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Heart Of Pain

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Download links and information about Heart Of Pain by Lucky Peterson. This album was released in 2010 and it belongs to Blues, Rock genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 45:04 minutes.

Artist: Lucky Peterson
Release date: 2010
Genre: Blues, Rock
Tracks: 11
Duration: 45:04
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99
Buy on Songswave €1.27

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Out Of The Frying Pan 3:17
2. Heart Of Pain 4:49
3. A Woman Don't Care 4:00
4. I Will Survive 3:33
5. Age Ain't Nothing But A Number 3:51
6. Oh Baby 3:27
7. He's the Answer 4:20
8. Brown Can't Be Bad 5:21
9. Lucky's 88 5:16
10. Bound To Make You Love Me 3:53
11. I Won't Be Fooled 3:17

Details

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Lucky Peterson’s journey through the blues has been a long and labyrinthine one. A child prodigy, he scored his first hit at the age of six, appeared on both The Tonight Show and The Ed Sullivan Show, and was a longtime member of Bobby "Blue" Bland's traveling and recording band before he got his own shot as a leader in the '80s. He’s a notable guitarist who also plays a hell of a piano and a Hammond B-3, is a fine vocalist and arranger. He’s recorded jazz and gospel albums — he collaborated with Mavis Staples on the excellent Spirituals & Gospel: Dedicated to Mahalia Jackson. Heart of Pain is a return to (mostly) contemporary Chicago-style blues, on which Peterson plays lead guitar, keyboards, and sings. He is backed by his current road band and a three-piece horn section. Heart of Pain is his third recording for Great Britain's JSP imprint, and quite solid. It contains 11 tracks of old-school Chicago blues beginning with a rollicking reading of John Steadman's and Steve Washington’s “Out of the Frying Pan and into the Fire” (they wrote the majority of the tunes here). The I-IV-V progression features a killer piano break from Peterson. The title track highlights Peterson's guitar muscle with a deeply soulful vocal. There is a slick gospel number on the set called “He’s the Answer,” penned with his sister, Tamara, who offers a fine duet performance. Another roadhouse rocker is the stellar “I Will Survive,” with its punchy horns, B-3, and stinging guitar fills. There’s a strutting piano workout called “Lucky’s 88” and the set closes with the funky “I Won't Be Found,” featuring a swaggering horn chart. In sum, this is a great place to catch Peterson at what he does best, and yet another chapter in his blues sojourn.