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Good 'Nuff (feat. Willis Jackson & Houston Person)

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Download links and information about Good 'Nuff (feat. Willis Jackson & Houston Person) by Johnny Hammond. This album was released in 1962 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 01:11:36 minutes.

Artist: Johnny Hammond
Release date: 1962
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 13
Duration: 01:11:36
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Good 'Nuff (feat. Willis Jackson) (featuring Johnny) 6:30
2. Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen (featuring Johnny) 7:10
3. Sonja's Dreamland (feat. Willis Jackson) (featuring Johnny) 3:29
4. Besame Mucho (feat. Willis Jackson) [Instrumental] (featuring Johnny) 3:55
5. Neckbones (feat. Willis Jackson) (featuring Johnny) 6:10
6. Delicious (feat. Willis Jackson) (featuring Johnny) 4:16
7. Y'all (feat. Willis Jackson) (featuring Johnny) 7:43
8. The Stinger (feat. Houston Person) (featuring Johnny) 6:43
9. There Is No Greater Love (featuring Johnny) 5:30
10. Brother John (featuring Johnny) 3:58
11. Cleopatra and the African Knight (feat. Houston Person) (featuring Johnny) 5:01
12. You Don't Know What Love Is (featuring Johnny) 6:57
13. Benny's Diggin' (feat. Houston Person) (featuring Johnny) 4:14

Details

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Good 'Nuff combines two Smith-'60s albums onto one CD: 1962's Johnny Hammond Smith Cooks With Gator Tail (co-billed to tenor saxophonist Willis Jackson), and 1965's The Stinger. "Good 'Nuff" is one of the tracks on Johnny Hammond Smith Cooks with Gator Tail, which is typical, early-'60s Prestige soul-jazz, with all the good and bad that implies. The good? It hits a lockstep earthy groove, with funky organ by Smith, smoky sax from Jackson, and some smooth guitar from Eddie McFadden. The bad? Well, it's not bad, really, just predictable. The compositions usually have easygoing, unchallenging, bluesy progressions, and the whole thing has the agreeable ambience of a good-time bar where the music fades more into the background the longer it continues. Smith wrote four of the seven songs, the program balanced by Jackson's "Y'All" and covers of "Besame Mucho," and the traditional "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen." "Sonja's Dreamland" goes the furthest into ballad territory, while "Neckbones" swings the hardest. "The Stinger," on which Houston Person and Earl Edwards assume the tenor sax duties, is more interesting, with a slightly more gutbucket soul feel, though the title track, too, strongly recalls Bill Doggett's huge mid-1950s hit "Honky Tonk." "Brother John" sounds like a Ray Charles track without a vocal, and "Cleopatra and the African Knight," as the title indicates, incorporates a convincing tinge of Arabia. [The 2003 reissue features six extra bonus tracks.]