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Roosevelt "Booba" Barnes - The Heartbroken Man

Track listing:
  1. How Long This Must Go On 4:05
  2. Don't Cry No More 2:31
  3. Ain't Going To Worry About Tomorrow 4:28
  4. Tell Me What I've Done/My Last Affair 4:10
  5. Heartbroken Man 7:21
  6. Blind Man/I Pity The Fool 8:10
  7. Rocking Daddy 3:30
  8. Tin Pan Alley 5:41
  9. Baby, Scratch My Back 3:50
  10. Louise Louise Blues 5:17
  11. No Place To Go 5:34

Notes


Review by Thom Owens
Roosevelt "Booba" Barnes didn't record his first album, Heartbroken Man, until 1990. By that point, he had become a seasoned blueman, and was well-known in the South as a tough, hard-rocking guitarist. Heartbroken Man delivers on the promise of his reputation. It's an astonishing record, filled with gutsy vocals and gnarled, unpredictable guitar. Unlike most modern blues, it's teeming with life, and its raw, unvarnished production is a welcome, bracing contrast to the sterile atmosphere of most modern blues records. But what really counts is the music itself, and Barnes proves to be the heir to such classic bluesmen as Howlin' Wolf and Slim Harpo (both of whom he covers here), as both a performer and songwriter. An instant modern classic.

Biography by Jim O'Neal & Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Booba Barnes and his Playboys band rocked the hardest of all the juke-joint combos in the Mississippi delta during the '80s, and after the release of his debut album (The Heartbroken Man, 1990), "Booba" took his act and his band north to Chicago, following the trail of his idols Howlin' Wolf and Little Milton. In a Guitar Player review, Jas Obrecht called Barnes "a wonderfully idiosyncratic guitar player and an extraordinary vocalist by any standard."

Roosevelt Booba Barnes began playin music professionally in 1960, playing guitar in a Mississippi band named the Swinging Gold Coasters. Four years later, he moved to Chicago, where he performed in blues clubs whenever he could get work. Barnes returned to his home state of Mississippi in 1971, where he began playing bars and clubs around Greenville.

Barnes continued to play the juke joints of Mississippi for the next decade. In 1985, he opened his own joint, the Playboy Club. With Barnes and his backing band, the Playboys, acting as the house band, the bar became one of the most popular in the Delta. Soon, the band was popular enough to have a record contract with Rooster Blues. Their first album, The Heartbroken Man, was released in 1990. After its release, Barnes and the Playboys toured the United States and Europe. They continued to tour, as well as occasionally record, until Barnes died of cancer in April 1996.