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Robert Johnson - King Of The Delta Blues Singers (Picture Disc) ((Vinyl))

Robert Johnson

Robert Johnson - King Of The Delta Blues Singers (Picture Disc) ((Vinyl))

$ 13.57 $ 19.99

This reissue of KING OF THE DELTA BLUES SINGERS contains 1 previously unreleased track.
Solo performer: Robert Johnson (vocals, acoustic guitar).
Producer: Don Law.
LP reissue producer: Frank Driggs.
CD reissue producer: Lawrence Cohn.
Recorded in San Antonio, Texas on November 23 & 26-27, 1936 and Dallas, Texas on June 19-20, 1937. Original LP released on Columbia Records (1961). Includes original liner notes by Frank Driggs. Includes reissue liner notes by Peter Guralnick.
Digitally remastered by Robert Vosgien (CMS Digital, Pasadena, California).
Solo performer: Robert Johnson (vocals, acoustic guitar).
Compilation producer: Frank Driggs.
Reissue producer: Lawrence Cohn.
Recorded in San Antonio, Texas on November 23 & 26-27, 1936 and Dallas, Texas on June 19-20, 1937.
This is part of Columbia/Legacy's Master Sound series.
Master Sound releases are 24-karat gold CDs remastered from first-generation masters. This process utilizes 20-bit technology and Sony's "Super Bit Mapping" system.
Of all the early blues singers and players, Robert Johnson towers above all the others. He lived fast, died young, and left a small body of music that laid the groundwork for electric blues as well as rock & roll. Johnson had a unique voice, capable of deep growlings and grumblings and eerie, almost ghostly wails and moans. His guitar illustrated his stories, making any other instruments irrelevant. His songs conveyed a sense of a man trying to outrun a pack of demons ("Hell Hound on My Trail," "Cross Road Blues"), were autobiographical ("I'm a Steady Rollin' Man") and, of course, dealt with love troubles ("From Four Until Late," "Love in Vain"). Johnson's songs have become blues standards--"Sweet Home Chicago," "Dust My Broom," and many others have been adapted by many rock bands, from the Rolling Stones' version of "Love in Vain" to the Red Hot Chili Peppers' "They're Red Hot." If you want to hear the main architect of the twin dynasties of blues and rock & roll (who also influenced folk and country music), Robert Johnson is the man, and KING is a beautifully annotated introduction.

  • RSD Release Date: DDD
  • Genre: Blues