Create account Log in

Jay McShann Meets Jimmy Witherspoon

[Edit]

Download links and information about Jay McShann Meets Jimmy Witherspoon by Jimmy Witherspoon, Jay McShann. This album was released in 1958 and it belongs to Blues, Jazz genres. It contains 26 tracks with total duration of 01:15:54 minutes.

Artist: Jimmy Witherspoon, Jay McShann
Release date: 1958
Genre: Blues, Jazz
Tracks: 26
Duration: 01:15:54
Buy on iTunes $6.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Spoon Calls Hootie 2:45
2. Bar Fly Blues 2:33
3. Roll On Katy 3:07
4. Please Stop Playing These Blues 2:56
5. Gone With the Blues 2:43
6. In the Evening 3:00
7. Ain't Nobody's Business 6:00
8. Christmas Blues 3:01
9. Back Water Blues 3:10
10. Sweet Loving Baby 2:33
11. Doctor Blues 2:12
12. Jump Children 2:46
13. Love My Baby 2:42
14. I'm Just a Lady's Man 2:26
15. Thelma Lee Blues 2:39
16. Baby Baby 2:18
17. Evil Woman 2:26
18. I'm Just a Country Boy 3:02
19. There Ain't Nothing Better 2:57
20. Love and Friendship 3:09
21. Slow Your Speed 2:59
22. Rain Rain Rain 2:44
23. Frogimore Blues 2:48
24. Cain River Blues 2:50
25. The Duke and the Brute 2:51
26. When I've Been Drinking 3:17

Details

[Edit]

This 1958 LP was just a random — and short — roundup of ten tracks from 1949-1951 singles Jimmy Witherspoon had done for Modern. With four national R&B hits ("Ain't Nobody's Business," "No Rollin' Blues," "Big Fine Girl," and "Once There Lived a Fool"), it does supply a fragmentary overview of Witherspoon's early career, in which he — like so many R&B singers — was purveying a brand of West Coast blues that could both swing and croon. It's not up there with the singer's best recordings, as it doesn't have the most forceful of the jazz-blues fusions he'd make. It's respectable early R&B, however, with a bunch of sides recorded in concert (including "Ain't Nobody's Business," "No Rollin' Blues," and "Big Fine Girl") with a spontaneous rawness unusual even by the standards of this earlier, more rudimentary era. "Jump Children" (aka "Good Jumpin'") is a pretty transparent imitation of "Good Rockin' Tonight," however. The CD reissue on Ace adds a lot of value, tacking on eight bonus tracks from other 1948-1951 singles, as well as lengthy historical liner notes.