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    Little Walter

    The Complete Chess Masters: 1950-1967

    Little Walter - The Complete Chess Masters: 1950-1967

    03/17/2009 | Hip-o Select 

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    All Music Guide Review

    It is no exaggeration to call Little Walter the Jimi Hendrix of the electric harp: he redefined what the instrument was and what it could do, pushing the instrument so far into the future that his music still sounds modern decades after it was recorded. Little Walter wasn't the first musician to amplify the harmonica but he arguably was the first to make the harp sound electric, twisting twitching, vibrant runs out of his instrument; nearly stealing the show from Muddy Waters on his earliest Chess recordings; and so impressing Leonard Chess that he made Muddy keep Walter as his harpist even after Waters broke up his band. Chess also made Walter into his studio's house harpist and started to release Little Walter solo records with the instrumental "Juke" in 1952. "Juke" became a smash hit and turned Little Walter into a star, making him a steady presence on the '50s R&B charts. Like Chicago blues itself, Little Walter suffered a downturn of fortunes in the '60s, his career first eclipsed by the rise of rock & roll, but his decline was assisted in no small measure by the reckless alcoholic behavior that led to his early death in 1968. However, Hip-O Select's tremendous five-disc set The Complete Chess Masters proves that Little Walter remained capable of surprises until the end -- and that he's a major artist whose legacy only seems more formidable when it's heard as a whole, as it is here.

    Technically speaking, the title The Complete Chess Masters may be a bit of a misnomer. Little Walter issued the majority of his sides on Chess' sister label Checker with his full LPs appearing on Chess proper, but this is splitting hairs: Walter cut all his solo sides for Chess, often in Chess studios, cutting most during a spell in the early and mid-'50s when he was the most successful artist on the label, leapfrogging over his boss Muddy Waters with "Juke," a song cut at the tail end of a Muddy-led session. Once "Juke" hit, the sessions started coming fast and furious, with Walter entering the studio four or five times a year during the mid-'50s, churning out singles that turned into hit after hit and not just on the strength of his electrified harp. Walter was a supple, nuanced singer, the roundness of his voice standing in sharp contrast to his lacerating harp, providing an inherent tension within his records; when he sang "Mellow Down Easy," it sounded as if it were possible to ease into his funky groove, but that harp pulled you right out. Such kinetic inadvertent drama fueled his prime '50s recordings and almost everything he cut was of shockingly high quality, extending beyond the hits "Blues with a Feeling" and "My Babe" and into B-sides and forgotten sides.

    This makes The Complete Chess Masters consistently absorbing listening, hampered only slightly by a rather large preponderance of alternate takes that can sometimes slow the momentum of this set. Conversely, the appearance of Walter's legacy winds up being bolstered somewhat by Chess' over-recording of him at his peak and general avoidance of him in his decline. This five-disc set might be billed as stretching from 1950 to 1967 but that's misleading: all but 15 tracks here were recorded in the '50s, a fact that winds up camouflaging just how long Walter was in dire straits. His fall from Chess' biggest star to being given charity sessions reflects the impact of rock & roll on blues sales -- not only did they wipe out crossover blues hits, but Walter couldn't adapt to the times, his electric harp too closely tied to Chicago blues. So, he wound up with only a handful of sessions in the '60s, all presented on the final stretch, none less than entertaining, none a patch on Walter at his peak. These final recordings are necessary to fill out the picture, but what remains are those '50s sessions, which defined what electric blues was and what it could do, and produced music that is still invigorating and essential -- and best appreciated here, where the true depth of Little Walter's achievement is easy to behold. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

    The Complete Chess Masters: 1950-1967 Track Listing

  • Track#
  • Title
  • time
  • lyrics
  • 1
  • Evans Shuffle
  • 2:14

  • 2
  • Juke
  • 2:45

  • 3
  • Juke (Alternate Take)
  • 2:57

  • 4
  • Can't Hold Out Much Longer
  • 3:01

  • 5
  • Can't Hold Out Much Longer (Alternate Take)
  • 2:51

  • 6
  • Blue Midnight (Alternate Take)
  • 3:02

  • 7
  • Blue Midnight
  • 2:59

  • 8
  • Boogie
  • 3:01

  • 9
  • Mean Old World
  • 2:55

  • 10
  • Sad Hours
  • 3:12

  • 11
  • Fast Boogie
  • 2:48

  • 12
  • Fast Boogie (Alternate 1)(#)
  • 3:13

  • 13
  • Fast Boogie (Alternate 2)(#)
  • 2:57

  • 14
  • Fast Boogie (Alternate 3)
  • 3:00

  • 15
  • Don't Need No Horse
  • 3:15

  • 16
  • Driftin' (#)
  • 3:12

  • 17
  • Driftin' (Alternate Take)
  • 3:08

  • 18
  • Don't Have to Hunt No More
  • 3:01

  • 19
  • Crazy Legs
  • 3:23

  • 20
  • Tonight with a Fool
  • 2:53

  • 21
  • Off the Wall (Alternate Take)
  • 2:55

  • 22
  • Off the Wall
  • 2:50

  • 23
  • Tell Me Mama
  • 2:45

  • 24
  • Quarter to Twelve
  • 3:13

  • 25
  • That's It
  • 3:10

  • 26 (2)
  • Blues with a Feeling (Alternate Take)
  • 2:56

  • 27 (2)
  • Blues with a Feeling
  • 3:07

  • 28 (2)
  • Last Boogie
  • 2:32

  • 29 (2)
  • Too Late
  • 2:41

  • 30 (2)
  • Fast Boogie
  • 2:52

  • 31 (2)
  • Lights Out
  • 2:46

  • 32 (2)
  • Fast Large One
  • 2:50

  • 33 (2)
  • You're So Fine
  • 3:04

  • 34 (2)
  • My Kind of Baby
  • 3:08

  • 35 (2)
  • Come Back Baby
  • 2:54

  • 36 (2)
  • Rocker
  • 3:07

  • 37 (2)
  • I Love You So (Oh Baby)
  • 2:33

  • 38 (2)
  • Oh Baby
  • 2:46

  • 39 (2)
  • I Got to Find My Baby (Alternate Take)
  • 3:07

  • 40 (2)
  • I Got to Find My Baby
  • 2:48

  • 41 (2)
  • Big Leg Mama
  • 2:47

  • 42 (2)
  • Mercy Babe (My Babe)
  • 3:18

  • 43 (2)
  • Last Night (First Version)
  • 2:54

  • 44 (2)
  • You'd Better Watch Yourself
  • 3:04

  • 45 (2)
  • Blue Light
  • 3:14

  • 46 (2)
  • Instrumental
  • 2:55

  • 47 (2)
  • Last Night
  • 2:44

  • 48 (2)
  • Mellow Down Easy
  • 2:43

  • 49 (2)
  • My Babe
  • 2:42

  • 50 (2)
  • My Babe (Overdubbed Version)
  • 2:30

  • 51 (3)
  • Thunderbird
  • 2:48

  • 52 (3)
  • Roller Coaster
  • 2:53

  • 53 (3)
  • I Got to Go
  • 2:41

  • 54 (3)
  • Hate to See You Go (Extended)
  • 3:04

  • 55 (3)
  • Little Girl
  • 3:06

  • 56 (3)
  • Crazy for My Baby
  • 3:01

  • 57 (3)
  • Can't Stop Loving You
  • 2:48

  • 58 (3)
  • One More Chance with You
  • 2:55

  • 59 (3)
  • Who
  • 2:24

  • 60 (3)
  • Boom, Boom Out Go the Lights
  • 2:51

  • 61 (3)
  • It Ain't Right
  • 2:54

  • 62 (3)
  • Flying Saucer
  • 3:03

  • 63 (3)
  • It's Too Late Brother
  • 2:43

  • 64 (3)
  • Teenage Beat
  • 3:02

  • 65 (3)
  • Take Me Back
  • 3:06

  • 66 (3)
  • Just a Feeling
  • 2:54

  • 67 (3)
  • Nobody But You
  • 2:07

  • 68 (3)
  • Temperature (Version 1)
  • 1:59

  • 69 (3)
  • Shake Dancer
  • 2:44

  • 70 (3)
  • Everybody Needs Somebody
  • 2:53

  • 71 (3)
  • Temperature (Alternate 1)
  • 2:15

  • 72 (3)
  • Temperature (Alternate 2)
  • 2:16

  • 73 (3)
  • Temperature (Take 30)
  • 3:28

  • 74 (3)
  • Temperature (Take 35-38)
  • 4:54

  • 75 (3)
  • Temperature (Version 2)
  • 2:40

  • 76 (3)
  • Ah'w Baby (Alternate Take)
  • 2:50

  • 77 (4)
  • Ah'w Baby
  • 2:54

  • 78 (4)
  • I've Had My Fun (Alternate Take)
  • 2:13

  • 79 (4)
  • I've Had My Fun (Alternate 2)(#)
  • 2:26

  • 80 (4)
  • I've Had My Fun
  • 2:02

  • 81 (4)
  • The Toddle
  • 2:38

  • 82 (4)
  • Confessin' the Blues
  • 3:04

  • 83 (4)
  • Key to the Highway
  • 2:46

  • 84 (4)
  • Rock Bottom
  • 2:31

  • 85 (4)
  • Rock Bottom
  • 2:18

  • 86 (4)
  • Walkin' On (Rock Bottom Alternate)
  • 2:36

  • 87 (4)
  • You Gonna Be Sorry (Someday Baby) (Take 5)
  • 2:43

  • 88 (4)
  • You Gonna Be Sorry (Someday Baby) (Alternate Take)
  • 3:08

  • 89 (4)
  • You Gonna Be Sorry (Someday Baby)
  • 2:49

  • 90 (4)
  • One of These Mornings (#)(Instrumental)
  • 3:13

  • 91 (4)
  • Baby
  • 2:00

  • 92 (4)
  • My Baby Is Sweeter (Alternate Take)
  • 2:51

  • 93 (4)
  • My Baby Is Sweeter
  • 2:29

  • 94 (4)
  • Crazy Mixed Up World (Alternate Take)
  • 2:01

  • 95 (4)
  • Crazy Mixed Up World
  • 2:00

  • 96 (4)
  • Worried Life (Alternate Take)
  • 2:18

  • 97 (4)
  • Worried Life
  • 2:40

  • 98 (4)
  • Everthing's Gonna Be Alright (Take 1)
  • 4:29

  • 99 (4)
  • Everything's Gonna Be Alright (Alternate 1)
  • 2:15

  • 100 (4)
  • Everything's Gonna Be Alright (Alternate 2)
  • 3:02

  • 101 (4)
  • Everything's Gonna Be Alright
  • 2:50

  • 102 (4)
  • Mean Old Frisco (Alternate Take)
  • 3:06

  • 103 (4)
  • Mean Old Frisco
  • 2:25

  • 104 (5)
  • Back Track
  • 2:49

  • 105 (5)
  • One of These Mornings
  • 2:56

  • 106 (5)
  • Blue and Lonesome (Alternate Take)
  • 4:51

  • 107 (5)
  • Blue and Lonesome
  • 2:55

  • 108 (5)
  • Me and Piney Brown
  • 2:32

  • 109 (5)
  • Break It Up
  • 2:27

  • 110 (5)
  • Going Down Slow
  • 2:56

  • 111 (5)
  • You're Sweet
  • 2:59

  • 112 (5)
  • I Don't Play
  • 2:19

  • 113 (5)
  • As Long as I Have You
  • 2:39

  • 114 (5)
  • You Don't Know
  • 2:25

  • 115 (5)
  • Just Your Fool
  • 2:24

  • 116 (5)
  • Up the Line
  • 2:07

  • 117 (5)
  • I'm a Business Man
  • 2:55

  • 118 (5)
  • Dead Presidents
  • 2:53

  • 119 (5)
  • Southern Feeling
  • 2:59

  • 120 (5)
  • Back in the Alley
  • 3:07

  • 121 (5)
  • I Feel So Bad (Take 1)
  • 2:43

  • 122 (5)
  • I Feel So Bad (Take 2)
  • 4:15

  • 123 (5)
  • Chicken Shack
  • 2:47

  • 124 (5)
  • Feel So Bad (#)
  • 2:57

  • 125 (5)
  • Make It Alright (#)
  • 3:23

  • 126 (5)
  • Juke (From "Super Blues")
  • 3:27

  • The Complete Chess Masters: 1950-1967 Notes

    As shown in the Chess Records bio film, "Cadillac Records," in the world of pop, rock and blues harmonica, there are two distinct eras: before Little Walter and post Little Walter. A featured player in the story of Chess, Walter took a mostly dismissed instrument and elevated it to a centerpiece of the rock and blues world by coupling it with cheap microphones and easily overloaded amplifiers. The effect created a totally new spectrum of sounds, and made Marion Walter Jacobs a deity of the harmonica thereafter.

    It also didn't hurt that Little Walter had a string of 14 Top 10 R&B hits between 1952 and 1958, including a pair of #1s, "Juke" and "My Babe." Walter also recorded virtually a blues songbook, songs that have been played in bars, on stages and on record by untold bands ever since: "You're So Fine," "Blues With A Feeling," "Mean Old World," "Boom, Boom Out Go The Lights," "Key To The Highway," and "Confessin' The Blues," among others.

    Made for Chess Records between 1950 and 1967, the 126 recordings on the five CDs here present an amazing recorded portrait by this giftedperformer. Starting with a Walter lead recorded with Muddy Waters in 1950, this set contains all of his solo masters for the label, featuring all of the hits and 9 previously unreleased recordings including a pair of songs recorded with Bo Diddley, "Feel So Bad" and "Make It Alright." The majority of these recordings have not been available anywhere for well over a decade.

    Credits of The Complete Chess Masters: 1950-1967

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