Remember Me

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (17 ratings)
Remember Me album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 40:18

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Raw and Real

gatorboy69

This CD recorded while he was dyin....He just played at jooks and house parties...didn't give a damn about fortune and fame!

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Good album

humza_a_m

Good modern blues. He changes styles quite a bit. And he is definately a newer blues player, not so rustic, sometimes a bit quick, but definately he is a blues player. and in fact, his style is a bit fresh in a sea of bad know-offs. his changing of the riffs is perfect for people who wish to begin a new affair with blues music.

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True blues

loranga

This is a realy good record. You hear that thing called music all over the recording. It's a "clean" recording compared to some of possums other recordings. I heard a song from possums site and felt imidiatly that Caldwell is a great artist. Listen for your self. Keep on truckin

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They Say All Music Guide

The story of Charles Caldwell is that of too many bluesmen — discovered too late. At least the Fat Possum label did find and record him before he died of cancer in September 2003. And there was no doubt this guy could play, whether on his own or accompanied by a drummer. You want raw Mississippi blues? This is it, as electric as R.L. Burnside or Junior Kimbrough, full of fire and relating tales of life, as on “Old Buck.” There’s a wonderful crispness to his guitar playing; to some it will sound basic, but there’s plenty going on inside it, complemented by as powerful a voice as Caldwell’s own singing. In songs like “I Know I Done You Wrong” you can hear echoes of Robert Johnson and Charley Patton through the ages, and even early Muddy Waters. “I Got Something to Tell You” rocks all the way to Chicago and back, while “Alone for a Long Time” hammers a beat home, strong enough to shake any house party. It all ends, somewhat poignantly, with “Remember Me.” Bluesmen like this are, literally and unfortunately, a dying breed. It’s too late now for Charles Caldwell. But this, the sum total of his recordings, made late in life, stands as an eloquent testament that it wasn’t all in vain. – Chris Nickson

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