His Best

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His Best album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 55:37

eMusic Features

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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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Blues Classics

By John Morthland, eMusic Contributor

Contrary to the music's image, there are blues for every mood and every occasion, and blues styles varied widely for as long as the music stayed in style with African-Americans. Blues remains one of the cornerstones of American popular music, and though few bluesmen crossed over into the mainstream, many of their songs did. So here's three hours of blues classics for everyone: classic artists, classic songs, classic performances. Get it while you… more »

They Say All Music Guide

While some hardliners will point to his early 1950s Trumpet recordings as his most undiluted work, Sonny Boy’s tenure at Chess Records was his longest and most successful and therefore deserves first look for the novice coming to this remarkable bluesman at ground level. This 20-track collection takes 17 tracks from the excellent two-disc Essential Sonny Boy Williamson collection and adds “Sad To Be Alone,” “My Younger Days” and an alternate session-second version of “One Way Out” with Buddy Guy on guitar (yes, this is the version that the Allman Brothers used as the blueprint for their cover version) to the final mix. This is another entry into MCA’s Chess 50th Anniversary Series and the digital transfers here are exemplary, making this an automatic audio upgrade for those who already have this material in their collection. Because his output for the label was of such a uniformly high quality, virtually everything Williamson put down on tape at the Chess studios could make a final cut on any best of package you’d want to put together on the man. So bemoaning the absence of any track here would be minor critical carping, especially in light of no less than five other Sonny Boy Chess packages still being in print at press time. But if you’re only going to own one of them and your wallet tends to shy away from two-disc anthologies, this makes an excellent first purchase. – Cub Koda

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