Product Details
Artist : Various
Format : Box set, Soundtrack
Binding : Audio CD
EAN : 0044003952324
Label : Universal Music Group
Number of Discs : 5
Product Group : Music
Release Date : 2003-09-09
UPC : 044003952324
ASIN : B0000A0VA1
Track Listings for
Disc-1
1. Othar Turner & The Rising Star Fife & Drum Band - Shortnin' / Henduck
2. Lightning & Group - Long John
3. Mamie Smith - Crazy Blues
4. W.C. Handy - St. Louis Blues
5. Bessie Smith - Muddy Water
6. Blind Lemon Jefferson - Match Box Blues
7. Furry Lewis - Billy Lyons & Stack-O-Lee
8. "Ma" Rainey - "Ma" Rainey's Black Bottom
9. Blind Willie Johnson - Dark Was The Night, Cold Was The Ground
10. Louis Armstrong - Savoy Blues
11. Frank Stokes - Downtown Blues
12. Mississippi John Hurt - Frankie
13. Henry Thomas - Fishing Blues
14. Leroy Carr - How Long How Long Blues
15. Tommy Johnson - Canned Heat Blues
16. Blind Willie McTell - Statesboro Blues
17. Tampa Red & Georgia Tom - It's Tight Like That
18. Pine Top Smith - Pine Top's Boogie Woogie
19. Lonnie Johnson - Guitar Blues
20. Charley Patton - Pony Blues
21. Blind Blake - Diddie Wah Diddie
22. Memphis Jug Band - K.C. Moan
23. Jimmie Rodgers - Standin' On The Corner (Blue Yodel # 9)
24. Mississippi Sheiks - Sittin' On Top Of The World
25. Son House - Preachin' The Blues
Disc-2
1. Skip James - Devil Got My Woman
2. Lead Belly - C.C. Rider
3. Big Joe Williams - Baby Please Don't Go
4. Roosevelt Sykes - Dirty Mother For You (Don't You Know)
5. Billie Holiday - Billie's Blues
6. Robert Johnson - Cross Road Blues
7. Sonny Boy Williamson - I Good Mornin' Little School Girl
8. Bukka White - Shake 'Em On Down
9. Joe Turner & Pete Johnson - Roll 'Em Pete
10. Robert Petway - Catfish Blues
11. Count Basie Orchestra with Jimmy Rushing - Going To Chicago Blues
12. Big Bill Broonzy - Key To The Highway
13. Memphis Minnie - Me And My Chauffeur Blues
14. Big Maceo Merriweather - Worried Life Blues
15. Tommy McClennon - Cross Cut Saw Blues
16. Lionel Hampton Sextet with Dinah Washington - Evil Gal Blues
17. Sister Rosetta Tharpe - Strange Things Happening Everyday
18. Joe Liggins - Honeydripper Pt.I
19. Johnny Moore's Three Blazers featuring Charles Brown - Drifting Blues
20. Louis Jordan - Let The Good Times Roll
21. Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup - That's All Right Mama
22. T-Bone Walker - Call It Stormy Monday
23. Wynonie Harris - Good Rockin' Tonight
24. Jimmy Witherspoon - Ain't Nobody's Business, Part One
25. The Johnny Otis Quintette with Little Esther & The Robins - Double Crossing Blues
Disc-3
1. Memphis Slim - Mother Earth
2. Percy Mayfield - Please Send Me Someone To Love
3. Jackie Brenston - Rocket 88
4. Elmore James - Dust My Broom
5. Rosco Gordon - No More Doggin'
6. Little Walter - Juke
7. Big Mama Thornton - Hound Dog
8. Lowell Fulson - Reconsider Baby
9. Guitar Slim - The Things That I Used To Do
10. Professor Longhair - In The Night
11. Muddy Waters - (I'm Your) Hoochie Coochie Man
12. J.B. Lenoir - Eisenhower Blues
13. Fats Domino - Blue Monday
14. Ray Charles - Hard Times
15. Smiley Lewis - I Hear You Knockin'
16. Elvis Presley - Mystery Train
17. Sonny Boy Williamson II - Don't Start Me To Talkin'
18. Howlin' Wolf - Smokestack Lightnin'
19. Bo Diddley - Who Do You Love
20. Slim Harpo - I'm A King Bee
21. Chuck Berry - Johnny B. Goode
22. Bobby "Blue" Bland - Farther Up The Road
23. Otis Rush - So Many Roads, So Many Trains
24. Buddy Guy - First Time I Met The Blues
Disc-4
1. Freddie King - Hide Away
2. Junior Parker - Drivin' Wheel
3. John Lee Hooker - Boom Boom
4. Albert Collins - Frosty
5. Muddy Waters - You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had
6. Howlin' Wolf - Killing Floor
7. Son House - Death Letter Blues
8. Mississippi Fred McDowell - You Gotta Move
9. Bob Dylan - Highway 61 Revisited
10. Junior Wells - Hoodoo Man Blues
11. Koko Taylor - Wang Dang Doodle
12. John Mayall's Bluesbreakers with Eric Clapton - All Your Love
13. Paul Butterfield Blues Band - I've Got A Mind To Give Up Livin'
14. Jimi Hendrix - Red House
15. Albert King - Born Under The Bad Sign
16. Magic Sam - Mama Talk To Your Daughter
17. Etta James - Tell Mama
18. The Jeff Beck - Group Ain't Superstitious
19. Taj Mahal - She Caught The Katy (And Left Me A Mule To Ride)
20. Fleetwood Mac - Black Magic Woman
21. Janis Joplin - One Good Man
Disc-5
1. B.B. King - The Thrill Is Gone
2. Johnny Winter - Dallas
3. Derek & The Dominos - Have You Ever Loved A Woman
4. Hound Dog Taylor & The Houserockers - Give Me Back My Wig
5. The Allman Brothers Band - One Way Out
6. Z.Z. Hill - Down Home Blues
7. Stevie Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble - Pride And Joy
8. Robert Cray - Smoking Gun
9. Fabulous Thunderbirds - Tuff Enuff
10. John Lee Hooker & Bonnie Raitt - I'm In The Mood
11. Ali Farka Toure - Timbarma
12. Keb' Mo' - Am I Wrong?
13. Luther Allison - Cherry Red Wine
14. Peggy Scott-Adams - Bill
15. Susan Tedeschi - Just Won't Burn
16. Los Lobos - Voodoo Music
17. Bonnie Raitt - Round And Round
18. Cassandra Wilson - Vietnam Blues
19. Robert Cray & Shemekia Copeland - I Pity The Fool (Live)
20. Keb' Mo' & Corey Harris - Sweet Home Chicago
Editorial Reviews
From Amazon.com
This is by far the best and most comprehensive introduction to recorded blues ever assembled, drawing styles, record labels, and eras together with the efficiency of a spider's web. These five discs--tied to the hit-and-miss PBS film series Martin Scorsese Presents the Blues--embrace field hollers, early queens Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith, the music's first composer W.C. Handy, Delta slide guitarists, string bands, piano barrelhousers, jazz geniuses Count Basie and Lionel Hampton, Texas hotshots, lyric poets Percy Mayfield and Willie Dixon, Chicago powerhouses from Muddy Waters to Buddy Guy, Howlin' Wolf and howling white boys, soulkittens Etta James and Janis Joplin, juke joint brawlers like Hound Dog Taylor, African torchbearer Ali Farka Toure, modern guitar heroes Stevie Ray Vaughan and Luther Allison, and even recent hit-makers Peggy Scott-Adams and Susan Tedeschi. And that's just a smidgen of the talents represented across more than 100 cuts. Nonetheless, there are grave omissions in disc five, which focuses on contemporary blues. The raw electric sound of present-day Mississippi, embodied by R.L. Burnside and other artists on the Fat Possum label, has done much to open the ears of college-age audiences and should be included. Also absent are the music's most important contemporary innovators: Afro-blues fusionist Corey Harris, psychedelic folk bluesman Otis Taylor and rap-blues proselytizer Chris Thomas King. Still, it's obvious this collection is a work of devotion and intelligence as well as commerce. --Ted Drozdowski
Customer Reviews
Excellent material representing the entire blues genre! (2003-12-25)  This is the "comeback year" for the blues and "Martin Scorsese Presents The Blues" as good as good if not better than all blues cds so far. This is really a contribution as anything we've seen so far in the effort to increase awareness of and appreciation for blues music. The best part is that it's personalized from Scorsese's own liking. People might agree the Rolling Stones should have been included, for instance, but this 116 song piece is not a "best-of the blues". It's more of Martin Scorsese's perspective of what the blues has achieved for America and beyond. This CD box set is not the soundtrack to the video documentary series. Rather, it is a collection of songs representing the blues through the roughly 80-year history of recorded blues music. This is an excellent primer for anyone looking to understand blues music and its evolution. It would be impossible for any collection to include every artist that is loved by every blues fan. However, most of the truly great and important blues artists are here, including Charley Patton, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Son House, Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, Elmore James, Howlin' Wolf, Johnny Winter, Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy, and Stevie Ray Vaughan. Virtually every style of blues is also represented here, from the Mississippi Delta to New Orleans to Texas to Memphis to Chicago and even to Africa. And contrary to the assertions of some previously-posted critiques, the Piedmont style IS represented with Mississippi John Hurt's "Frankie." Also, Luther Allison and Johnny Winter ARE included also. There are also a few omissions of important blues artists. Lightnin' Hopkins was one of the most important blues musicians of the 1950s and '60s but was not included. Little Richard was every bit as important to the creation of rock & roll as Fats Domino and Chuck Berry but is not represented. The omission of Dr. John, perhaps the most important blues pianist of the modern era, is near as bad as leaving out the Rolling Stones and their massive love for the blues. More modern accoustic guitarists like John Hammond, Jr. and the incredible Rory Block should have been included (although the newly-recorded Keb' Mo'/Corey Harris cover of Robert Johnson's "Sweet Home Chicago" was almost worth the cost of the box set alone). And if Scorsese wanted a representation of blues-influenced Latino music, Carlos Santana would have been more appropriate than Los Lobos. Notwithstanding a few flaws, however, this CD box set is an excellent representation of recorded blues history, covering the entire history of the blues and including most of the important artists and styles of this wonderful musical genre. Scorsese does a great job with the layout of the entire 5 disc set. Included is a color print book with song by song explanations co-written by a Grammy Award winning music writer, and many pages portraying blues from the very beginning(1830's) to today. I highly recommend it to anyone who desires learning about the blues, or a fan simply looking for a good thorough collection of great blues music.
Not just for the newcomer (2003-11-24)  This is a box set of 20th Century American music, not the Old Testament! Let the ethnomusicologist completist academic blathering heads debate the merits of inclusion and exclusion - just enjoy the tunes. This is worth it just to have discs for your New Year's Party. Sure Janis was an execrable no-talent and Disc 5 should've been made up entirely of Robert Pete Williams. That guy is so deep blues that I sleep with a kinfe when I listen to him at night! But what is a fellow to do?
Excellent blues primer (2003-10-20)  This is the "Year of the Blues," and "Martin Scorsese Presents The Blues" is as important a contribution as anything I've seen so far in the effort to increase awareness of and appreciation for blues music. This CD box set is not the soundtrack to the video documentary series. Rather, it is a collection of songs representing the blues through the roughly 80-year history of recorded blues music. While there are some artists who should have been included and weren't, and there are a few selections that are really not appropriate to this collection, overall this is an excellent primer for anyone looking to understand blues music and its evolution. It would be impossible for any collection to include every artist that is loved by every blues fan. However, most of the truly great and important blues artists are here, including Charley Patton, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Son House, Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, Elmore James, Howlin' Wolf, Johnny Winter, Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy, and Stevie Ray Vaughan. Virtually every style of blues is also represented here, from the Mississippi Delta to New Orleans to Texas to Memphis to Chicago and even to Africa. And contrary to the assertions of some previously-posted critiques, the Piedmont style IS represented with Mississippi John Hurt's "Frankie." (While Hurt did not live in the Piedmont Valley area, he was nevertheless one of the most important Piedmont stylists in blues guitar history.) I do disagree with the inclusion of a few artists whom I do not consider to be blues musicians, such as Jeff Beck and Los Lobos. (Jeff Beck is undeniably a brilliant guitarist, but he is not a blues guitarist.) The absolute worst song in the set is Peggy Scott-Adams' "Bill," a terrible song about a woman who discovers her husband in bed with his gay lover. Aside from the fact that the song is just plain awful, it is also not a blues song. I wonder who was paid off to have it included. There are also a few omissions of important blues artists. Lightnin' Hopkins was one of the most important blues musicians of the 1950s and '60s but was not included. Little Richard was every bit as important to the creation of rock & roll as Fats Domino and Chuck Berry but is not represented. The omission of Dr. John, perhaps the most important blues pianist of the modern era, is inexplicable. More modern accoustic guitarists like John Hammond, Jr. and the incredible Rory Block should have been included (although the newly-recorded Keb' Mo'/Corey Harris cover of Robert Johnson's "Sweet Home Chicago" was almost worth the cost of the box set alone). And if Scorsese wanted a representation of blues-influenced Latino music, Carlos Santana would have been more appropriate than Los Lobos. Notwithstanding a few flaws, however, this CD box set is an excellent representation of recorded blues history, covering the entire history of the blues and including most of the important artists and styles of this wonderful musical genre. I highly recommend it to anyone who is either desiring to learn about the blues or who is already a blues fan and is simply looking for a good thorough collection of great blues music.
The Blues (2003-10-16)  Martin Scosese Presents The Blues A Musical Journey Have you ever known someone that was interested in exploring blues music and came to you asking you for advice on which artists and recordings to start with? If this is a familiar scenario to you and you have made lists as long as your arm of artists and recordings that you hope will steer them on the right path of bluesdom, next time just recommend (or better still hand them) Martin Scorsese Presents: The Blues, A Musical Journey (Hip-O Records), the five disc soundtrack to the documentary series that recently aired on PBS. This boxed set is handsomely packaged with a highly informative sixty page booklet that gives you a brief insight into every artist on the discs, along with a break down of every musician playing on each track and a great essay by noted writer Tom Piazza. This truly is a musical journey through the blues, containing over 117 tunes by almost as many artists, beautifully remastered to perfection so that even the oldest of recordings sound like they were cut yesterday. The names and tunes are way too long to list in their entirety but I'll try my best to give an overall and hopefully brief (this I gotta see) overview of each disc's highlights, otherwise this review will run longer than the last Presidential address. Disc One focuses primarily on the blues' entry and acceptance into the musical mainstream of the roaring 20's up to 1930. Oddly enough the disc's opening number "Shortnin" by Othar Turner and The Rising Star Fife and Drum Band is the only one not recorded during that period but serves as a portrait into the roots of the genre and is followed up by a field recording from the Alan Lomax Collection entitled "Long John," which is performed by a group of convicts on a state prison farm in Texas. The first real stars of the blues were women and they are represented by both Smiths, Mamie and Bessie, performing the classics "Crazy Blues," & "Muddy Water," respectively along with Ma Rainey's "Ma' Rainey's Black Bottom," which is probably musical history's first suggestive title. The rest of Disc One reads like a virtual who's who of legends and classic numbers such as:Frank Stokes' "Downtown Blues," Blind Lemon Jefferson's "Match Box Blues", Blind Willie McTells' "Statesboro Blues", Lonnie Johnson's "Guitar Blues" and Son House's "Preachin The Blues." One of the blues' greatest folk tales in the form of Mr. Skip James, who took thirty years off and persued a career in the ministry after his records did not sell well during the early days of the depression opens Disc Two. Considered by many to be a genuis of the early blues, his "Devil Got My Woman," represents that to the fullest extent and is followed by a pair of ultra classics, Leadbelly's "C.C. Rider," & Big Joe Williams' "Baby Please Don't Go." Disc Two continues its journey through the 1930's with The Lady Day crooning "Billie's Blues," Robert Johnson picking out "Cross Road Blues," and the original Sonny Boy Williamson blasting his way through through his immortal "Good Morning Little School Girl." Halfway through Disc Two we switch decades and are treated to such gems of the 1940's like, Big Bill Broonzy's "Key To The Highway," Tommy McClennon's "Cross Cut Saw," Wynnonie Harris' "Good Rockin Tonight," Louis Jordan's "Let The Good Times Roll," and T-Bone Walker's timeless "Call It Stormy Monday." The 1950's saw the blues enjoy its biggest boom in commercial acceptance and Disc Three is filled to the brim with some of the most memorable and influential tunes that the blues and its artists ever produced. Memphis Slims "Mother Earth,"Percy Mayfield's "Send Me Somone To Love," Jackie Brenston's "Rocket 88," and Elmore James' "Dust My Broom," start off Disc Three with a four punch combination that will rock you back on your heels before sending you to the canvas with Little Walter's,"Juke,". This particular disc illustrates the blues giving birth to its baby that they called rock & roll, with Big Mama Thornton's original version of "Hound Dog," (Big Mama made all of about five hundred dollars off this recording and died pretty much broke while some truck driver from Memphis made millions with the same tune, go figure!) Smiley Lewis' "I Hear You Knockin," Bo Diddley's "Who Do You Love," Fats Dominoe's "Blue Monday," and the timeless rock & roll anthem, Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode." Also included on Disc Three are classics like The Wolf's "Smokestack Lightnin," Muddy's "Hoochie Coochie Man," Bobby Bland's "Further On Up The Road," and Sonny Boy Wialliamson's (Rice Miller) Don't Start Me To Talkin." Disc Four gives us an intricate look at the state of the blues in the 1960's and the influence that it had on both American and British rock artists who were weaned on the tunes of the masters. The Jeff Beck Group's cover of Willie Dixon's "Ain't Superstitious," features a very young Rod Stewart on lead vocals while John Mayall's Bluesbreakers cover of "All Your Love," has a young Eric Clapton playing lead. Fleetwood Mac (gee did they once play the blues?) turns in a crushing version of "Black Magic Woman," with the twin guitars of Jeremy Spencer & Peter Green. Meanwhile back on home soil Bob Dylan tears through "Highway 61 Revisted," while Hendrix converts legions of rock & rollers with "Red House," and Janis Joplin and The Butterfield Blues Band do the same with "One Good Man," and "I've Got A Mind To Give Up Livin," respectively. While the rock genre was enlightening a new generation, John Lee Hooker recorded "Boom Boom," Albert Collins cut "Frosty," and Junior Wells released his signature "Hoodoo Man Blues." Etta James' "Tell Mama," turned a few heads and a new female singer by the name of Koko Taylor who was discovered by Willie Dixon raised a few million eyebrows with "Wang Dang Doodle." The 60's were a turbulent time for America and the impact that the blues made during that period is still being felt today throughout rock & roll. Disc Five begins in 1969 with B.B. King's "The Thrill Is Gone," and closes with the recently recorded acoustic duet of Corey Harris & Keb Mo doing the prettiest cover of "Sweet Home Chicago," that it's been my pleasure to hear in quite some time. In between these two classic numbers, the 70's,80's 90's right up to present day is represented by a wide spectrum of artists and styles whose music has forever effected the blues' direction. Johnny Winter's "Dallas," Derek and The Dominoes' "Have You Ever Loved a Woman," The Alman Bothers "One Way Out," and Hound Dog Taylors' "Give me Back My Wig," represent the 70's which pretty much was dominated by hard rock and is considered one of the toughest decades for post WWII blues. But, being as hard times is what the genre founded its roots in, the blues treaded water in a swirling sea of hard rock and disco. The 80's are represented by a young man who is credited with kicking the music industry in its ass and making them take the blues seriously again, Mr. Stevie Ray Vaughn. One of his best tunes "Pride and Joy,"is included here along with big brother Jimmie Vaughn's band,The Fabulous Thunderbirds' "Tuff Enough." Also from the 80's is Robert Cray's "Smoking Gun," and a duet of "I'm In the Mood," between John Lee Hooker & Bonnie Raitt from his monumentous The Healer album. The 90's get a well rounded look with Luther Allison's "Cherry Red Wine," Peggy Scott Adam's "Bill," (which is a totally new spin on the old cheating lover scenario) Keb Mo's "Am I Wrong," and Susan Tedeschi's "Just Won't Burn." Three other recent recordings in addition to "Sweet Home Chicago," are included with the best being the live duet between Robert Cray and Shemeika Copeland exploding on "I Pity The Fool." Cassandra Wilson's gorgeous voice gives new meaning to J.B. Lenoir's "Vietnam Blues," while Bonnie Raitt does ample justice to his "Round & Round," and Los Lobos does the same to his "Voodoo Music." This is the end of the journey blues fans. Well for now anyway. You can sort of look at this set as one hell of a roadmap to one of the best musical journeys you can possibly make with the rest of the journey being all around you as you read this. This is probably the best chronological record ever assembled of the music that changed the face of American music forever as the selections both mentioned and not mentioned in this review are the best of the best. Alot of you may already have a great deal of these recordings that are included here in some form or another, but it's the combination of the choice of selections and the remastering that make this package a must for every blues fan whether they are just learning about the blues or are already lifelong fans. Being a five disc set can mean it can be a bit on the pricey side, but I found it for around forty eight dollars at a couple of membership warehouse stores and it was worth every cent. With the holidays approaching it would make a completely awesome gift for the blueslover in your life or perhaps even yourself. This is one journey you will want to take several times.
The Best Blues Collection?... Hardly.... (2003-10-04)  I don't claim to be a Blues expert by any means, who is? ...but this collection could have been something really special if more of the unknown artists from the past and present were included here. Yeah, we all know about Jimi, Stevie Ray, Eric Clapton, B.B. King, etc. Why do we need to have them represented here again? Some of the newer artists included here hardly earned their dues and a few others shouldn't even be on this recording at all. Oh well..., what can you say except that life isn't fair which is what the blues is all about anyway. That doesn't mean you need to accept this collection as the blues gospel by any means! Where's the Junior Kimbrough and Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown? Where's the Luther Allison and James Solberg? I can go on and ask why but what sense would that make? Anyone who wants to own one of the best unknown ripping guitar, whiskey soaked vocals, ultra cool organ & rhythm tight CD's ever, buy James Solbergs "See that my grave is kept clean". If you want something really special, buy anything by Junior Kimbrough. If you want something that we've all heard before with a lot of it being mediocre then buy Mr. Scorsese Presents the Blues. Otherwise, check out the web sites for Shanachie Entertainment, Alligator Records, Blind Pig, Rounder/Bulls Eye Blues, Blues Bureau International/Shrapnel for links into the real blues crossroads where past and future meet head on! Oh yeah, let's not forget about Johnny Winter and Rory Gallagher either!!
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