Blues Queen

RELEASE
May 07, 2007
LABEL
Phoenix Jazz
GENRES
Blues, Classic Female Blues, Early Jazz, Vaudeville Blues

Album Review

Bessie Smith's passionate vocals overrode the primitive recording technology of her era and made her the zenith of female blues singers from the 1920s and '30s. This collection takes a quick survey of her career over two-dozen tracks recorded between 1923 and 1933 in New York in sessions with such jazz icons as Benny Goodman, Coleman Hawkins, Pee Wee Russell, and Fletcher Henderson, including her seminal 1925 version of W.C. Handy's "St. Louis Blues." An exercise in simplicity, Smith's version of the song features only her voice, Armstrong's answering cornet, and Fred Longshaw on a wheezing reed organ. The end result is one of the greatest performances in pop history. Also featured here is Smith's breakthrough side “Downhearted Blues,” plus wonderful takes on "Careless Love Blues" and “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out,” all of which show what this one of a kind and larger than life singer could do with a song.
Steve Leggett, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Downhearted Blues
  2. Tain't Nobody's Business If I Do
  3. My Sweetie Went Away
  4. Weeping Willow Blues
  5. St. Louis Blues
  6. Reckless Blues
  7. Sobbin' Hearted Blues
  8. Cold in Hand Blues
  9. You'd Been a Good Ole Wagon
  10. Cake Walkin' Babies (From Home)
  11. The Yellow Dog Blues
  12. Nashville Woman's Blues
  13. Careless Love Blues
  14. J.C. Holmes Blues
  15. I Ain't Goin' to Play No Second Fiddle
  16. Young Woman's Blues
  17. Muddy Water (a Mississippi Moan)
  18. Mean Old Bedbug Blues
  19. Empty Bed Blues, Pt. 1
  20. Empty Bed Blues, Pt. 2
  21. Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out
  22. Black Mountain Blues
  23. Do Your Duty
  24. Gimme a Pigfoot