I'm Jimmy Reed

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I'm Jimmy Reed album cover
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Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 32:29

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Ed Ward

eMusic Contributor

Ed Ward began writing about music in Broadside magazine in 1965, and has been on the staffs of Rolling Stone and Creem, as well as contributing to dozens of oth...more »

04.22.11
The most accessible of the master Chicago bluesmen.
2007 | Label: Vee-Jay Ltd. Partnership / The Orchard

There was a time during the great folk scare of the early 1960s when if you saw this record in someone's record collection, you knew they'd been enlightened, and cast off the dogmatic fear of electricity. Jimmy Reed, unlike the triumvirate of Muddy Waters, Howlin 'Wolf and Sonny Boy Williamson on Chess, had a light touch on both guitar and harmonica, and was instantly accessible to people who'd been listening to country blues, although he was no country bluesman himself. Starting in 1957, he started showing up on the lower reaches of the pop charts, but this, his first album, shows that his style and songwriting abilities were with him from his first Vee-Jay hits, "You Don't Have to Go" and "Ain't That Lovin 'You Baby," (1954-5), both included here. Unlike the Chess guys, he had fans in the north and the south, and until the road and constant drinking got the better of him, he made a kind of blues nobody else could imitate or equal.

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Didn't Work For Me

Murgatroyd

I may not be the biggest blues hound but give me some Muddy Waters, Albert King, Howling Wolf or Bo Diddley and I'm a happy man. This just seemed OK and the ear-splitting harmonica was a distraction. Guess LIttle Walter wasn't available for the session.

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The Blues Personified

talkinghead50

One of the greatest if not the greatest blues singer of all time. From the cotton fields of Mississippi to Chicago to Carnege Hall, Jimmy is the man!

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Scene: Chicago Blues, 1948-1968

By John Morthland, eMusic Contributor

Chicago began filling up with blues artists—Blind Blake, Big Bill Broonzy, Memphis Minnie, Sunnyland Slim, Memphis Slim—in the 1920s and '30s--but what we know as "Chicago blues" is a postwar phenomena, a term mostly used to describe electric band blues with Mississippi Delta roots. Its first true star was Muddy Waters, whose earliest Chicago music was mostly made by himself on electrified slide guitar alongside a stand-up bassist. As he grew successful, Muddy began adding musicians… more »

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Vee-Jay Records

By Ed Ward, eMusic Contributor

Vee-Jay Records was Chicago's "other" record label. Chess had ruled the city's blues scene since 1947, but in 1953, Gary, Indiana record-store owner Vivian Bracken Carter and her brother James Bracken found, after releasing a single by a group of high-school kids called the Spaniels, that there was more talent around the Chicago area than Chess could deal with. When a Mississippi-born Chicago slaughterhouse worker named Jimmy Reed showed up after Chess had turned him… more »

They Say All Music Guide

In deciding where to start listening to Jimmy Reed, the man and his record label made it easy — at the beginning. His debut LP release, I’m Jimmy Reed, was about as strong a first album as was heard in Chicago blues, but also no stronger (relatively speaking) than the first long-players issued of Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf and co. As was the case with most bluesmen of his generation, Reed’s debut LP was really a collection of single sides than an actual album of new material (though some of it did hail from its year of release), consisting of tracks he’d recorded from June 1953 (“Roll & Rhumba”) through March 1958 (“You Got Me Crying” etc.). So it’s no surprise that it rivals The Best of Muddy Waters or any of the other 12″ platters that were showing up from Reed’s rivals at the end of the 1950s — most of the blues labels put together their LPs the same way at first. But that also turns I’m Jimmy Reed into a treasure-trove of prime material from his repertory, including the songs on which he’d built his reputation over the previous five years, key among them “Honest I Do,” “Ain’t That Lovin’ You Baby,” “You Got Me Dizzy,” and “You Don’t Have to Go,” plus their highly relevant B-sides, which help give this album more depth and breadth than a formal hits collection would have had. And in addition to Reed’s singing and harp work, the album is also a superb showcase for guitarists Eddie Taylor and John Brim (the latter on the earliest material here), and drummer Earl Palmer. – Bruce Eder

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