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The Natch'l Blues

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (195 ratings)
The Natch'l Blues album cover
01
Good Morning Miss Brown
3:16
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02
Corinna
3:01
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03
I Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Steal My Jellyroll
3:13
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04
Going up to the Country, Paint My Mailbox Blue
3:37
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05
Done Changed My Way of Living
7:04
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06
She Caught the Katy and Left Me a Mule to Ride
3:29
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07
The Cuckoo
4:15
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08
You Don't Miss Your Water ('Til Your Well Runs Dry)
4:25
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09
Ain't That a Lot of Love
4:01
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10
The Cuckoo
3:20
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11
New Stranger Blues
5:39
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12
Things Are Gonna Work out Fine
3:17
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Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 48:37

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eMusic Review 0

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Andria Lisle

eMusic Contributor

06.30.09
A fresh, crackling reinterpretation of the blues idiom
2000 | Label: Columbia/Legacy

Forty years after Mahal's sophomore effort was released, it sounds as fresh and original as it did back in 1968. The Harlem-born musician, trained in African rhythms, certainly offers a unique take on the blues, using an integrated band to transpose the oft-wearied call-and-response formula that dominates the Southern musical style into a playfully upbeat sound.

When The Natch'l Blues surfaced, the hippie counterculture was in full swing. Electric bluesmen like Albert King — a southpaw famous for wrangling psychedelic chord changes from his Flying V — headlined the Fillmore Auditorium, while pre-war acoustic purveyors such as Furry Lewis and Son House were experiencing unlikely renaissances on the coffeehouse circuits. Mahal, true to form, elected to forge his own trail, employing an electric combo that included organist Al Kooper, the legendary Earl Palmer on drums, and sessions guitarist Jesse Ed Davis, best known for his work on Gene Clark's White Light album.

Originally composed of nine tracks, The Natch'l Blues includes renditions of Yank Rachell's classic country blues number "She Caught the Katy And Left Me A Mule To Ride," the Delta-styled vamp "Going Up To The Country, Paint My Mailbox Blue," and a pair… read more »

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Great Blues

grandpadog

Good vocals, swinging guitars and just plain good listening.

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Love This Record....

BigonBluz

I downloaded it originally because it brought back memories of my youth, but hearing it again gave me a whole new appreciation for Taj. These recordings are precious and timeless... its LA meets Mississippi...check out "Good Morning Miss Brown", "Gonna Move Up to the Canyon" and "She Caught the Katy" if you don't believe me. When the world has got the best of you, and you simply can't face that commute home, you'll be happy you have this CD in your case.

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amen

martinoalto

For the guitar work of the late great Jesse Edwin Davis alone all blues guitar freaks have to get this one. Off the charts tasty!

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Good and Bad Times

dj.tinny.toons

Sometimes the creative jucies stop flowing, be it a tour, burn out or what ever, This album is a better compilation and easy to listen too

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Bridge between the Big Easy and the Big Apple

bwmoeling

Okay, Taj Mahal is from further up the delta than New Orleans, but the connection is still there. Taj doesn't really have a bad period, but Natch'l Blues was one of his best, filled with the raw energy and music joy that characterize his work. She Caught the Katy and Going up the Country alone make this album worth putting in a place of honor in your blues collection.

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The very best Taj Mahal album

muzixplorer

And one of the best blues albums of all times. Taj is at his blues peak here and backed up by the best group he ever played with...including Jesse Ed Davis who is masterful on both guitar and keyboards. I have been listening to this since I was 13 years old and love it as much today as I did then. Which, in my book, means this is a timeless classic.

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They Say All Music Guide

Taj Mahal’s second album, recorded in the spring and fall of 1968, opens with more stripped-down Delta-style blues in the manner of his debut, but adds a little more amplification (partly courtesy of Al Kooper on organ) before moving into wholly bigger sound on numbers like “She Caught the Katy and Left Me a Mule to Ride” and “The Cuckoo” — the latter, in particular, features crunchy electric and acoustic guitars and Gary Gilmore playing his bass almost like a lead instrument, like a bluesman’s answer to John Entwistle. Most notable, however, may be the two original closing numbers, “You Don’t Miss Your Water (‘Til Your Well Runs Dry)” and “Ain’t That a Lot of Love,” which offer Taj Mahal working in the realm of soul and treading onto Otis Redding territory. This is particularly notable on “You Don’t Miss Your Water,” which achieves the intensity of a gospel performance and comes complete with a Stax/Volt-style horn arrangement by Jesse Ed Davis that sounds more like the real thing than the real thing. “Ain’t That a Lot of Love,” by contrast, is driven by a hard electric guitar sound and a relentless bass part that sounds like a more urgent version of the bassline from the Spencer Davis Group’s “Gimme Some Lovin’.” The fall 2000 CD reissue includes a trio of bonus tracks: a faster-paced rendition of “The Cuckoo” with a more prominent lead guitar, the slow electric lament “New Stranger Blues” featuring some good mandolin-style playing on the guitar, and the rocking instrumental “Things Are Gonna Work Out Fine,” which is a killer showcase for Davis’ lead electric guitar and Taj Mahal’s virtuosity on the harmonica. – Bruce Eder

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