Thursday, 28 August 2008

Mp3 music: Buddy Guy






Buddy Guy
   

Artist: Buddy Guy: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Blues

   







Buddy Guy's discography:


Live at the Checkerboard Lounge: Chicago 1979
   

 Live at the Checkerboard Lounge: Chicago 1979

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 10
Can't Quit the Blues (cd3)
   

 Can't Quit the Blues (cd3)

   Year: 2006   

Tracks: 15
Can't Quit the Blues (cd2)
   

 Can't Quit the Blues (cd2)

   Year: 2006   

Tracks: 14
Can't Quit the Blues (cd1)
   

 Can't Quit the Blues (cd1)

   Year: 2006   

Tracks: 18
Bring 'Em In
   

 Bring 'Em In

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 13
Blues Singer
   

 Blues Singer

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 12
Sweet Tea
   

 Sweet Tea

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 9
Buddy's Baddest: The Best Of Buddy Guy
   

 Buddy's Baddest: The Best Of Buddy Guy

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 14
Heavy Love
   

 Heavy Love

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 11
The Complete Chess Studio Recordings (CD 2)
   

 The Complete Chess Studio Recordings (CD 2)

   Year: 1997   

Tracks: 25
The Complete Chess Studio Recordings (CD 1)
   

 The Complete Chess Studio Recordings (CD 1)

   Year: 1997   

Tracks: 22
Buddy's Blues (Chess 50th Anniversary Collection)
   

 Buddy's Blues (Chess 50th Anniversary Collection)

   Year: 1997   

Tracks: 15
Live: The Real Deal
   

 Live: The Real Deal

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 9
Live! The Real Deal (with G.E. Smith and The Saturday Night Live Band)
   

 Live! The Real Deal (with G.E. Smith and The Saturday Night Live Band)

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 9
Slippin' In
   

 Slippin' In

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 11
Pleading the Blues
   

 Pleading the Blues

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 8
Feels Like Rain
   

 Feels Like Rain

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 11
Ohne Filter
   

 Ohne Filter

   Year: 1991   

Tracks: 8
Damn Right, I've Got The Blues
   

 Damn Right, I've Got The Blues

   Year: 1991   

Tracks: 10
Breaking Out
   

 Breaking Out

   Year: 1988   

Tracks: 8
A Man and The Blues
   

 A Man and The Blues

   Year: 1987   

Tracks: 8
Stone Crazy
   

 Stone Crazy

   Year: 1981   

Tracks: 6
This Is Buddy Guy (Live)
   

 This Is Buddy Guy (Live)

   Year: 1968   

Tracks: 8
Left My Blues In San Francisco
   

 Left My Blues In San Francisco

   Year: 1967   

Tracks: 9
I Left My Blues in San Francisco
   

 I Left My Blues in San Francisco

   Year: 1967   

Tracks: 11
My Time After Awhile
   

 My Time After Awhile

   Year:    

Tracks: 11
D.J Play My Blues
   

 D.J Play My Blues

   Year:    

Tracks: 10






He's Chicago's vapours baron today, persuasion his world just as his matinee idol and mentor Muddy Waters did ahead him. Yet in that respect was a time, and non all that long agone either, when Buddy Guy couldn't regular lecture terms a decent phonograph record make up out. Times sure welcome changed for the bettor -- Guy's first triad albums for Silvertone in the '90s all earned Grammys. Eric Clapton unabashedly calls Buddy Guy his favourite blues axeman, and so do a outstanding many lovesome fans general.


High-energy guitar histrionics and boundless onstage energy have always been Guy trademarks, along with a tortured vocal style that's nearly as distinctive as his seditious rapid-fire fretwork. He's come a long way of life from his beginnings on the 1950s Baton Rouge blues picture -- at his first-class honours degree gigs with bandleader "Handsome Poppa" John Tilley, the young guitarist had to chug a stomach-jolting concoction of Dr. Tichenor's antiseptic and wine to aaron Montgomery Ward off an advanced case of stage fearfulness. But by the time he joined harper Raful Neal's stria, Guy had conquered his nervousness.


Hombre journeyed to Chicago in 1957, quick to engage the town by force. But times were tough ab initio, until he sour up the juice as a showman (a great deal as some other of his former idols, Guitar Slim, had back home). It didn't take long later on that for the unexampled tike in ithiel Town to establish himself. He hung with the city's blues elite: Freddy King, Muddy Waters, Otis Rush, and Magic Sam, world Health Organization introduced Buddy Guy to Cobra Records knob Eli Toscano. Two searing 1958 singles for Cobra's Artistic underling were the outcome: "This Is the End" and "Try to Quit You Baby" exhibited more than a trace of B.B. King influence, spell "You Sure Can't Do" was an unabashed court to Guitar Slim. Willie Dixon produced the sides.


When Cobra folded, Guy wisely followed Rush all over to Chess. With the issue of his first Chess unmarried in 1960, Guy was no thirster aurally indebted to anybody. "First Time I Met the Blues" and its follow-up, "Broken Hearted Blues," were fiery, tormented wearisome blues brilliantly showcasing Guy's whammy-bar-enriched guitar and screech, hellhound-on-his-trail vocals.


Although he's often complained that Leonard Chess wouldn't allow him to turn up his guitar loud enough, the claim doesn't wash: Guy's 1960-1967 Chess catalog remains his most cheering body of influence. A shuffle "Allow Me Love You Baby," the fervid downbeat items "Tenner Years Ago," "Rock Crazy," "My Time After Awhile," and "Leave My Girl Alone," and a resilient "No Lie" rate with the hottest blues waxings of the '60s. While at Chess, Guy worked foresighted and difficult as a session guitar player, acquiring his licks in on sides by Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Little Walter, Sonny Boy Williamson, and Koko Taylor (on her run into "Wang Dang Doodle").


Upon going away Chess in 1967, Guy went to Vanguard. His first LP for the firm, A Man and the Blues, followed in the same spick-and-span venous blood vessel as his Chess work and contained the rocking "Blessed Virgin Had a Little Lamb," only This Is Buddy Guy and Hold That Plane! proved somewhat less consistent. Guy and harpist Junior Wells had foresighted been friends and played around Chicago together (Hombre supplied the guitar work on Wells' seminal 1965 Delmark set Hoodoo Man Blues, initially billed as "Friendly Chap" because of his Chess narrow); they recorded unitedly for Blue Thumb in 1969 as Pal and the Juniors (pianist Junior Mance beingness the other Junior) and Atlantic in 1970 (roger Sessions co-produced by Eric Clapton and Tom Dowd), and 1972 for the solid album Sidekick Guy & Junior Wells Play the Blues. Buddy and Junior toured together end-to-end the '70s, their playful repartee immortalized on Drinkin' TNT 'n' Smokin' Dynamite, a live set cut at the 1974 Montreux Jazz Festival.


Guy's report among rock guitar gods such as Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, and Stevie Ray Vaughan was unsurpassed, merely prior to his Grammy-winning 1991 Silvertone disc Goddamn Right, I've Got the Blues, he astonishingly hadn't issued a domestic record album in a 10. That's when the Buddy Guy bandwagon truly picked up steam -- he began marketing extinct auditoriums and turning up on electronic network idiot box (David Letterman, Jay Leno, etc.). Feels Like Rain, his 1993 encore, was a immense letdown artistically, unless i enjoys the distorted concept of having one of the world's top bluesmen duo with area lid represent Travis Tritt and hopelessly overwrought rock singer Paul Rodgers. By comparability, 1994's Slippin' In, produced by Eddie Kramer, was a major step endorse in the right direction, with no hideous duets and a preponderance of genuine blues excursions. Last Time Around: Live at Legends, an acoustic excursion with longtime partner Junior Wells followed in 1998. In 2001, Guy switched gears and went to Mississippi for a recording of the type of modal juke joint vapors preferent by Junior Kimbrough, R.L. Burnside and the Fat Possum crew. The result was Sweet Tea: arguably one of his finest albums and yet a complete anomaly in his catalog. Oddly sufficiency, he chose to follow that up with Blues Singer in 2003, some other wholly acoustic elbow grease that north Korean won a Grammy. For 2005's Bring 'Em In, it was back to the same templet as his first gear albums for Silvertone, with polished production and a smattering of edgar Albert Guest stars.


A Buddy Guy concert can sometimes be a thwarting live. He'll be in the middle of something downright hair-raising, only to get around it off dead in mid-song, or he'll disregard his possess massive songbook in parliamentary procedure to offer imitations of Clapton, Vaughan, and Hendrix. But Guy, whose club remains the well-nigh successful vapors reefer in Chicago (you'll likely get hold him sitting at the prevention whenever he's in town), is without a doubt the Windy City's ruling blues creative person -- and he rules benevolently.





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