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Sam Carr's Delta Jukes - Let The Good Times Roll flac mp3 download

Sam Carr's Delta Jukes - Let The Good Times Roll flac mp3 download
Title:
Let The Good Times Roll
Musician:
Sam Carr's Delta Jukes
Style:
Blues Rock, Chicago Blues, Electric Blues
Released:
MP3 album size:
1773 mb
FLAC album size:
1310 mb
Other formats:
VQF DTS AA RA AU AUD DMF
Genre:
Rating:
4.5 ✪

Tracklist

1 Thank You Baby 4:20
2 All Night Long 3:47
Jimmy Reed Medley: (4:58)
3A You Don't Have To Go
3B Hush Hush
3C Baby What You Want Me To Do
4 Fishing 4:05
5 Good Man 6:25
6 Why Do You Call 3:47
7 That's Alright 1:56
8 Hoover Den 2:05
9 Little Red Rooster 5:07
10 Big Boss Man 1:39
11 Crawling King Snake 4:54
12 Let The Good Times Roll 3:19

Companies, etc.

  • Distributed By – SPV GmbH
  • Copyright (c) – Blue Label

Credits

  • Artwork – Chris Musto
  • Bass Guitar – Dave Riley, Fred James
  • Drums – Sam Carr
  • Guitar – Andrew 'Shine' Turner, Dave Riley, Sam Carr
  • Harmonica – John Weston
  • Mastered By – Roger Lomas
  • Producer – Fred James
  • Vocals – Andrew 'Shine' Turner (tracks: 11, 12), Dave Riley (tracks: 1 to 3, 6, 8. 9), John Weston (tracks: 4, 5), Sam Carr (tracks: 7, 10)

Notes

Issued in a Digipak.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 693723499727
  • Matrix / Runout: 52357089/49972 21

Video about Sam Carr's Delta Jukes - Let The Good Times Roll



Reviews:
  • Dordred
Blues drummer Sam Carr is the son of the legendary Robert Nighthawk, and from his Mississippi birthplace arrived in St. Louis, and then for good in Helena, AK, where he formed this group, the Delta Jukes. They play authentic, raw, and untamed down-home blues, replete with the rough-hewn, basic techniques that signify blues dragged through Southern mud and somewhat refined by modern electricity. On this document are two significant vocalists in Dave Riley, who sings on six cuts, and John Weston, who plays a spare basic harmonica on all the tracks, and does the lyric on two. Weston appeared on this session shortly before passing away from heart failure. Producer Fred James plays second guitar and bass, while Andrew Turner is on third guitar. Riley sings on the ragged edge for the juke-joint shuffle "Thank You Baby," the chooglin' "All Night Long," the good-time party tune "Why Do You Call," and the rocker "Hoover Den" (a typo? "Hoover Dam"?), all of which he wrote. Weston vocally shows more range and a smoother, lower timbre during his compositions, the slow "Fishing" and slower "Good Man." The rest are well-known blues standards, including an excellent steady-rollin' three-song Jimmy Reed medley. Carr sings and plays guitar in tandem with Weston for a loosey-goosey take on "Big Boss Man" and the Jimmy Rogers-penned "Sweet Home Chicago"-sounding "That's Alright." The final two tracks are a revelation, as Turner, paralleling Lonnie Brooks in sound and stance, turns in some nasty guitar and vocal work during John Lee Hooker's "Crawling King Snake" and the party anthem "Let the Good Times Roll." Though at times a bit sloppy and imprecise, this is still a fine no-frills CD that blues lovers should easily enjoy.(Michael G. Nastos)