Back To The Black Bayou

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (8 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 38:58

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5 Star

LittleGWeevil

I would say this album is an absolutely fantastic material. The band is tight and smokey, Little Victor`s guitar licks are tasty and well placed. Mr Red is shining all way through the session. Victor and Red have been good friends for decades and now this friendship is paying off. There is no weak track here so i highly recommend it to those who like the old school blues in the way it`s suppose to be done.

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Every Blues Album Should Sound This Good...

tanta07

Louisiana Red has yet to release a bad album, but this one is something special. With an all star backing band, he manages to conjure the sound and feel of the old juke joint syle blues ensembles. This could have been recorded at Chess Records in the 50s. Can't recommend this one highly enough.

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They Say All Media Guide

“Raw” is an overused and sometimes misapplied term of admiration, especially in the realm of the blues, where it is all too often used as a euphemism for “incompetent and off-key.” In the case of Louisiana Red’s Back to the Black Bayou, however, it’s the only apt descriptor, and it’s fully justified as a term of praise: his sound is ragged-edged and fiery, though its center is utterly solid and his delivery is unfailingly powerful. Having lived in Germany since the early ’80s, he went to neighboring Norway to record this album with producer and guitarist Little Victor, and even if the program leans heavily toward old and familiar material (“Ride on Red,” “Too Poor to Die,” “I Come from Louisiana”), he gives every track an almost shocking immediacy and energy; the subtle rhythmic shifts and adjustments on “Alabama Train” are handled with both grace and authority, “Roamin’ Stranger” is given a powerfully grinding rendition, and the traditional gospel song “Don’t Miss That Train” provides a nicely shuffling changeup in both lyrical theme and rhythm. But he is perhaps at his most impressive on “Sweet Leg Girl,” a slow blues that shows just how much an expatriate bluesman with 60 years of experience can still do. – Rick Anderson

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