Hubert Sumlin's Blues Party Hubert Sumlin

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CD - Remastered

  • Release Date: 09/13/2005
  • Original Release: 1987
  • Sales Rank: 90,765
  • Label: SHOUT FACTORY
  • UPC: 826663115628
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Hubert Sumlin's Blues Party

1LISTENHidden Charms 1:58
2LISTENWest Side Soul 2:30
3LISTENA Soul That's Been Abused 7:19
4LISTENLetter to My Girlfriend 2:21
5LISTENHow Can You Leave Me, Little Girl? 4:49
6LISTENCan't Call You No More 2:47
7LISTENBlue Guitar 5:20
8LISTENDown in the Bottom 2:49
9LISTENPoor Me Pour Me 2:41
10LISTENLiving the Blues 4:42

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Hubert Sumlin was Howlin' Wolf's guitar player for 23 years, and his jagged, desperate, and angular guitar playing was a big part of Wolf's rough-and-tumble sound. This album was recorded in October 1986 at Newbury Sound in Boston, 11 years after Wolf's death, and although Sumlin had headlined some European albums, it was to be his debut solo album in the U.S. The sessions were initiated and put together by guitarist Ronnie Earl, who arranged for the presence of an all-star band, and brought in Mighty Sam McClain to handle most of the vocals, since Sumlin was notoriously reticent about occupying center stage. The result was really more of a jam session than anything else, and Sumlin doesn't really assert himself on any of these tracks, although his hesitant, soft, and fragile vocal on "How Can You Leave Me, Little Girl?" gives the song a real poignancy that manages to overcome the banal lyrics. There was nothing shy about McClain's singing, however, and he grabs the vocal microphone on four of the songs, including the strong opening track, a version of Willie Dixon's "Hidden Charms." Originally released on LP in 1987 by Black Top Records, Hubert Sumlin's Blues Party has a loose, fairly generic sound, and a case could be made that Sumlin wasn't quite ready yet for a solo career. Still, the album has its charms. Steve Leggett, All Music Guide

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