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Big Bill Broonzy

All the Classic Sides 1928-1937

All the Classic Sides 1928-1937 Tracks
1. House Rent Stomp - Big Bill Broonzy
2. Big Bill Blues - Big Bill Broonzy
3. Down in the Basement Blues - Big Bill Broonzy
4. Starvation Blues - Big Bill Broonzy
5. Somebody's Been Using That Thing - Famous Hokum Boys
6. Black Cat Rag - Famous Hokum Boys
7. Pig Meat Strut - Famous Hokum Boys
8. Guitar Rag - Famous Hokum Boys
9. Saturday Night Rub - Famous Hokum Boys
10. I Can't Be Satisfied -
11. Grandma's Farm -
12. Skoodle Do Do -
13. Tadpole Blues -
14. Bow Leg Baby -
15. Skoodle Do Do -
16. Saturday Night Rub - Hokum Boys
17. Pig Meat Strut - Hokum Boys
18. Papa's Gettin' Hot - Hokum Boys
19. Police Station Blues -
20. They Can't Do That -
21. No Good Buddy - Bill Williams
22. State Street Woman -
23. Meanest Kind of Blues -
24. I Got the Blues for My Baby -
25. Banker's Blues -
26. How You Want It Done -
27. Worried in Mind Blues -
28. Too Too Train Blues -
29. Mistreatin' Mamma -
30. Big Bill Blues -
31. Brown Skin Shuffle -
32. Stove Pipe Stomp -
33. Beedle Um Bum -
34. Selling That Stuff -
35. Mr Conductor Man -
36. Too Too Train Blues
37. Worrying You Off My Mind, Pt. 1
38. Worrying You Off My Mind, Pt. 2
39. Shelby County Blues
40. Mistreatin' Mama Blues
41. Bull Cow Blues
42. How You Want It Done
43. Long Tall Mama
44. M and O Blues - Big Bill Broonzy
45. Rukus Juice Blues - Big Bill Broonzy
46. Friendless Blues
47. Milk Cow Blues
48. Hungry Man Blues
49. I'll Be Back Home Again
50. Bull Cow Blues, Pt. 2
51. Serve It to Me Right
52. Starvation Blues
53. Mississippi River Blues
54. At the Break of Day
55. I Want to Go Home
56. Hard Headed Woman
57. Dying Day Blues
58. I Want to See My Baby
59. Serve It to Me Right
60. Dirty No-Gooder
61. Let Her Go-She Don't Know
62. Hobo Blues
63. Prowlin' Ground Hog
64. C.C. Rider [Take A]
65. C.C. Rider [Take B]
66. Sweet to Mama - State Street Boys
67. Rustlin' Man - State Street Boys
68. She Caught the Train - State Street Boys
69. Midnight Special - State Street Boys
70. Dozen - State Street Boys
71. Don't Tear My Clothes - State Street Boys
72. Southern Blues
73. Good Jelly
74. C and A Blues
75. Something Good
76. You May Need My Help Someday
77. Rising Sun Shine On
78. Mountain Blues
79. Bad Luck Blues
80. I Can't Make You Satisfied
81. I'm Just a Bum
82. Keep Your Hands Off Her
83. Sun Gonna Shine in My Door Someday
84. Good Liquor Gonna Carry Me Down
85. Down the Line Blues
86. Bricks in My Pillow
87. Tell Me What You Been Doing
88. Ash Hauler
89. Evil Women Blues
90. These Ants Keep Biting Me
91. Big Billl Blues (These Blues Are Doggin' Me)
92. You Know I Need Lovin'
93. Match Box Blues
94. Low Down Woman Blues
95. Keep Your Mind on It - Hokum Boys
96. Bull Cow Blues, No.3
97. Married Life's a Pain
98. Black Mare Blues
99. Pneumonia Blues (I Keep on Aching)
100. Big Bill's Milk Cow, No. 2
101. W.P.A. Blues
102. I'm a Southern Man
103. Nancy Jane - Hokum Boys
104. Lowland Blues
105. Seven-Eleven (Dice Please Don't Fail Me)
106. You Know I Got a Reason
107. Oh Babe (Don't Do Me That Way)
108. Detroit Special
109. Falling Rain
110. Black Widow Spider
111. Cherry Hill
112. Out With the Wrong Woman -
113. Don't Tear My Clothes, No. 2 -
114. You Drink Too Much -
115. Southern Flood Blues
116. My Big Money
117. My Woman Mistreats Me
118. Let's Reel and Rock - Big Bill Broonzy
119. Come Up to My House - Big Bill Broonzy
120. Get Back (Black, Brown and White) - Big Bill Broonzy
121. Terrible Flood Blues - Big Bill Broonzy
122. Little Bug - Big Bill Broonzy
123. Horny Frog [Take 1] - Big Bill Broonzy
124. Horny Frog [Take 2] - Big Bill Broonzy
125. Mean Old World [Take 1] - Big Bill Broonzy
126. Mean Old World [Take 2] - Big Bill Broonzy
127. Barrelhouse When It Rains - Big Bill Broonzy
Big Bill Broonzy - All the Classic Sides 1928-1937


Users's Reviews
Feel free to add your comments about All the Classic Sides 1928-1937
****½
5
Finally! All of Big Bill Broonzy's classic and hugely influential prewar sides gathered together. 128 sides recorded for labels like Paramount, ARC and Perfect Records, and featuring Big Bill as a solo performer, as well as leading various small combos.

Big Bill Broonzy was one of the major links between country blues and the urban Chicago variety, and artists like Memphis Slim and Muddy Waters recorded entire LPs of his material.
The sound on these five discs is not great, but you probably won't find any better-sounding Big Bill-sides from the 20s and 30s, and this is certainly no second-rate compilation, in spite of the relatively low price and the cartoonish design of the box. On the contrary, it is a well-annotated, carefully remastered overview of the music of Big Bill Broonzy in his prime.

Posted by Anonymous, on 2004-02-20
Big Bill's Best Box...3.5 stars
3
With this box you get the pre-war sides of the Chicago Gentleman of the blues. Broonzy was interesting in that, at least to me, he seems rather emotionally detatched, vocally, much of the time. Particularly in comparison to many of his contemporaries. Whereas Skip James can make you feel like you just heard a ghost crying on the wind, Broonzy kinda sounds like a stately, distinguished gentleman. Certainly a feat, considering how sexually explicit some of his lyrics are.

I think the idea of a Rock & Roll Hall of Fame is ridiculous to begin with, but if Broonzy isn't in it (maybe he is, I don't know), then it's even more ridiculous than I thought. Broonzy had a much larger stylistic impact upon rock & roll than did, say, Robert Johnson, who I would imagine is probably already in there for no other reason than Clapton and Keith Richards can't seem to ever shut up about him. Detach yourself from the hype and actually just listen to the musics of Broonzy and Johnson. There is nothing of Johnson's sound or style that widely found its way into rock & roll. Now listen to quite alot of Broonzy's music. Much of Broonzy's music isn't even so much blues as it is rhythm & blues... the very foundation of the later Chicago blues sound, and early R&R sounds. Water down the lyrics, add some horns or an electric guitar, speed it up a bit, make it 25 years later and some of Big Bill's music is 1950s rock & roll.

Not that I give or take two doo-doos of merit to something because it did or did not influence rock, but seeing as how so many classic-rock fans are always regurgitating the same stuff they've read in 50 Clapton interviews, it annoys me how many blues-rock fans will go on and on about how Robert Johnson was the greatest blues musician ever, as well as some sort of genius proto-architect of rock, when this guy (Broonzy) that most of those same people have never heard, clearly, at times, sounds like a main influence for everyone from Little Richard to Johnny Cash & the Tennessee Two. I'm not slighting Robert's music here, just saying that if you believe the hype, he seemed to do everything but create the earth and sky.

As for Broonzy's music itself, this is a blessing and a curse. Sometimes he does indeed fall into many of the repetitious and bland pitfalls that became the hallmark of the famed post-war "Chicago Blues sound" that oftentimes bores me to tears. That is certainly not all the music in this great box, though. And of course some of his music does dig deep. It's not all just sex and fun.

I feel special mention must be made of Black Bob, Broonzy's longtime pianist. He is as much the star of this box as is Broonzy himself.

As for JSP's work on this box, it is lovely as usual. This is the best sounding Big Bill I have heard. My 3.5 stars don't slight JSPs fine transfers, it's just that as much as I like Big Bill, I personally have never elevated him to the same level as the Memphis Minnies, Lonnie Johnsons, Skip James', Blind Willie McTells, etc... of the world. If you're a huge Big Bill fan, or a first-timer just looking to check him out, this is as fine a box (and price) as you will ever find. I've had this box for 4 or 5 months now and it has yet to escape my player for more than a couple days.

Posted by Anonymous, on 2004-11-30