|
POP MUSIC |
| WorldOfPopMusic.com | Home |
|
|
|
What people search:
This BB King quote, stated to David Ritz, was his conclusion to why he chose to play and sing blues over his other love, gospel music. 'A gospel song would get me a pat on the head,' he said. 'But a blues would get me a dime.' The blues earned King not only more than his share of dimes, but a spot among music's seminal performers and teachers. Despite Ritz properly mentioning that King's music was too blue for rock and roll or soul during his early career, he has become as much a caretaker of rock's traditions as of the blues themselves. This one-disc collection, even at 16 songs, seems too little space for BB King's prolific, quality output, especially after 1992's expansive 'King Of The Blues' box. But 'Greatest Hits' timed to King's most recent rock-oriented successes: his 'How Blue Can You Get?' sampled on a pop hit, his U2 collaboration, his Robert Cray duet on 'Playing With My Friends' (from 'Blues Summit,' among the 90s best blues releases), even 'Paying The Cost To Be The Boss' covered by Pat Benatar! With remarkable liner notes and references to original ABC/MCA LPs (nearly all in print), 'Greatest Hits' is a sampler tour through BB King's immense, classic blues catalogue. It's also another chance to hear King with much better sound, courtesy of compiler Andy McKaie (who handled MCA's exceptional Chess blues compilations) and Erick Labson's remastering. It freshly paints Johnny Pate's production on 1964's seminal 'Live At The Regal' tracks, King's 1969-70 string of of rockin' blues hits ('Why I Sing The Blues,' the original 'Thrill Is Gone'), even overlooked gems like Doc Pomus/Dr. John's tailor-made 'There Must Be A Better World Somewhere.' What 'Greatest Hits' shows most is King's guitar playing and vocal economy; no melismatic vocal trills or guitar hyperspace, even live where crowds needed pleasing. Instead, King's solos in 'I Like To Live The Love' and 'Don't Answer The Door' press the melody forward, and his underrated vocals show occassional collaborator Bobby Bland's strong 'Sinatra Of The Blues' influence. King shared (or at least impressed) these traits on his most recent collaborator, Eric Clapton, and here does with just-enough help from friends like Joe Walsh and Leon Russell (on Russell's 'Hummingbird') and Stevie Wonder (on 'To Know You Is To Love You..') 'Greatest Hits' is THE King album for casual fans or those who enjoy his rare spins on classic rock or oldies radio. Blues fans wanting to dig deeper should pick up any of the original LPs, including 'Live At The Regal,' 'There Must Be A Better World Somewhere,' 'Indianola Mississippi Seeds, ' or the Bobby Bland collaborations. 'Greatest Hits' covers quality ground quickly, and thus remains an essential one-stop blues shop. (by trivialtony) What people search: |
|
||||
|
COMPUTER: Browsers - Operating Systems - Storage - CD Writer - Gadgets - Hard Disk - Mother Board - Modems - Monitors - Monitors 2 - Mouse - MP3 Player - Notebook - Printers - Sound Card - Video Card - hand held - handheld software CAMERA: camera - canon - digital cameras - hasselblad - leica - mamiya - minolta - nikon - pentax - rollei MISCELANEOUS: cell phones - credit card - dvd player - dvd writer - gambling - health - television - video camera MOVIES: Action/Adventure - Animation - Classics - Comedy - CultMovies - Drama - Documentary - Disney - Horror - Kids & Family - Military and War - Musical - Mystery and Suspense |
© 2002, WorldOfPopMusic.com