Showing posts with label Chess Records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chess Records. Show all posts

26 April 2017

#586 :: LIVE Blues Recording Wednesday :: RIP Chuck Berry

The Blues Room #586
Wednesday 26 April 2017
9pm-10pm NZ time, FreeFM89.0


A tribute to the late great KING OF ROCK AND ROLL, Charles Edward Anderson "Chuck" Berry aka CHUCK BERRY (October 18, 1926 – March 18, 2017). 


1. Chuck Berry - Maybellene
2. Chuck Berry - Thirty Days
3. Chuck Berry - No Money Down
4. Chuck Berry with the Steve Miller Blues Band - Fillmore Auditorium Introduction - June 27, 1967
5. Rockin' At The Fillmore (instrumental)
6. Everyday I Have The Blues
7. Driftin' Blues
8. I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man
9. Chuck Berry - Lanchester Arts Festival Introduction - February 3, 1972
10. Roll Over Beethoven
11. Nadine
12. Sweet Little Sixteen
13. Reelin' And Rockin'
14. Johnny B. Goode

BIOGRAPHY
Chuck Berry’s music has transcended generations. He earns respect to this day because he is truly an entertainer. Berry, also known as “The Father of Rock & Roll,” gained success by watching the audience’s reaction and playing accordingly, putting his listeners’ amusement above all else. For this reason, tunes like “Johnny B. Goode,” “Maybellene” and “Memphis” have become anthems to an integrated American youth and popular culture. Berry is a musical icon who established rock and roll as a musical form and brought the worlds of black and white together in song.

Born in St. Louis on October 18, 1926 Berry had many influences on his life that shaped his musical style. He emulated the smooth vocal clarity of his idol, Nat King Cole, while playing blues songs from bands like Muddy Waters. For his first stage performance, Berry chose to sing a Jay McShann song called “Confessin’ the Blues.” It was at his high school’s student musical performance, when the blues was well-liked but not considered appropriate for such an event. He got a thunderous applause for his daring choice, and from then on, Berry had to be onstage.

GUITAR LESSONS
Berry took up the guitar after that, inspired by his partner in the school production. He found that if he learned rhythm changes and blues chords, he could play most of the popular songs on the radio at the time. His friend, Ira Harris, showed him techniques on the guitar that would become the foundation of Berry’s original sound. Then in 1952, he began playing guitar and singing in a club band whose song list ranged from blues to ballads to calypso to country. Berry was becoming an accomplished showman, incorporating gestures and facial expressions to go with the lyrics.

It was in 1953 that Chuck Berry joined the Sir John’s Trio (eventually renamed the Chuck Berry Combo), which played the popular Cosmopolitan Club in St. Louis. Country-western music was big at the time, so Berry decided to use some of the riffs and create his own unique hillbilly sound. The black audience thought he was crazy at first, but couldn’t resist trying to dance along with it. Since country was popular with white people, they began to come to the shows, and the audience was at some points almost 40 percent white. Berry’s stage show antics were getting attention, but the other band members did their parts as well. In his own words: “I would slur my strings to make a passage that Johnnie (Johnson) could not produce with piano keys but the answer would be so close that he would get a tremendous ovation. His answer would sound similar to some that Jerry Lee Lewis’s fingers later began to flay.”

SOME GOOD ADVICE
Later in 1955, Berry went on a road trip to Chicago, where he chanced upon a club where his idol, Muddy Waters, was performing. He arrived late and only heard the last song, but when it was over he got the attention of Waters and asked him who to see about making a record. Waters replied, “Yeah, Leonard Chess. Yeah, Chess Records over on Forty-seventh and Cottage.” Berry went there on Monday and discovered it was a blues label where greats like Howlin’ Wolf and Bo Diddley recorded. He didn’t have any tapes to show, but Chess was willing to listen if he brought some back from St. Louis. So Berry went home and recorded some originals, including the would-be “Maybellene,” then called “Ida May,” and drove back to Chicago later that week to audition. Much to Berry’s surprise, it was that hillbilly number that caught Chess’ attention. Berry was signed to Chess Records and in the summer of 1955, “Maybellene” reached #5 on the Pop Charts and #1 on the R&B Charts. Through Chuck Berry, Chess Records moved from the R&B genre into the mainstream and Berry himself was on his way to stardom.

THE REST IS HISTORY
Berry continued his success with such hits as “Brown-Eyed Man,” “Too Much Monkey Business,” “Memphis,” “Roll Over, Beethoven!” and “Johnny B. Goode.” “Johnny B. Goode” is Berry’s masterpiece, as it brought together all the elements of Berry’s unique musical sound. It cemented his place in rock history and led to fame in the 1950s. His popularity garnered him television and movie appearances and he toured frequently.

Berry’s incredible success is due to his ability to articulate the concerns and attitudes of his audience in his music. At the height of his success, Berry was a 30-year-old black man singing to a mostly white, teenage audience. Dubbed the “Eternal Teenager,” Chuck Berry’s knowledge of the pop market made it possible for him to break color barriers and play to an integrated audience.

In the 1960s and 1970s, Berry’s music was the inspiration for such groups as the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. Berry had a number of comeback recordings and in 1972 had the first and only #1 Pop Chart hit of his career with “My Ding-A-Ling. 1986 fittingly saw him inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as the very first inductee in history. As a tribute to his pervasiveness in the realm of rock, a clip of “Johnny B. Goode” was chosen played in the Voyager I spacecraft, proving Chuck Berry and his rock legacy are truly out of this world.

Listen to a new single from Chuck's new album 
due for release on June 16, 2017.

11 February 2016

#523 :: Vinyl Shots

The Blues Room, 10 February 2016
Episode #523

All blues VINYL SHOTS in this episode thanks to Ivan at Nivara Lounge. If any of you are in Hamilton and want to come up on air sometime to spin your blues vinyl/music just holla!

1. Junior Wells Chicago Blues Band - All Night Long
2. Muddy Waters - Got My Brand On You
3. Muddy Waters - Hoochie Coochie Man
4. Buddy Guy - Stone Crazy
5. Johnny Shines - Won't You Tell Me Mama
6. Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee - Midnight Special
7. Koko Taylor - Wang Dang Doodle
8. Luther "Guitar Junior" Johnson & The New Hawks - Walkin' The Dog

25 January 2013

The Blues Room # 364 Marshall Chess: The Chess Story

 
Chess Records is one of my favorite labels for authentic blues. On this episode you'll hear many great Chess cuts plus snippets of Marshall Chess reciting some great Chess moments and stories. Enjoy!
 
Episode 364, 9 January 2013
1 Little Walter - Blues With A Feeling
2 Sugar Boy Crawford - Jock-A-Mo
3 Muddy Waters - Mad Love (I Want You To Love Me)
4 Little Walter - You're So Fine
5 Jimmy Binkley - Wine Wine Wine
6 Jimmy Rogers - Chicago Bound
7 Big Ed & His Combo (Eddie Burns) - Biscuit Baking Woman
8 Leon D Tarver & His Chordones - I'm A Young Rooster
9  Muddy Waters - Just Make Love To Me (I Just Want)
10 Jimmy Rogers - Sloppy Drunk
11 Bo Diddley - Bo Diddley
12 Bo Diddley - Diddley Daddy
13 Clarence Frogman Henry - Ain't Got No Home
14 Bobby Charles - See You Later Alligator
15 Howlin Wolf - Howlin' For My Darlin'
16 Willie Dixon - 29 Ways
 
Downloadd link for this episode: 364
 
Brothers Leonard and Phil Chess were responsible for creating the preeminent blues label of the fifties and sixties. Polish immigrants who settled in Chicago, the brothers formed Aristocrat Records in 1947 before launching their eponymous label two years later. They assembled an unparalleled roster of blues, R&B and rock and roll artists, including Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Willie Dixon, Etta James, Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf. While Phil focused on jazz, Leonard honed in on roots music, making Chess the greatest repository of blues music by the late Fifties. It was under Leonard's tutelage that Muddy Waters’ electric blues fomented a revolution that led directly to rock and roll in the person of Chuck Berry.
 
The reach of the label's music extended far across the Atlantic, where a band of impressionable twentysomethings billing themselves as the Rolling Stones sought to emulate the hard-driving R&B sounds they heard on songs like Waters' "I Can't Be Satisfied," Big Bill Broonzy's "Tell Me Baby" and Berry's "Around and Around" — all songs the group covered when Leonard's son Marshall Chess allowed the band to record at the label's 2120 South Michigan Avenue studio in 1964. More trips to Chess followed, including sessions in 1965 that would lead to "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction."
 
After working alongside his father Leonard and uncle Phil for more than 16 years, Marshall eventually came to be president of the family's namesake imprint in 1969, while continuing to produce albums, including Muddy Waters' Electric Mud (1969) and Howlin' Wolf's The Howlin' Wolf Album (1969) — both released on Marshall's Cadet Concept label, a division of Chess. Shortly after his father passed away, Marshall left Chess in 1970, and was hired as the Rolling Stones' manager and president of Rolling Stones Records, which was created after the group's Decca contract expired.

24 November 2010

The Blues Room#252 Blues Time With Chess Records


Photo credit: http://www.nickcresswell.com/chicago.html

The Blues Room presents ...
Blues Time With Chess Records
Episode 252, 17 November 2010

http://www.history-of-rock.com/chess_records.htm
http://www.bsnpubs.com/chess/chesscheck.html

1. Sunnyland Slim - She Ain't Nowhere
2. Muddy Waters - You're Gonna Miss Me
3. Robert Nighthawk - Black Angel Blues (Sweet Black Angel)
4. Shoeshine Johnny (Johnny Shines) - So Glad I Found You
5. John Lee Hooker - Walkin' The Boogie
6. Joe Williams - Everyday I Have The Blues
7. Elmore James - She Just Won't Do Right (Dust My Broom)
8. Washboard Sam - Diggin' My Potatoes
9. Little Walter - Tell Me Mama
10. Bo Diddley - Who Do You Love
11. Willie Dixon - 29 Ways
12. J.B. Lenoir - Don't Touch My head
13. TV Slim - Flat Foot Sam
14. Jimmy McCtacklin - Everybody Rock (New Orleans Beat)
15. Eddie Bo - Oh Oh
16. Sugarpie DeSanto - I Want To Know
17. Howling Wolf - Howlin' For My Darlin'
18. Etta James - At Last
19. Little Milton - So Mean To Me
20. Buddy Guy - Stone Crazy
21. Buster Brown - Crawlin' King Snake
22. Tommy Tucker - I'm Shorty
23. Koko Taylor - Love You Like A Woman
24. Hound Dog Taylor - Sitting Home Alone

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15 June 2010

The Blues Room#229 Rocket 88


The Blues Room presents ...
ROCKET 88
Episode 229, 9 June 2010

1. James Cotton - Rocket 88
2. Willie King - Peg Leg Woman
3. Little Walter - Fast Boogie
4. Rosco Gordon - Just a little bit
5. Matt Murphy - The Blues Don't Bother me
6. Magic Dick and Jay Geils (Bluestime) - Pontiac Blues
7. Kid Andersen - Stompin' with the Kid
8. Ike Turner - Hey Hey
9. Five Blazers - Chicago Boogie
10. Speckled Red - Pinetop's Boogie Woogie
11. Buddy Reed - Rialto Rock
12. Roy Gains and Clarence Hollimon - Full Gain
13. Muddy Waters - Tom Cat
14. Ike and Tina Turner - Mojo Queen
15. The JBs w/ James Brown - To My Brother
16. Jackie Brenston - Rocket 88
17. Memphis Minnie - Me and My Chauffeur
18. Jackie Brenston and his Delta Cats - My Real Gone Rocket
19. Frank Frost - Frank's Boogie

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