1. Deneen McEachern
Hard Dark Love 3:58
2. George Higgs
The Unloving Kind 4:00
3. Louisiana Red & Lefty Dizz
Going Train Blues 4:47
4. Deneen McEachern
Black Sky El 4:02
5. Sonny Terry
Selling Out 2:28
6. Jemima James
Tracking Through the Snow 3:19
7. Deneen McEachern
Lovers Lament 2:35
8. Jemima James / George Higgs
Walk All Over Georgia 4:48
9. Marc Galbo
Have What You Give 3:32
10. Louisiana Red
Held Up In One Town 3:16
11. Jemima James
Emergency Call 3:38
12. George Higgs
Somebody Tell Somebody 3:17
13. Jemima James / Deneen McEachern
Dog Following Me 4:22
14. Louisiana Red
Red Sun 4:38
feat.: Johnny Shines & Sugar Blue
15. Lightnin Welles
If Shes Gone Bad 2:10
16. Louisiana Red
When My Mama Was Living 5:01
KENT COOPER "THE
BLUES & OTHER SONGS"
WITH PERFORMANCES BY LOUISIANA RED, SONNY TERRY, GEORGE HIGGS, WILLIE MURPHY, JEMIMA JAMES AND MANY OTHERS
Labor Records has announced a second release of collected songs by songwriter/
lyricist Kent
Cooper, entitled: Vol. 2 The Blues and Other Songs.
Eleven of the sixteen tracks are new, never before
released material, which embody the range of this prolific lyricist.
A powerful new blues singer, Deneen McEachern, opens the set with Hard
Dark Love, about a passionate attachment above any need for formalized
marriage contracts. McEachern deploys her full bodied larger-than-life
voice in a forceful and gripping interpretation of Black Sky El
(Rob Bowman), evoking a snowy night on Chicagos bleak Southside,
where her man has lost his way. Deneens Lovers
Lament, comes from a woman who cannot bring herself to bury her
lover: They got them tombstones far as the eye can see, its
just not the place my baby needs to be.
George Higgs, winner of Living Blues Country Album of the year award
in 2002, and Jemima James, the great Boston area singer, join forces on
Walk All Over Georgia, a plaintive ode to love unknowingly
crushed. It is apparent that Higgs and James have forged an instant classic
in this number. Ms. James, whose ample voice has been described as full
throated and deep in the chest when she lets loose, gives a touching
performance in Tracking Through the Snow, a song that captures
what Cooper has referred to as the isolation that too many women must
endure and, hopefully, overcome. Ms. James version of Emergency
Call, is the frantic bemoaning of a woman struck with the realization
that shes lost her lover and needs a fast retreatback to her
dead mother if necessary.
Sonny Terry sings the wildly lamenting song Selling Out, while
Louisiana Red, aided and abetted by the fabulous Lefty Dizz, kicks up
a storm on Going Train Blues. (You can actually see and hear
the train smoking down the hard steel highway.) Red is joined by Sugar
Blue and Johnny Shines on Red Sun, the story of a man waiting
for a miracle to break him out of prison, so he can have one more
good drunk in town. Red has never sounded better nor been more impressive
as on the tracks Held Up In One Town and When My Mama
was Living. The guitar wizard was at the top of his game when he
cut these recordings, his voice a real standout in the pantheon of the
blues. Cooper has said, Few singers can get as much anguish into
their voice as Louisiana Red. The way he sings When My Mama was
Living, you know the woman is sorely missed. You feel it yourself.
Backed by the Cold Wind Band, George Higgs two numbers will garner
this vintage singer an even greater audience. Higgs is the real thing,
a man who has worked all his life at manual labor, and, until later years,
played his music mostly for solace and for neighborhood friends. The richness
and depth of Higgs feelings are fully evident in the songs The
Unloving Kind and Somebody Tell Somebody.
Coopers songs have been recorded by artists as diverse as Eric Burdon
of the Animals and Peg Leg Sam, the hobo harmonica sage. Cooper lived
in the East Village in the Sixties and Seventies and was friends with
most of the blues luminaries of the day, which included Sonny Terry, Brownie
McGhee, John Lee Hooker (for whom he wrote the obituary for the Heritage
Blues Society), Muddy Waters, Lonnie Johnson, Arthur Crudup, Johnny Shines,
Roosevelt Sykes and a host of others. He is the author of a book on Sonny
Terry and of the blues musicals Deathwatch and Standing
At Your Door, the latter of which starred Guy Davis in the l998
production
A tale of marital woe so harrowing it makes the bardic sophistry
of the Geto Boys or Ghostface Killan seem tame by comparison. Its
a jaw dropper. Spin Magazine
(about Coopers seminal
blues classic Sweet Blood Call)
see LYRICS
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