Mr. Scrapper's Blues

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Mr. Scrapper's Blues album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 45:18

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Mr. Scrapper's Blues

spiro

this is a glorious album. I've been driving around all week listening to the CD over and over again. Ignore the other reviews- the guitar playing is killer. Just check out "E Blues", "A Blues" and "Goin' Where The Moon Crosses The Yellow Dog. The singing is full of emotion and who knew Little Boy Blue would create such a great song. Don't forget Scrapper Blackwell was so good that Robert Johnson stole two of his songs to create two of his classic- Sweet Home Chicago and Love In Vain.

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Older, But Still Plenty to Like...

tanta07

This is an older, more world-weary Scrapper Blackwell than you heard on his pre-war recordings. His voice is a harsh, raspy shell of its former self, but his guitar playing is still spry and shows flourishes of his younger self. It's not as strong as his pre-war material, but fans of Scrapper Blackwell (and great country blues guitar) will still find plenty to like here.

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They Say All Music Guide

Blackwell, it’s not always remembered, was rediscovered in the late 1950s, though he didn’t have much chance to make a new career out of the blues revival before his death a few years later. He performs well, but not wonderfully, on this July 1961 session in Indianapolis, accompanied only by his guitar (although he uses piano on one song, “Little Girl Blues”). His guitar playing is in better shape than his vocals, and, in fact, his instrumental work is sparkling on tunes like “Blues Before Sunrise,” where the pacing and alternation of chords and single-note runs is immaculate. The instrumental “‘A’ Blues” is also a standout in its tradeoffs between high and low notes. It’s mostly blues of a slow and deliberate, if varied, pace, though “Little Boy Blues” picks up the mood into a charging, swinging rhythm. – Richie Unterberger

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