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Betty
Davis [IMPORT] - by
Betty Davis |
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They
Say I'm Different [IMPORT] - by
Betty Davis |
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Nasty
Gal [IMPORT] - by
Betty Davis |
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Love
Supreme - (Deluxe Edition) - [ORIGINAL RECORDING REMASTERED] - by
John Coltrane
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When
The Sun Goes Down: The Secret History of Rock & Roll - [Box Set]
[Limited Edition] |
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.The
Complete Brownie McGhee - by Brownie McGhee
The
complete Brownie McGhee is not exactly complete, but it does contain
all of Brownie's work for Okeh/Columbia in 1940 - 41, just before
his partnership with Sonny Terry.
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Calling
the Doctor - by
Dr. John
Dr.
John has been stirring up a tasty gumbo of blues, rock and R&B,
all with that strong New Orleans flavor for decades. Amazon.com's
selection of the Dr.'s best.
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The
Man with the Mojo Hand by
Lightnin' Hopkins
Texas
bluesman par excellence, Lightnin' Hopkins had a career that saw
the beginning of the blues general rise in popularity and lasted
until it's revival in the early 1980's. Though Hopkins style never
changed appreciably, it always found a new audience that welcomed
the lone star bluesman's rich voice and haunting mornful sound.
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Indigenous
live at Pachyderm studio 1998 by
Indigenous
From
the Yankton Reservation in South Dakota all the way to a major tour
with B.B. King, Indigenous made a big splash in 1999.Through their
rise has been meteoric, years of practice, recording and road work
are behind it
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Back
to the Blues by
Sue Foley
Sue
Foley !!!!!!!!!! YES
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Before
the Blues: The Early American Black Music Scene, Vol.1
Before
the Blues (series), by Bobby Leecan
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Smile
on My Face by
Sunnyland Slim
Sunnyland
Slim was ten feet tall. He strode into bluesdom like some mystic
man out of folklore, having played piano in the lumber camps, mining
towns & road houses.
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Blues
had a Baby by
Lurrie Bell
Lurrie
Bell is a central fogure among the ranks of a younger generation
of black performers who are keeping the blues tradition alive and
legitimizing it's palce in their culture.
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Paying
for My Sins by
Grady Champion
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Life,
Love & the Blues by
Etta James
On
life, love and the blues Etta James returns to her blues & soul
repertoire, enlivening even the hoariest of tunes ("Spoonful",
a gender flipped "Hootchie Cootchie Gal") with her growl.
The tinges of funk underpinning "Born under a Bad Sign"
are given full room to stretch on a Sly Stone cover.
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Sing
it by
Marcia Ball
Why
settle for one great female vocalist when you can get three, especially
when they are stylish soul diva Irma Thomas, Tracy "Mother
Earth" Nelson and swamp rocker & roller Marcia Ball. The
talented trio take the sing it title seriously, belting the hues
of blues with satisfying sass.
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Destination
GB Blues: 15 Brilliant British Blues Tracks
Various
Artists - Blues - Modern/Electric
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