Super Audio CD - SACD Hybrid
Hoodoo Man Blues is a Desert Island classic. The Memphis-born Wells may have been influenced by two of the great harpists from the region, John Lee Sonny Boy Williamson and Rice "Sonny Boy Williamson" Miller, but on Hoodoo he's a fully mature player brimming with the style and mannerisms -- muscular snarling and swooping harp -- that defined his sound, joined by guitarist Buddy Guy. This 1965 recording was one of the first albums by a "major" blues musician on the new designer labels (Delmark), and it departed from all other contemporary styles. "Snatch It Back and Hold It," "Chitlin Con Carne," and the title track are funky, gritty, and 1960s urban, drawing as much on James Brown and organ combo grooves as on solacious Delta blues like "Good Morning Schoolgirl." This album is full of the ratchet rhythms which connect the thumb pops and vocal yowls of '20s delta blues to the slinky funk of Sly Stone and harmolodics of Blood Ulmer to the sample of "We're Ready" by hip-hoppers Arrested Development. Don Palmer, Barnes & Noble