Burning Hell

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ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 42:10

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Was Once Available in US

seadiva

I know because I downloaded a track I didn't have elsewhere. Too bad it's not available any longer

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Not the usual quality mp3s

irjason

Be aware these songs are only 128k mp3s. While they probably sound about as good as the original recording, they aren't the usual VBR mp3 files eMusic provides for other releases.

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in particular...

bklynd

Burnin' Hell is a transcendantly beautiful track. You need it.

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burnin'

gimbal

I don't suppose I'd have heard this, if it wasn't for eMusic. I've heard it, now, and I am in love with this man's guitar. It sounds like something I might've heard the like of, perhaps nearly, on one or another Bob Dylan track -- little did I know, John Lee Hooker must be the very master of it. It ain't just a matter of the man's guitar, of course. With his voice, his person, and his mastery of the rhythm, along with that guitar, John Lee Hooker gives it an edge and a sound that sits stronger than any pop imitation. There it is -- you can have a hear at it, for yourself.

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They Say All Media Guide

In April 1959, John Lee Hooker recorded a couple of solo acoustic albums for Riverside that were his first efforts geared toward the folk/acoustic blues audience, rather than the commercial R&B one. One of these albums (The Country Blues of John Lee Hooker) was issued at the time; the other, Burning Hell, wasn’t issued until 1964, and then only in England (in 1992, it finally came out in the U.S. on CD). Burning Hell is very similar to Country Blues, mixing originals with covers of tunes by Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Lightnin’ Hopkins, and Big Bill Broonzy. It has a slight edge, with the singing and performances sounding a little more committed. But anyone who likes one LP will like the other, though neither ranks among the best of Hooker’s one-man recordings. – Richie Unterberger

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