Heritage of the Blues: The Complete Hightone Sessions Pinetop Perkins

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CD

  • Release Date: 07/22/2003
  • Sales Rank: 60,540
  • Label: HIGHTONE RECORDS
  • UPC: 012928815925
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Heritage of the Blues: The Complete Hightone Sessions

1LISTENDown in Mississippi 3:20
2LISTENSong for Sunnyland 4:59
3LISTENPinetop's Boogie Woogie 3:49
4LISTENKansas City 4:47
5LISTENLittle Girl, Little Girl 5:08
6LISTENJust a Little Bit 3:17
7LISTENHow Long 4:26
8LISTENMiss Ida B. 4:25
9LISTENI Almost Lost My Mind 3:58
10LISTENBig Fat Mama 3:37
11LISTENFive Long Years 4:07
12LISTENTake It Easy Baby 3:43
13LISTENEveryday I Have the Blues 3:54
14LISTENPinetop's Piano Shuffle 3:20
15LISTENKidney Stew 4:01

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Pinetop Perkins' Heritage of the Blues: The Complete Hightone Sessions is a welcome if strange reissue. In a sense, none of the tracks here have been issued before -- at least not in this form. These sessions took place over two years in the Octobers of 1996 and 1997 in Chicago. There are 15 tracks here, including Perkins classic originals such as "Down in Mississippi," "Take It Easy Baby," "Song for Sunnyland," "Big Fat Mama," "Little Girl, Little Girl," and others. Yes, "Pinetop's Boogie Woogie" is here, too. Unaccompanied, Perkins runs through these tunes in an intimate and utterly compelling manner, turning the middle eights into wondrously dexterous right-hand workouts, and his voice is still in fine shape here. What is so strange is that some of these tunes are recorded on an electric piano, making them sound tinny, reedy, and oddly more home-style than barrelhouse. Even so, Perkins' trademark slippery right hand is in fine supply here, as are his strange, open-ended, and extrapolated chords. It's a gentle workout, one that is as laid-back as it is articulate and soulful, but this is a different side of Perkins, one that balances out the profile of a giant and master. Despite the weird timbres, Heritage of the Blues is a fine and even essential Perkins recording to own. Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

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