Muddy Waters - Baby Please Don't Go - ChicagoFest 1981

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 13 вер 2024
  • gravityworld.tv...
    In August of 1981, when the undisputed king of Chicago blues headlined ChicagoFest -
    then the Windy City's top outdoor music festival - for two nights, his loyal subjects mobbed Navy
    Pier on the lakefront to hear one of the greatest innovators the idiom had ever produced.
    Muddy Waters led the charge in the late 1940s and early '50s to electrify Delta blues in an
    urban setting. His peerless combo would include such future stars as ace guitarist Jimmy Rogers,
    harmonica virtuoso Little Walter and piano wizard Otis Spann. But Muddy was always at the center
    of the action. His gruff, authoritative vocal delivery and slashing slide guitar define the purest form
    of postwar Chicago blues. Waters' charisma was as immense as his musical vision.
    Born April 4, 1915, in Issaquena County, Mississippi, McKinley Morganfield learned the
    blues while sharecropping on Stovall Plantation. One guitarist particularly influenced him. "I never
    seen a man could play at that time as good as Son House, to me. With that big voice he had, he could
    sing," said Muddy. "He was preachin' the blues then, and I thought he was the best in the world."
    In late August of 1941 musicologists Alan Lomax and John Work rolled into Coahoma
    County in search of rural gospel and blues talent. They made field recordings of Muddy, with Lomax
    returning the next year to cut more. But those were for the Library of Congress. It was only after
    Muddy migrated north in 1943 that he pursued a career as a professional bluesman.
    "As soon as I decided to leave, my mind said, 'Go to Chicago!'" he recounted. "So I
    came." Pianist Sunnyland Slim introduced Muddy to Leonard Chess, then with the fledgling
    Aristocrat label, in 1947. Waters cut a few small combo sides for the label before reverting to his
    Delta slide attack the following year on "I Can't Be Satisfied" and "I Feel Like Going Home," his
    first hit. "When I did them two sides, that's the sides they went nuts over," said Waters.
    "I had a band in less than a week," Muddy remembered. "Mojo Buford - he was with
    me before, the harp player - said, 'I'll get you some boys that'll cook just like that.' He called in
    about two or three days. He said, 'I'm gonna bring 'em over and let you listen to 'em.' Just that fast,
    I had a band!" Buford was joined by guitarists John Primer and Rick Kreher, pianist Lovie Lee,
    bassist Earnest Johnson and drummer Ray Allison. They all instinctively understood Muddy's
    groove.
    After "Mannish Boy" gets the festivities off to a rousing start, Muddy counts off romping
    shuffles for the ChicagoFest throng, rolling through Jimmy Reed's "You Don't Have To Go," Big
    Joe Williams' "Baby Please Don't Go," Slim Harpo's "I'm A King Bee" and his own 1955 gem
    "Trouble No More." For the luxuriantly downbeat "They Call Me Muddy Waters," he peels off a
    slide solo that makes the hair on the nape of your neck stand up in silent salute.
    In the midst of his rollicking "Walking Thru The Park," Muddy brings out fleet-fingered
    guitar wizard Johnny Winter, producer of his 1977 "comeback" album Hard Again. "We met back
    in the '60s in Austin, Texas," recalled Muddy. "He was one of the young white kids who was really
    deep into it." Johnny sings "Going Down Slow" before Waters blasts out a swaggering "She's
    Nineteen Years Old," boasting another jaw-dropping slide ride. Winter takes over again vocally for
    a grinding "You've Got To Love Her With A Feeling" that morphs into "Five Long Years" when
    local luminary Mighty Joe Young strolls up to the mic, Big Twist following that with a few special
    lyrics for the occasion. Muddy brings it all to a close with a rousing "Got My Mojo Working."
    "To stay with this music, you got to live with it. Sometimes you might be a little hungry,
    but you got to stay with it. I've been where I couldn't get the right food a lot of times. My icebox
    wasn't full, you know?" said Muddy, who passed away not long after this show on April 30, 1983.
    "I'm glad it was like that. So when I got to the point that I could get what I want, I think I enjoyed it
    better."
    It's hard to tell who enjoyed those two evenings at ChicagoFest more - the crowd, his
    pals onstage or Muddy himself.
    - Bill Dahl
    Research Materials
    Can't Be Satisfied: The Life And Times Of Muddy Waters, by Robert Gordon
    (Boston & New York: Little, Brown and Co., 2002)
    Spinning Blues Into Gold: The Chess Brothers And The Legendary Chess Records, by Nadine Cohodas
    (New York: St. Martin's Press, 2000)
    The Complete Muddy Waters Discography, by Phil Wight and Fred Rothwell
    (Cheshire, England: Blues and Rhythm Pub.)
    Joel Whitburn's Top R&B Singles 1942--1988, by Joel Whitburn
    (Menomonee Falls, WI: Record Research Inc., 1988)
    The Official Muddy Waters Web site: www.muddywaters....

КОМЕНТАРІ • 38

  • @andreaspeix9498
    @andreaspeix9498 Рік тому +1

    Muddy Waters, Best blues singer and blues guitar Player !

  • @jwholland73
    @jwholland73 8 років тому +5

    He is over 65 years old in this performance and the epitome of cool. Where is today's Muddy Waters????

  • @Lion-cf3jk
    @Lion-cf3jk Рік тому +2

    Sublime performance great MUDDY WATERS

  • @jigbrain
    @jigbrain 13 років тому +4

    Muddy Waters The Boss of Blues !!

  • @kabllbak
    @kabllbak 11 років тому +3

    No wonder I fell in love with the Blues...all those years ago. And to think, yup: It all started with Muddy Waters.

  • @BackToTheBlues
    @BackToTheBlues 13 років тому +5

    One of my favourite Muddy numbers, thanks for this!

  • @luiscasal1532
    @luiscasal1532 5 років тому +2

    Simplemente maravilloso, música eterna.

  • @VICTORIA777NESS
    @VICTORIA777NESS 13 років тому +1

    ahhhh summertime, the blues, good food and the stars what else?

  • @Bluestomiv
    @Bluestomiv 12 років тому +1

    i had the pleasure of seeing them both last summer on the same stage together.

  • @alijav091
    @alijav091 13 років тому

    that someone who doesnt like this is actually just one, who the hell cares, God bless muddy . RIP

  • @xcuerdenx
    @xcuerdenx 13 років тому +2

    my fav muddy song!

  • @lovelight4388
    @lovelight4388 6 років тому +1

    American Classic !!!

  • @susan51516
    @susan51516 7 років тому

    this one's worth your time, around when i was born too.

  • @milczarekstaszek
    @milczarekstaszek 12 років тому +1

    Słuchałem Muddy Watersa w Warszawskiej Sali Kongresowej ... prawdziwy powiew bluesa

  • @snl7473
    @snl7473 6 років тому +1

    Holy shittt 😘😘😘😘

  • @llew777
    @llew777 12 років тому

    Gotta agree Strongly,
    Rob From Canada

  • @MrCHICAGO2011
    @MrCHICAGO2011 4 роки тому

    Buford was joined by guitarists John Primer and Rick Kreher, pianist Lovie Lee,
    bassist Earnest Johnson and drummer Ray Allison.

  • @bamboosa
    @bamboosa 13 років тому

    Yes, yes, yes.

  • @theskidrow55
    @theskidrow55 14 років тому

    just awesome, thanks for adding=)

  • @yaelpalombo4093
    @yaelpalombo4093 Рік тому

    ♥️💐♥️

  • @ljb2492
    @ljb2492 13 років тому +3

    @michelvn: We hear the great George "Mojo" Buford on harp here.

  • @johnnyguitar335
    @johnnyguitar335 11 років тому +2

    Muddy Waters---the Hootchie Kootchie Man his sef. An inspiration to so many "in the day" and through today. Soulful, masterful...a powerhouse of blues. Heals my soul and gives me hope. This is a dynamite clip others to check out would be Muddy at "The Last Waltz" wherein Muddy knocks the lights out with his powerful blues as well. If yaz digs these blues check our site out on youtube too---johnnyguitar335

  • @mr64lemans
    @mr64lemans 11 років тому

    song written by big joe williams 78 years ago; its a classic

  • @aizawabass
    @aizawabass 12 років тому

    LIKE!!

  • @Exakta66
    @Exakta66 8 років тому

    More than appropriately the headliner of ChicagoFest in 1981...he would die only two years later...

  • @rmurbach1961
    @rmurbach1961 13 років тому +1

    @blou4now No, that is not Pinetop Perkins. I believe it's Lovey Smith. Pinetop had alreadty left the Muddy Waters Band when this festival took place.

  • @sayerma
    @sayerma 10 років тому +2

    Awesome old microphone Mojo Buford is using...old Electrovoice??

  • @trajanoserravallijr39
    @trajanoserravallijr39 6 місяців тому

    acdc the them gravaram

  • @Odin029
    @Odin029 12 років тому

    Yeah that's Mojo Buford on harp. Look up James Cotton.. they don't look a thing alike.

  • @Freekb2
    @Freekb2 13 років тому

    =D

  • @blou4now
    @blou4now 13 років тому

    Is that pinetop perkins?on keys?

  • @michelvn
    @michelvn 13 років тому

    who is on the Harp here ?
    thanks :)

    • @tomdemille
      @tomdemille 7 років тому

      james cotton.. check 'live from chicago mr. super harp himself' album by Cotton... one of best blues harp albums ever recorded

  • @johnnyguitar335
    @johnnyguitar335 11 років тому

    yeah Muddy Waters. The real thing. The Man! If ya dig these blues check us out on youtube too--johnnyguitar335