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Various Artists - The Chess Story 1947-1975 (1947-1950) (Disc 1) (1999)

Track listing:
  1. Chicago Boogie Five Blazers 2:54
  2. Hey Pretty Mama Jump Jackson & His Orchestra 3:04
  3. Ice Man's Blues Tom Archia 3:09
  4. Boogie Woogie Blues Clarence Samuels 2:41
  5. Bilbo Is Dead Andrew Tibbs 2:54
  6. Johnson Machine Gun Sunnyland Slim 2:51
  7. Gypsy Woman Muddy Waters 2:35
  8. I Feel Like Crying Andrew Tibbs 2:57
  9. She Ain't Nowhere Sunnyland Slim 2:46
  10. I Feel Like Going Home Muddy Waters 3:10
  11. I Can't Be Satisfied Muddy Waters 2:42
  12. Tonky Boogie Forrest Sykes 3:09
  13. Florida Hurricane St Louis Jimmy 2:55
  14. You're Gonna Miss Me Muddy Waters 2:39
  15. Locked Out Boogie Leroy Foster 2:29
  16. Streamline Woman Muddy Waters 3:19
  17. A Woman On Every Street Forest City Joe 2:51
  18. Crying The Blues Laura Rucker 2:42
  19. Baby I'm Sick Of You Duke Jenkins' Aristocrats 2:50
  20. Black Angel Blues (Sweet Black Angel) Robert Nighthawk 3:03
  21. You're Gonna Need My Help Muddy Waters 3:03
  22. Big Town Playboy Little Johnny Jones 2:55
  23. Screamin' And Cryin' Muddy Waters 3:08
  24. All I Need Is You The Bozier Boys 3:19
  25. Six Three O Robert Nighthawk 2:53
  26. Rollin' And Tumblin' (Part 1) Muddy Waters 2:58

Notes


First the good news, which is really good: the sound on this 340-song set is about as good as one ever fantasized it could be, and that means it runs circles around any prior reissues; from the earliest Aristocrat sides by the Five Blazers and Jump Jackson & His Orchestra right up through Muddy Waters' "Going Down to Main Street," it doesn't get any better than this set. The clarity pays a lot of bonuses, beginning with the impression that it gives of various artists' instrumental prowess. In sharp contrast to the past efforts in this direction by MCA, however, the producers of this set have not emasculated the sound in the course of cleaning it up, as was the case with the Chuck Berry box, in particular. When the rock & roll era dawns at Chess as depicted on disc five, the sound is nice and dirty, just really sharp. The contents of the set are largely "limited" -- if that's the word for any 340-song collection -- to Chess' blues, R&B, rock & roll, and soul output, although Ramsey Lewis gets a nod, as does comedian Pigmeat Markham. What's more, the care lavished on the songs is virtually universal -- there was time spent getting all of it right. One wishes that the same could be said for one of the featured bonuses on this set, the CD-ROM that comprises the 15th disc (disc 14 is a pair of interviews with Phil Chess and Marshall Chess). First, there are the skimpy film clips, misspellings ("Arether Franklin") and incorrect dates. There also would have been enough room to put a complete Chess discography on the CD-ROM, rather than just the MCA reissues of Chess' material. The CDs themselves conveniently assembled in three fold-out volumes in a slipcase, but identifying individual tracks and artists means constantly referring back to the booklets glued into those volumes; additionally, it would've been nice to have had a sessionography on the songs, or at least the release dates, or even release years. This set is available only as a British import as of the spring of 2000; it is unbeatable for sound, and should be considered on that -- but only on that -- basis.