Lightnin' Hopkins - From The Vaults Of Everest Records Part 1-4 (1989)
Blues | Author: artmuss | 27-12-2019, 16:28
Artist: Lightnin' Hopkins
Title Of Album: From The Vaults Of Everest Records Part 1-4
Year Of Release: 1989
Label: Collectables
Country: United States
Genre: Electric Blues, Country Blues, Texas Blues
Quality: FLAC (*tracks+.cue,log)
Bitrate: Lossless
Time: 4:05:34
Full Size: 1.28 gb
The Collectables reissue label is responsible for more than 15 entries to the 21st century Lightnin' Hopkins digital discography. These include a Hopkins sampler simply titled Blues; two volumes devoted to the high voltage Herald recordings of 1954; The Lost Texas Tapes (a sizeable archive of privately recorded material spread over five discs), and two compilations combining four albums from the mid-'60s originally issued on LPs as part of the Everest Archive of Folk series. The Everest recordings were premiered on CD in 1990 as the Golden Classics set; this same collection reappeared with the more specific title From the Vaults of Everest in 2001. The albums, originally titled Drinkin' in the Blues, Prison Blues, Mama and Papa Hopkins and Nothin' But the Blues, add up to 63 choice cuts, both solo and ensemble, recorded in the studio and live in coffeehouses. Lightnin' strikes deep into the root strata of the tradition with "See See Rider," "Trouble in Mind" (? la Furry Lewis) and "When the Saints Go Marching In." He regularly taps into the rockin' boogie woogie vein, sounding a lot like Rev. Gary Davis during "Bottle It Up and Go," covering "What'd I Say" by Ray Charles and tearing up during "Get Off My Toe" and "Long Gone Like a Turkey Through the Corn." Caught in front of a live audience, he obviously enjoys kicking back and telling stories ("Big Black Cadillac Blues," "Big Car Blues"). This anthology contains the essence of Lightnin' Hopkins. It illuminates his links with the canon of classic blues ("I've Been Buked and Scorned" contains direct quotes from Blind Willie Johnson) and the rural Afro-American experience ("Cotton" directly references the life of backbreaking agricultural labor that Hopkins roundly rejected when he chose to become an itinerant musician.) For a prime example of the role that he played in the development of the modern electric blues guitar tradition, go directly to "Guitar Lightnin'."
:: TRACKLIST ::From The Vaults Of Everest Records, Part 1 - Drinkin' In The Blues1. Big Black Cadillac Blues
2. Early In The Mornin' Blues
3. Coffee House Blues
4. I've Been Buked And Scorned
5. Stool Pidgeon Blues
6. Brand New Car
7. Drinkin' In The Blues
8. Shining Moon
9. Ball Of Twine
10. Fugitive Blues
11. "G" String Blues
12. Grandma Told Grandpa
13. Rain
14. Goin' To Dallas
15. Last Night
16. Shake It Baby
From The Vaults Of Everest Records, Part 2 - Prison Blues1. Keep Movin' On
2. That's My Story
3. Dillon's Store
4. Long Time
5. Rainy Day Blues
6. Baby!
7. Long Gone Like A Turkey
8. Goin' Back Home
9. Prison Blues Come Down On Me
10. Backwater Blues
11. Gonna' Pull A Party
12. Bluebird Bluebird
13. See See Rider
14. Worrying My Mind
15. Til The Gin Gets Here
16. Good Times
From The Vaults Of Everest Records, Part 3 - Mama And Papa Hopkins1. Bunion Stew
2. You Got To Work To Get Your Pay
3. Go Down Old Hannah
4. Hear My Black Dog Bark
5. In The Evening, The Sun Is Going Down
6. Trouble In Mind
7. Mama And Papa Hopkins
8. What Did I Say
9. Foot Race Is On
10. That Gambling Life
11. When The Saints Go Marching In
12. Get Off My Toe
13. 75 Highway
14. Bottle Up And Go
15. Short Haired Woman
16. Don't Wake Me
From The Vaults Of Everest Records, Part 4 - Nothin' But The Blues1. So Long Baby
2. Santa Fe Blues
3. Mojo Hand
4. Little Wail
5. Cotton
6. Take Me Back
7. Nothin' But The Blues
8. Hurricane Betsy
9. Guitar Lightnin'
10. Woke Up This Morning
11. Shake Yourself
12. Big Car Blues
13. Shaggy Dog
14. I'll Be Gone
15. Talk Of The Town
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