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Chuck Berry - The Chess Box: Disc 2 1958 - 1964 (1964)

Track listing:
  1. Memphis 2:13
  2. Anthony Boy 1:54
  3. Jo Jo Gunne 2:46
  4. Sweet Little Rock 'n' Roller 2:22
  5. Merry Christmas Baby 3:13
  6. Run Rudolph Run 2:44
  7. Little Queenie 2:42
  8. Almost Grown 2:21
  9. Back In The U.S.A. 2:29
  10. Betty Jean 2:31
  11. Childhood Sweetheart 2:44
  12. Let It Rock 1:47
  13. To Pooped To Pop 2:35
  14. Bye Bye Johnny 2:06
  15. Jaguar And Thunderbird 1:51
  16. Down The Road Apiece 2:15
  17. Confessin' The Blues 2:09
  18. Thirteen Question Method 2:14
  19. Crying Steel 2:33
  20. I'm Just A Lucky So And So 2:51
  21. I'm Talking About You 1:50
  22. Come On 1:49
  23. Nadine (Is It You?) 2:36
  24. Crazy Arms 2:13
  25. You Never Can Tell 2:43
  26. The Things You Used To Do 2:42
  27. Promised Land 2:24

Notes


Over the course of three compact discs, The Chess Box contains most of the highlights from Chuck Berry's career, including all of the hit singles. In addition to the familiar items, which are all included here, there are numerous tracks that are lesser-known but equally as good. That's particularly true on the stellar first two discs, where album tracks, B-sides, and forgotten singles like "Downbound Train," "Drifting Heart," "Havana Moon," "Betty Jean," "Bye Bye Johnny," "Down the Road a Piece," and "The Thirteen Question Method" get equal space with "Maybellene," "Thirty Days," "No Money Down," "Roll Over Beethoven," "Too Much Monkey Business," "Brown Eyed Handsome Man," "School Day," "Rock & Roll Music," "Sweet Little Sixteen," "Johnny B. Goode," and "Carol." Some serious fans, however, also found disc one, and especially the earlier songs on that disc, to be very controversial; part of the intrinsic nature of Berry's music was the sheer noisiness of the songs — tracks like "Maybellene," "Thirty Days," "You Can't Catch Me," and "Brown Eyed Handsome Man" insinuated themselves into listeners' consciousness over the radio and on the jukebox with their sheer raucous, in-your-face sound (frequently near overload). But at the time The Chess Box was done, the philosophy about CD mastering was to clean up the noise in original recordings whenever it was too pronounced, lest the "hot" digital sound make the track too harsh. (Note: this "problem" especially afflicted "Layla" by Derek & the Dominos, so much so that the producers of the Clapton box remixed the song). Thus, the first 15 or so tracks on the first disc of The Chess Box may sound too "clean," lacking some of the raw edge from their vinyl editions. On the plus side, the detail revealed — every note, and even the action on the guitar on the opening of "Roll Over Beethoven" — is always interesting, and occasionally fascinating, and it is difficult to complain too loudly about hearing Johnnie Johnson's or Lafayette Leake's piano, or Willie Dixon's upright bass in such sharp relief. Additionally, for many years this set had the only undistorted CD version of "Come On" — a relatively minor Berry song, but one that provided the Rolling Stones with their debut release — that you could find, but potential purchasers should also be aware of the compromise in the sound. That caveat aside, the programming manages to get in most of the best album cuts, including tracks like Berry's hot cover of "House of Blue Lights" and the "Memphis Tennessee" "sequel" "Little Marie," though not quite enough material from 1964-1965. And toward the end of the set, the quality of the material begins to sag a bit, but there are still forgotten gems like "Tulane" that prove Berry's songwriting hadn't completely dried up. The now out of print Great Twenty-Eight collection remains the definitive single CD hits collection, and the audio quality on MCA's two-CD Anthology, released a dozen years later, is superior, but The Chess Box offers a flawed but near essential overview of his work for any serious fan, either of Chuck Berry or rock & roll.