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The American Folk Blues Festival 1962-1966, Vol. 2

The American Folk Blues Festival 1962-1966, Vol. 2

List Price: $19.98
Your Price: $17.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "second volume is as good if not better ~ Blues lives on"
Review: Are you ready to watch some classic footage of great blues, from the legends to the modern masters of acoustic to the electric featuring essential performances covering the last half-century of blues. Some of the greatest of the great blues performers doing what they do best...BLUES! When you watch this video the feelings come through loud and clear. The sound and performances are picture perfect, very collectible to all the blues fans out there.

"American Folk Blues Festivals 1962-1966 Vol. 2", featuring Willie Dixon, John Lee Hooker, Memphis Slim, Mississippi Fred McDowell, Big Mama Thorton, Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf some of the legends that put it on the line and then some. Each performer playing side by side and giving their all. Sit back and enjoy as each cue is dead on, with detailed liner-notes and a little history of their background and accomplishments. This DVD is proof that once and for all Blues is very much alive and well. If you enjoyed this volume, then volume one is another winner...gotta love it!

Total Time: 80 mins ~ Hip-O Records 602498604137 ~ (8/26/2003)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An essential blues DVD
Review: At least as strong as the excellent first volume in the "American Folk Blues" series, this second disc opens with Aleck "Rice" Miller (Sonny Boy Williamson II) doing a brief solo rendition of "Bye Bye Bird", followed by a tremendous band-backed "In My Younger Days" which features Howlin' Wolf's combo of Sunnyland Slim, Hubert Sumlin, Willie Dixon and drummer Clifton James.

Willie Dixon himself (purposely) stutters his way through the novelty(-ish) "Nervous", introduced by a very dignified Memphis Slim: "He is such a big man", says Slim, "he weighs four or five hundred pounds, something like that. Imagine a guy that big being nervous!"
Well, John Chatman's own cool borders on arrogance as he tosses off a terrific "Nobody Loves Me" ("Everyday I Have The Blues") with the greatest of ease.

Other highlights include...well, the rest of the disc, really. The black-and-white footage is excellent, and the sound is surprisingly good as well. It's a bit disappointing that the booklet merely duplicates the one from volume one in the series, but that's just about the only gripe I have.
Being able to see Sam "Lightnin'" Hopkins perform his classic "Mojo Hand" live with a small backing group is such a treat, as is grand old lady Victoria Spivey's spirited "Black Snake Blues", and T-Bone Walker's strikingly urbane "Don't Throw Your Love On Me So Strong".

Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee do a fine "Stranger Blues" (AKA "I'm A Stranger Here"), but the absolute cream of the crop has to be three performances by the mighty Howlin' Wolf, "Shake For Me", "Love Me Darling" and "I'll Be Back Someday". And the two "Bonus tracks" (there's really no good reason why they're presented as such) capture Magic Sam Maghett shortly before his untimely death in 1969, doing the instrumental "Magic Sam's Boogie" and the classic "All Your Love".
No fan of classic Chicago blues should be without this wonderful collection.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Take a trip back to the 60's
Review: Great performances, sound quality is very good better than most new music cd's. You can't go wrong with this DVD. If you like the blues at all this will become one of your most played.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Take a trip back to the 60's
Review: Great performances, sound quality is very good better than most new music cd's. You can't go wrong with this DVD. If you like the blues at all this will become one of your most played.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: howlin' wolf - unfathomable greatness
Review: the howlin' wolf footage on volume 2 is probably the greatest live singing, of any kind, that i have ever seen. it's not even fair to compare him to mortal men. if you can't imagine it being as great as his greatest records, believe me - it is here.

anyone know of any little walter footage in existence?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: howlin' wolf - unfathomable greatness
Review: the howlin' wolf footage on volume 2 is probably the greatest live singing, of any kind, that i have ever seen. it's not even fair to compare him to mortal men. if you can't imagine it being as great as his greatest records, believe me - it is here.

anyone know of any little walter footage in existence?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The blues that created the British sound & British Invasion
Review: These two DVD's are rare treasures. Shot on a new format for the 60's called video tape. Incredible. I had never heard of these tours. Supposedly Jimmy Page and Mick Jagger saw some of these shows and the rest is history. The jewel here is Magic Sam playing Earl Hooker's guitar on the bonus tracks.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The blues that created the British sound & British Invasion
Review: These two DVD's are rare treasures. Shot on a new format for the 60's called video tape. Incredible. I had never heard of these tours. Supposedly Jimmy Page and Mick Jagger saw some of these shows and the rest is history. The jewel here is Magic Sam playing Earl Hooker's guitar on the bonus tracks.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unique archival footage; better than you thought possible
Review: While a few tracks are merely good, most are excellent, and some are simple amazing. The Howlin' Wolf tracks are the best footage I've seen of him to date. He was still healthy enough here to get on his feet; very intimidating stuff. Admittedly, T-Bone Walker's backup band sometimes seems to be in a different city on his one track; but T-Bone himself sounds great. For archival TV from that era, audio-visual quality is unexpectedly high. Very crisp B&W. Very slight grain/white spots occasionally, but only if you're looking for it. Be sure to go to the bonus tracks by Magic Sam; the last of these is clearly from some alternate universe. A special thank you to those who preserved, and who rediscovered this material; they are creating a DVD Golden Age.


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