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    George Harmonica Smith - Blowing the Blues - 1960

    Posted By: mfrwiz
    George Harmonica Smith - Blowing the Blues - 1960

    George Harmonica Smith - Blowing the Blues - 1960
    Lossless (Flac Image File + Cue + Log + Audiochecker Log): 397 Mb | EAC Secure Mode Rip | Mp3 (CBR 320 kbps): 196 Mb | HQ Scans
    Audio CD - Number of Discs: 1 - Original Release Date: 1960 - Label: OFFICIAL - Catalog Number: 15504
    Blues

    Product Description: These were culled from sessions from 1956 to 1966 and 1978, and originally recorded for local labels JM, Sotoplay, Carolyn and Hittin' Heavy. Although this material taps the depths of Smith's mastery, little care was done to digitally clean up these cuts. Just as shameful are that some of the personnel is unknown, as they serve up some tasty morsels. Al Bedorsian (later associated with Robert Lucas' Luke and the Locomotives) and William Clarke join on the 1978 session. Smith's gab for songwriting needs more notice, as "Rope This Twist," influenced by Chubby Checker's "Do the Twist," is more like a one-up on that popular favorite, going with complex instrumental layering, yet keeping a danceable feel.
    George Harmonica Smith - Blowing the Blues - 1960

    Biography: George Smith was born on April 22, 1924 in Helena, AR, but was raised in Cairo, IL. At age four, Smith was already taking harp lessons from his mother, a guitar player and a somewhat stern taskmaster — it was a case of get-it-right-or-else. In his early teens, he started hoboing around the towns in the South and later joined Early Woods, a country band with Early Woods on fiddle and Curtis Gould on spoons. He also worked with a gospel group in Mississippi called the Jackson Jubilee Singers.
    Smith moved to Rock Island, IL, in 1941 and played with a group that included Francis Clay on drums. There is evidence that he was one of the first to amplify his harp. While working at the Dixie Theater, he took an old 16mm cinema projector, extracted the amplifier/speaker, and began using this on the streets.
    His influences include Larry Adler and later Little Walter. Smith would sometimes bill himself as Little Walter Jr. or Big Walter. He played in a number of bands including one with a young guitarist named Otis Rush and later went on the road with the Muddy Waters Band, after replacing Henry Strong.
    In 1954, he was offered a permanent job at the Orchid Room in Kansas City where, early in 1955, Joe Bihari of Modern Records (on a scouting trip), heard Smith, and signed him to Modern. These recording sessions were released under the name Little George Smith, and included "Telephone Blues" and "Blues in the Dark." The records were a success.
    Smith traveled with Little Willie John and Champion Jack Dupree on one of the Universal Attractions tours. While on the tour, he recorded with Champion Jack Dupree in November of 1955 in Cincinnati, producing "Sharp Harp" and "Overhead Blues." The tour ended in Los Angeles and Smith settled down — spending the rest of his life in that city.
    In the late '50s he recorded for J&M, Lapel, Melker, and Caddy under the names Harmonica King or Little Walter Junior. He also worked with Big Mama Thornton on many shows.
    In 1960, Smith met producer Nat McCoy who owned the Sotoplay and Carolyn labels, with whom he recorded ten singles under the name of George Allen. In 1966, while Muddy Waters was on West Coast, he asked Smith to join him and they worked together for a while, recording for Spivey Records.
    Smith's first album on World Pacific A Tribute to Little Walter was released in 1968. In 1969 Bob Thiele produced an excellent solo album of Smith on Bluesway, and later made use of Smith as a sideman for his Blues Times label, including sets with T-Bone Walker, and Harmonica Slim. Smith met Rod Piazza, a young White harp player and they formed the Southside Blues Band, later known as Bacon Fat.
    In 1969, Smith signed with U.K. producer Mike Vernon and did the No Time for Jive album. Smith was less active in the 1970s appearing with Eddie Taylor and Big Mama Thornton. Around 1977, Smith became friends with William Clarke and they began working together. Their working relationship and friendship continued until Smith died on October 2, 1983.
    William Clarke, Smith's protégé, writes "He had a technique on the chromatic harp where he would play two notes at once, but one octave apart. He would get an organ-type sound by doing this. George really knew how to make his notes count by not playing too much and taking his time by letting the music unfold easily. He could also swing like crazy and was a first-class entertainer. I have heard from a friend that they had seen George Smith in the 1950s playing a club in Chicago, tap dancing around everybody's drinks on top of the bar while playing his harp."
    "I have been with him in church and seen him play amplified harmonica by himself. This was very soulful. I have never heard George play a song the same way twice. He was very creative and played directly from his heart. He admired all great musicians but had his own sound and style. He was a true original. Mr. Smith would always give 100% on stage whether or not there were 1 or 1,000 people listening. This was his performing style, always."
    "George Smith greatly admired harmonica player Larry Adler, and although Adler used the octave technique on the harp also, George really was the one that developed this to its full potential. Before Mr. Smith, nobody in blues had used this octave technique." "An extremely kind and gentle man, George always went all out to help other harmonica players. Everybody liked George Smith. He played a huge role in advancing blues harmonica and should never be forgotten. You can hear the influence of George Smith in most everyone playing blues harmonica today, whether directly or indirectly. He also was a great blues singer. He had a huge baritone voice that conveyed great emotion and soulfulness."
    Recommended Smith recordings include Blowin' the Blues (1960) on Pea Vine, Tribute to Little Walter (1968) on Liberty, No Time for Jive (1970) on Blue Horizon, Of the Blues(1973) re-issued on Crosscut Records, and Little George Smith (1991) on Ace Records. ~ Michael Erlewine - All Music
    George Harmonica Smith - Blowing the Blues - 1960
    Track Listing
    01 - Blowing The Blues - 2:17
    02 - West Helena Blues - 3:11
    03 - I Don't Know - 2:59
    04 - Miss O'Malley's Rally - 2:14
    05 - All Last Night - 2:29
    06 - I Want A Woman - 2:35
    07 - Until You Come Home - 2:48
    08 - Hot Rolls - 2:12
    09 - I Must Be Crazy - 2:03
    10 - Yes Baby - 2:16
    11 - Loose Skrews - 2:31
    12 - Rope That Twist - 1:56
    13 - Sometimes You Win, Sometimes You Lose - 3:03
    14 - Good Things - 2:52
    15 - You Can't Undo What's Been Done - 2:24
    16 - Nobody Knows - 2:49
    17 - Trap Meat - 2:07
    18 - Tight Dress - 2:37
    19 - Times Won't Be Hard Always - 2:34
    20 - Come On Home - 2:23
    21 - The Avalon Boogaloo - 2:45
    22 - As Long As I Live - 2:49
    23 - Brown Mule - 2:41
    24 - Summertime - 3:30
    25 - Teenage Girl - 4:45
    26 - Teardrops Falling - 5:01

    Download (Updated)
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    Path: …\SLHTGNHTCNGR

    1 -=- George Harmonica Smith - Blowing The Blues.flac -=- CDDA (100%)

    167989300

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

    EAC extraction logfile from 27. October 2009, 8:51

    George "Harmonica" Smith / Blowing The Blues

    Used drive : Pioneer BDR-203BK Adapter: 7 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 : Yes
    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 : 192 kBit/s
    Quality : High
    Add ID3 tag : No
    Command line compressor : C:\Programmi\FLAC\flac.exe
    Additional command line options : -T "artist=%a" -T "title=%t" -T "album=%g" -T "date=%y" -T "tracknumber=%n" -T "genre=%m" -5 %s


    TOC of the extracted CD

    Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
    1 | 0:00.00 | 2:18.64 | 0 | 10413
    2 | 2:18.64 | 3:10.69 | 10414 | 24732
    3 | 5:29.58 | 2:58.61 | 24733 | 38143
    4 | 8:28.44 | 2:13.60 | 38144 | 48178
    5 | 10:42.29 | 2:28.39 | 48179 | 59317
    6 | 13:10.68 | 2:34.54 | 59318 | 70921
    7 | 15:45.47 | 2:47.52 | 70922 | 83498
    8 | 18:33.24 | 2:11.57 | 83499 | 93380
    9 | 20:45.06 | 2:02.63 | 93381 | 102593
    10 | 22:47.69 | 2:16.30 | 102594 | 112823
    11 | 25:04.24 | 2:30.57 | 112824 | 124130
    12 | 27:35.06 | 1:56.09 | 124131 | 132839
    13 | 29:31.15 | 3:02.67 | 132840 | 146556
    14 | 32:34.07 | 2:51.45 | 146557 | 159426
    15 | 35:25.52 | 2:24.27 | 159427 | 170253
    16 | 37:50.04 | 2:49.09 | 170254 | 182937
    17 | 40:39.13 | 2:07.03 | 182938 | 192465
    18 | 42:46.16 | 2:36.69 | 192466 | 204234
    19 | 45:23.10 | 2:34.31 | 204235 | 215815
    20 | 47:57.41 | 2:23.00 | 215816 | 226540
    21 | 50:20.41 | 2:44.52 | 226541 | 238892
    22 | 53:05.18 | 2:48.45 | 238893 | 251537
    23 | 55:53.63 | 2:41.09 | 251538 | 263621
    24 | 58:34.72 | 3:30.12 | 263622 | 279383
    25 | 62:05.09 | 4:45.00 | 279384 | 300758
    26 | 66:50.09 | 4:59.00 | 300759 | 323183


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    Filename F:\Downloads\uTorrent\Completati\George Harmonica Smith - Blowing the Blues (FLAC)\SLHTGNHTCNGR\George Harmonica Smith - Blowing The Blues.wav

    Peak level 99.9 %
    Range quality 100.0 %
    Copy CRC E8102086
    Copy OK

    No errors occurred

    End of status report