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    Johnny Copeland - Texas Twister (1986)

    Posted By: countryfreak
    Johnny Copeland - Texas Twister (1986)

    Johnny Copeland - Texas Twister (1986)
    EAC Rip | FLAC (Image) + CUE + LOG | 414 MB | + Covers
    Genre: Blues/R&B/Regional Blues | Label: Rounder | Catalog Number: 11504 | Release Date: 1983
    RAR 5% Rec. | RS.com + FS.com

    Johnny Copeland's tenure on Rounder Records was mostly productive. He made several albums that ranged from decent to very good, increased his audience and name recognition, and got better recording facilities and company support than at most times in his career. The 15 numbers on this anthology cover four Rounder sessions, and include competent renditions of familiar numbers. But what makes things special are the final three selections; these were part of Copeland's superb and unjustly underrated Bringin' It All Back Home album, recorded in Africa, which matched Texas shuffle licks with swaying, riveting African rhythms.

    ––––––
    Tracklist
    ––––––
    1. Everybody Wants A Piece Of Me 2:58
    2. Copeland Special 3:10
    3. It's My Own Tears 4:53
    4. Claim Jumper 3:35
    5. Natural Born Believer 3:27
    6. Cold Outside 4:00
    7. Honky Tonkin' 5:08
    8. Love Utopia 3:53
    9. Don't Stop By The Creek, Son 4:05
    10. Houston 3:35
    11. I De Go Now 6:54
    12. Excuses 3:30
    13. Ngote 8:46
    14. Kasavubu 5:33
    15. Abidjan 3:38

    Johnny Copeland - Texas Twister (1986)

    Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5 from 4. May 2009

    EAC extraction logfile from 4. January 2011, 12:54

    Johnny Copeland / Texas Twister

    Used drive : ASUS DRW-24B1LT Adapter: 3 ID: 0

    Read mode : Secure
    Utilize accurate stream : Yes
    Defeat audio cache : Yes
    Make use of C2 pointers : No

    Read offset correction : 6
    Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
    Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
    Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
    Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
    Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

    Used output format : User Defined Encoder
    Selected bitrate : 1024 kBit/s
    Quality : High
    Add ID3 tag : No
    Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\Exact Audio Copy\FLAC\FLAC.EXE
    Additional command line options : -6 -V -T "ARTIST=%a" -T "TITLE=%t" -T "ALBUM=%g" -T "DATE=%y" -T "TRACKNUMBER=%n" -T "GENRE=%m" -T "COMMENT=%e" %s -o %d


    TOC of the extracted CD

    Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
    1 | 0:00.00 | 3:01.00 | 0 | 13574
    2 | 3:01.00 | 3:13.00 | 13575 | 28049
    3 | 6:14.00 | 4:55.00 | 28050 | 50174
    4 | 11:09.00 | 3:38.00 | 50175 | 66524
    5 | 14:47.00 | 3:30.00 | 66525 | 82274
    6 | 18:17.00 | 4:03.00 | 82275 | 100499
    7 | 22:20.00 | 5:11.00 | 100500 | 123824
    8 | 27:31.00 | 3:55.00 | 123825 | 141449
    9 | 31:26.00 | 4:08.00 | 141450 | 160049
    10 | 35:34.00 | 3:37.00 | 160050 | 176324
    11 | 39:11.00 | 6:57.00 | 176325 | 207599
    12 | 46:08.00 | 3:33.00 | 207600 | 223574
    13 | 49:41.00 | 8:48.00 | 223575 | 263174
    14 | 58:29.00 | 5:35.00 | 263175 | 288299
    15 | 64:04.00 | 3:37.00 | 288300 | 304574


    Range status and errors

    Selected range

    Filename D:\MUSIK\Johnny Copeland - Texas Twister [FLAC] (1986)\Johnny Copeland - Texas Twister.wav

    Peak level 100.0 %
    Range quality 100.0 %
    Copy CRC EA31F7F3
    Copy OK

    No errors occurred


    AccurateRip summary

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    Track 15 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 1) [6E06E27E], AccurateRip returned [48D51F08]

    No tracks could be verified as accurate
    You may have a different pressing from the one(s) in the database

    End of status report


    Johnny Copeland - Texas Twister (1986)

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    BIOGRAPHY:by Richard Skelly
    Considering the amount of time he spent steadily rolling from gig to gig, Johnny "Clyde" Copeland's rise to prominence in the blues world in the early '90s wasn't all that surprising. A contract with the PolyGram/Verve label put his '90s recordings into the hands of thousands of blues lovers around the world. It's not that Copeland's talent changed all that much since he recorded for Rounder Records in the '80s; it's just that major companies began to see the potential of great, hardworking blues musicians like Copeland. Unfortunately, Copeland was forced to slow down in 1995-1996 by heart-related complications, yet he continued to perform shows until his death in July of 1997.
    Johnny Copeland was born March 27, 1937, in Haynesville, LA, about 15 miles south of Magnolia, AR (formerly Texarkana, a hotbed of blues activity in the '20s and '30s). The son of sharecroppers, his father died when he was very young, but Copeland was given his father's guitar. His first gig was with his friend Joe "Guitar" Hughes. Soon after, Hughes "took sick" for a week and the young Copeland discovered he could be a frontman and deliver vocals as well as anyone else around Houston at that time.
    His music, by his own reasoning, fell somewhere between the funky R&B of New Orleans and the swing and jump blues of Kansas City. After his family (sans his father) moved to Houston, Copeland was exposed, as a teen, to musicians from both cities. While he was becoming interested in music, he also pursued boxing, mostly as an avocation, and it is from his days as a boxer that he got his nickname "Clyde."
    Copeland and Hughes fell under the spell of T-Bone Walker, whom Copeland first saw perform when he was 13 years old. As a teenager he played at locales such as Shady's Playhouse – Houston's leading blues club, host to most of the city's best bluesmen during the '50s – and the Eldorado Ballroom. Copeland and Hughes subsequently formed the Dukes of Rhythm, which became the house band at the Shady's Playhouse. After that, he spent time playing on tour with Albert Collins (himself a fellow T-Bone Walker devotee) during the '50s, and also played on-stage with Sonny Boy Williamson II, Big Mama Thornton, and Freddie King. He began recording in 1958 with "Rock 'n' Roll Lily" for Mercury, and moved between various labels during the '60s, including All Boy and Golden Eagle in Houston, where he had regional successes with "Please Let Me Know" and "Down on Bending Knees," and later for Wand and Atlantic in New York. In 1965, he displayed a surprising prescience in terms of the pop market by cutting a version of Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind" for Wand.
    Johnny Copeland - Texas Twister (1986)

    After touring around the "Texas triangle" of Louisiana, Texas, and Arkansas, he relocated to New York City in 1974, at the height of the disco boom. It seems moving to New York City was the best career move Copeland ever made, for he had easy access to clubs in Washington, D.C., New York, Philadelphia, New Jersey, and Boston, all of which still had a place for blues musicians like him. Meanwhile, back in Houston, the club scene was hurting, owing partly to the oil-related recession of the mid-'70s. Copeland took a day job at a Brew 'n' Burger restaurant in New York and played his blues at night, finding receptive audiences at clubs in Harlem and Greenwich Village.
    Copeland recorded seven albums for Rounder Records, beginning in 1981 and including Copeland Special, Make My Home Where I Hang My Hat, Texas Twister, Bringing It All Back Home, When the Rain Starts a Fallin', Ain't Nothing But a Party (live, nominated for a Grammy), and Boom Boom; he also won a Grammy award in 1986 for his efforts on an Alligator album, Showdown! with Robert Cray and the late Albert Collins. Although Copeland had a booming, shouting voice and was a powerful guitarist and live performer, what most people don't realize is just how clever a songwriter he was. His latter-day releases for the PolyGram/Verve/Gitanes label, including Flyin' High (1992) and Catch Up with the Blues, provide ample evidence of this on "Life's Rainbow (Nature Song)" (from the latter album) and "Circumstances" (from the former album).
    Because Copeland was only six months old when his parents split up and he only saw his father a few times before he passed away, Copeland never realized he had inherited a congenital heart defect from his father. He discovered this in the midst of another typically hectic tour in late 1994, when he had to go into the hospital in Colorado. After he was diagnosed with heart disease, he spent the next few years in and out of hospitals, undertaking a number of costly heart surgeries. Early in 1997, he was waiting for a heart transplant at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center in New York City. As he was waiting, he was put on the L-VAD, a recent innovation for patients suffering from congenital heart defects. In 1995, Copeland appeared on CNN and ABC-TV's Good Morning America, wearing his L-VAD, offering the invention valuable publicity.
    Despite his health problems, Copeland continued to perform and his always spirited concerts did not diminish all that much. After living 20 months on the L-VAD – the longest anyone had lived on the device – he received a heart transplant on January 1, 1997 and for a few months, the heart worked fine and he continued to tour. However, the heart developed a defective valve, necessitating heart surgery in the summer. Copeland died of complications during heart surgery on July 3, 1997.