The Okeh Rhythm & Blues Story 1949-1957

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 78   Total Length: 203:08

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Great Music Needs a booklet

Johnovt

This is great music from one of the best of the "race" labels but it points up the need for PDF booklet downloads. I for one would be more than willing to spend a couple downloads on a booklet for something like this.

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Amazing Collection

MarriedManWalkin

I don't think there's a better collection on emusic. This is what makes being a member great. Big John and the Buzzards, Screamin Jay and Big Maybelle three of the best Shouters/Singers you ever need. 100% Beef and no Filler or for you Vegans and Vegites it's all Soy.

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They Say All Media Guide

The three-CD set is a real eye opener. As the most straight-laced and self-consciously upscale of the major labels, Columbia Records isn’t usually thought of as having had much to contribute to the history and development of rhythm & blues. That impression was never more than partly true, however, as every track on this three-disc set reminds us. The postwar OKeh label was Columbia’s attempt to grab a piece of a market that, as early as 1948, it knew it was losing, and the music is as solid a representation of R&B of the era as that of any major label of the period. It’s true that Okeh had only sporadic success and developed a relative handful of R&B stars: Chuck Willis, Big Maybelle, the Treniers, and Screamin’ Jay Hawkins. A great many other notable artists passed through, however, either after their biggest successes or in the years prior to their emergence, including LaVern Baker (known at the time as Bea Baker) singing with Maurice King & His Wolverines, Marvin Gaye as a member of the Marquees (working with Bo Diddley), Hadda Brooks, Annie Laurie, and the Ravens. They’re all represented here, and there’s not a second-rate song anywhere on this set, which also features some of the cleanest, richest remastering heard on a Columbia CD set of truly vintage material up to that time. The booklet is also pretty impressive in its details, listing individual band members and filled with concise encapsulated biographies (where known) of the artists. – Bruce Eder

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