Nina Simone - High Priestess of Soul (1966)

01 - Don't You Pay Them No Mind
02 - I'm Gonna Leave You
03 - Brown Eyed Handsome Man
04 - Keeper of the Flame
05 - The Gal from Joe's
06 - Take Me to the Water
07 - I'm Going Back Home
08 - I Hold No Grudge
09 - Come Ye
10 - He Ain't Comin' Home No More
11 - Work Song
12 - I Love My Baby

- Vocal
- Jazz
- Vocal Jazz

Perhaps a bit more conscious of contemporary soul trends than her previous Philips albums, this is still very characteristic of her mid-'60s work in its eclectic mix of jazz, pop, soul, and some blues and gospel. Hal Mooney directs some large band arrangements for the material on this LP without submerging Simone's essential strengths. The more serious and introspective material is more memorable than the good-natured pop selections here. The highlights are her energetic vocal rendition of the Oscar Brown/Nat Adderley composition "Work Song" and her spiritual composition "Come Ye," on which Simone's inspirational vocals are backed by nothing other than minimal percussion.

The Jam - All the Choice Cuts (1983)

01 - In the City 02 - All Around the World 03 - The Modern World 04 - News of the World
05 - David Watts
06 - 'A' Bomb in Wardour Street
07 - Down in the Tube Station at Midnight
08 - Strange Town
09 - When You're Young
10 - Smithers Jones
11 - The Eton Rifles
12 - Going Underground
13 - The Dreams of Children
14 - That's Entertainment [The Demo Version]
15 - Start!
16 - Funeral Pyre [The Remix]
17 - Absolute Beginners
18 - A Town Called Malice
19 - Precious
20 - The Bitterest Pill (I Ever Had to Swallow)
21 - Beat Surrender

- Pop/Rock
- New Wave
- Punk

Jimmy Rogers - Chicago Bound (1976)

1. You're The One
2. Money, Marbles And Chalk
3. Luedella
4. Act Like You Love Me
5. Back Door Friend
6. Last Time
7. I Used To Have A Woman
8. Sloopy Drunk
9. Blues Leave Me Alone
10. Out On The Road
11. Goin' Away Baby
12. That's All Right
13. Chicago Bound
14. Walking By Myself

- Blues
- Modern Electric Chicago Blues
- Chicago Blues
- Electric Chicago Blues
Review:
Starkly printed in black and white with washed-out, grainy photographs, this is one heavy slab of blues by a player who is not as well-known as he should be. Guitarist Jimmy Rogers was usually overshadowed by the leaders he worked for, Muddy Waters particularly. He was also sometimes confused with the hillbilly singer Jimmie Rodgers, and although they might have sounded good together, they don't have anything in common. This reissue collection grabs 14 tracks done at various times in the mostly early '50s which involve practically a who's who of performers associated with the most intense and driving Chicago blues. This includes the aforementioned Waters, leaving behind his role as leader for a few numbers to add some stinging guitar parts. There is also a pair of harmonica players, each of whom could melt vinyl siding with their playing. These are the Walters, big and little, as in Big Walter Horton and Little Walter. Pianist Otis Spann, bassist Willie Dixon, and drummer Fred Belew are also on hand, meaning the rhythm section action is first class. Blues listeners who have only skimmed the surface of the music may not have really discovered Rogers, as his reputation increased in the years after his death and he had nowhere near the following and status of Waters or even Little Walter. Some of the tracks here are numbers the musicians got together and played with Rogers at the end of what was probably an already grueling session by Waters. "Sloppy Drunk" is a killer track that joins the long list of great blues numbers concerning the inebriated, while "Walking by Myself" is a fine example of the kind of shuffling rhythm these players are so good at. The CD era was an opportunity to put together larger selections of Rogers' material, complete with outtakes and selections that are much rarer than the material here. If a listener's reaction to this album is as positive as it ought to be, they can be assured the pickings will be equally tasty if they decide to go for more extensive documentation of this artist.