Most of these trio performances come from two transcription sessions made for MacGregor in 1944, with two songs coming from 1939 airchecks originating at the Hotel Sherman in Chicago, with "Boogie Woogie Prayer" and their lively treatment of "St. Louis Blues" standing out as highlights. One error in the notes to this reissue is the omission of Johnson's rhythm section for his set from the 1947 Just Jazz concert in Pasadena, as guitarist Sonny Rogers, bassist Johnny Parker, and drummer Roy Milton are also on hand. Of course, a rhythm section was superfluous for a powerful boogie-woogie interpreter, so Johnson really didn't need any help. Especially noteworthy is Johnson's "Four O'Clock Blues." Likewise, drummer Smokey Stover's name is omitted from Lewis' various early-'50s airchecks from Club Hangover in San Francisco, though a second take of his "Six Wheel Chaser" is newly added. The instrument Lewis is stuck playing in this venue had obviously seen better days, but like many pianists of the day, he made the most of what he had to work with. The second CD focuses on vintage 1939 airchecks from the Hotel Sherman by each of the pianists individually, plus two trio selections. The sound quality is quite good, while all three artists are in top form, with Lewis stealing the show with his fine whistling in his appropriately titled "Whistling Blues." This two-CD set should be considered an essential acquisition for anyone interested in boogie-woogie.