|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4CD
|
|
JSP 77204CD
|
"All the vintage recordings of this seminal figure, rightly described as the 'Father Of Rock & Roll' are meticulously gathered here in the best ever sound. The presentation is superb-vintage pictures, wonderful design and a detailed sleevenote from Neil Slaven who was one of the main figures in the 1960's British Blues explosion and 'was there' when Arthur came back on the scene."
|
|
Artist |
Title |
Format |
Label |
Catalog # |
|
|
5CD BOX
|
|
BCD 17352CD
|
"His complete recordings 1941-1962! Songs include the original versions of 'Rock Me Mamma', 'That's All Right', 'My Baby Left Me', 'Mean Ol' Frisco', 'So Glad You're Mine', and many more! Newly researched biography by award-winning blues journalist Bill Dahl. Rare and exclusive photos! In the world of music, there was never anyone quite like Arthur 'Big Boy' Crudup. Rooted in the Mississippi Delta, his style was propulsive, melodic, original, and profoundly soulful. If he wasn't 'The Father of Rock 'n' Roll', as one LP proclaimed, there's no doubt that rock 'n' roll owes a debt to his songs, including 'That's All Right Mama', 'My Baby Left Me', 'Rock Me Mamma', 'So Glad You're Mine', and 'Mean Ol' Frisco Blues', as much as to his tight, swinging brand of rural blues. Arthur Crudup was in his thirties when he made his first recordings in 1941 and recorded prolifically until his death in 1974. This set includes his complete recordings from 1941 until 1962, including every extant song from RCA and its associated labels, as well as his sides for Trumpet, Checker, Ace, and Fire. Over one hundred recordings in all. An expressive singer and a true poet of the blues, Arthur Crudup certainly deserves to be known as the guy who wrote three songs that Elvis Presley recorded during the fifties, but he was a towering musician in his own right. His influence didn't end at Elvis Presley. In addition to all those that Elvis influenced, countless other blues and rock musicians adapted his songs and his sweet, lyrical style. These 124 songs on 5 CDs are complemented by a 68-page book by Bill Dahl, rare photos, and a newly researched discography."
|
|
Artist |
Title |
Format |
Label |
Catalog # |
|
|
10"
|
|
EALZ 3001LP
|
Gatefold sleeve. En avant la Zizique!, in collaboration with Éditions du Trainailleur, presents a true immersion in old Chicago with the real father of rock 'n' roll! In 1954, a young truck driver cut a bunch of singles in Sam Phillips's famous studio in Memphis, Tennessee; "That's All Right Mama" was one of the songs recorded, and it ended up on the first 7" released by a certain Elvis Presley. Within few months, the latter's name was on everyone's lips as the record entered every jukebox in the country as well as radio stations, the rock 'n' roll wave inundating the culture of millions of Caucasian youngsters. Eight years earlier in Chicago, a blues singer from Mississippi, a straight guitar player with an exquisitely expressive voice, cut a personal creation titled "That's All Right," this after having made a first draft in 1945 under the title "Dirt Road Blues." Backed by a solid rhythm section, Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup had indeed, by doing so, signed the original of what later became a great rock 'n' roll standard. All the ingredients are already there -- the breaks, the riffs, the line-up, the chords, and the tempo -- confirming Crudup as the original composer of this tune. This devastating hit was so lucrative for Presley that he recorded two more of Big Boy's masterpieces -- "My Baby Left Me" and "So Glad You're Mine." There's no question of Presley's charismatic interpretation, or of his highly praised musical references. However, it is common knowledge that neither the king nor the producers nor the managers had made public the name of Arthur Crudup. With this release, the connoisseurs will once again recognize the magic of these post-war blues sessions -- and everyone else will definitely get hooked. That's All Right: An Introduction to the Father of Rock'n'Roll contains ten tracks from a forgotten hero without whom the rock 'n' roll revolution would surely have taken a different path.
|