| 1. Amapola |
| 2. Otschi Tschornije |
| 3. Hold Me Tonight (Barcarole) |
| 4. Du Nur Du Allein |
| 5. I Dont Know Why |
| 6. Parlami D Amoure Mariu (Duet With Salvatore Adamo) |
| 7. Valencia |
| 8. Tirtomba |
| 9. Mama |
| 10. Ave Maria |
| 11. Toreador |
| 12. I Am Trying To Believe (Etude Nr. 3 Of Chopin) |
| 13. Take My Hand (Song Of The Pearl Fisher) |
| 14. Youll Win (Triumph March From Aida) |
| 15. In All My Dreams (Liebstraum) |
| 16. In My Heart (Slaves Chorus Of Nabucco) |
| 17. Havah Nagilah |
Editorial Reviews
Product Description
1996 album from the classical crossover vocalist. 17 tracks. Universal.
Opening with an amazingly crisp and clear "Telephoning The Blues", Victoria Spivey's 1929 single, "The First Time I Met The Blues" is more strictly blues than the first volume in this series. Muddy Waters' "Hoochie Coochie Man" is still quite far away, musically anyway, but this diverse, far-reaching CD includes fine performances by early blues greats like Sippie Wallace, Sleepy John Estes, Tommy Johnson, Furry Lewis, and Blind Willie McTell.
The sound is generally very good considering that all of these songs were committed to tape between 1927 and 1936. Music from this era is often referred to as "country blues", but there is a lot of very urban blues music here, the so-called "classic female blues", jazzy performances like New Orleans singer Genevieve Davis's "Haven't Got A Dollar To Pay Your House Rent Man", which features a great clarinet solo, and "Rent Man Blues" by Edna Winston. And early jazz pioneer Ferdinand "Jelly Roll" Morton is playing the piano on Lizzie Miles' rendition of his (Morton's) "I Hate A Man Like You".
Other highlights include Jim Jackson's bouncy, melodic "When I Woke Up This Morning She Was Gone", "Cocaine Habit Blues" by the Memphis Jug Band, Delta legend Tommy Johnson's eerie "Canned Heat Blues", a good-naturedly dirty "I'm A Mighty Tight Woman" by the great Sippie Wallace, Sleepy John Estes' "The Girl I Love, She Got Long Black Curly Hair", "Don't Want No Woman" by Memphis Minnie McCoy and Kansas Joe Johnson, and of course Blind Willie McTell's "Statesboro Blues".
There are four volumes in this series, available individually or as a box set, plus six volumes dedicated to individual artists (like Blind Willie McTell, Arthur Crudup, and Leadbelly, whose entry is one of the very best), and an eleventh volume of gospel music titled "Sacred Roots Of The Blues". All of these well annotated and carefully remastered discs are highly recommended to anyone with a serious interest in American roots music.
1996 album from the classical crossover vocalist. 17 tracks. Universal.
Goes Classic V.2,Helmut Lotti,Universe Productions,Classical Artists,Easy Listening/Vocal
Average customer rating:
|
When the Sun Goes Down 2: The First Time I Met the Blues
Various Artists Manufacturer: RCA ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006EXE4 Release Date: 2002-08-20 |
Tracks:
- Telephoning the Blues - Victoria Spivey
- Viola Lee Blues - Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers
- Haven't Got a Dollar to Pay Your House Rent Man - Genevieve Davis
- Saturday Blues - Ishman Bracey
- When I Woke Up This Morning She Was Gone - Jim Jackson
- Canned Heat Blues - Tommy Johnson
- Statesboro Blues - Blind Willie McTell
- Stealin' Stealin' - Memphis Jug Band
- Judge Harsh Blues - Furry Lewis
- Rent Man Blues - Edna Winston
- I Don't Care What You Say - Harris & Harris
- I Hate A Man Like You - Lizzie Miles
- 'Tain't Nobody's Business If I Do - Pt. 1 - Frank Stokes
- I'm a Mighty Tight Woman - Sippie Wallace
- Blue Yodel #9 - Jimmie Rodgers
- The Girl I Love She Got Long Curly Hair - Sleepy John Estes
- Don't Want No Woman - McCoy & Johnson
- Cocaine Habit Blues - Memphis Jug Band
- Married Woman Blue - Blind Willie Reynolds
- Red Nightgown Blues - Jimmie Davis
- Hardworking Woman - Mississippi Matilda
- Doubled Up in a Knot - Bo Carter
- If You Want Me Baby - Daddy Stovepipe & Mississippi Sarah
- The First Time I Met the Blues - Little Brother Montgomery
- Sales Tax - The Mississippi Sheiks
Customer Reviews:
More "secret history of rock 'n' roll".......2004-12-05
Opening with an amazingly crisp and clear "Telephoning The Blues", Victoria Spivey's 1929 single, "The First Time I Met The Blues" is more strictly blues than the first volume in this series. Muddy Waters' "Hoochie Coochie Man" is still quite far away, musically anyway, but this diverse, far-reaching CD includes fine performances by early blues greats like Sippie Wallace, Sleepy John Estes, Tommy Johnson, Furry Lewis, and Blind Willie McTell.
The sound is generally very good considering that all of these songs were committed to tape between 1927 and 1936. Music from this era is often referred to as "country blues", but there is a lot of very urban blues music here, the so-called "classic female blues", jazzy performances like New Orleans singer Genevieve Davis's "Haven't Got A Dollar To Pay Your House Rent Man", which features a great clarinet solo, and "Rent Man Blues" by Edna Winston. And early jazz pioneer Ferdinand "Jelly Roll" Morton is playing the piano on Lizzie Miles' rendition of his (Morton's) "I Hate A Man Like You".
Other highlights include Jim Jackson's bouncy, melodic "When I Woke Up This Morning She Was Gone", "Cocaine Habit Blues" by the Memphis Jug Band, Delta legend Tommy Johnson's eerie "Canned Heat Blues", a good-naturedly dirty "I'm A Mighty Tight Woman" by the great Sippie Wallace, Sleepy John Estes' "The Girl I Love, She Got Long Black Curly Hair", "Don't Want No Woman" by Memphis Minnie McCoy and Kansas Joe Johnson, and of course Blind Willie McTell's "Statesboro Blues".
There are four volumes in this series, available individually or as a box set, plus six volumes dedicated to individual artists (like Blind Willie McTell, Arthur Crudup, and Leadbelly, whose entry is one of the very best), and an eleventh volume of gospel music titled "Sacred Roots Of The Blues". All of these well annotated and carefully remastered discs are highly recommended to anyone with a serious interest in American roots music.
1920s rock and roll!.......2002-08-29
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