商品の詳細
Playing with the Strings

Playing with the Strings
Lonnie Johnson

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4 新品/中古商品価格 ¥ 4,206

曲目リスト

  1. Won't Don't Blues
  2. Mr. Johnson's Blues
  3. Falling Rain Blues
  4. Now Good Blues
  5. Newport Blues
  6. Nile Of Genago
  7. To Do This You Gotta Know How
  8. Fours Hands Are Better Than Two
  9. I'm Not Rough
  10. Hotter Than That
  11. Savoy Blues
  12. Playing With The Strings
  13. Stompin' 'Em Along Slow
  14. The Mooche
  15. Move Over
  16. Hot And Bothered
  17. Paducah
  18. Star Dust
  19. Jet Black Blues
  20. Blue Blood Blues
  21. Sitting On Top Of The World
  22. Kansas City Man Blues
  23. I'm Nuts About That Gal
  24. Racketeer Blues

商品の詳細

  • Amazon.co.jp ランキング: #933472 / ミュージック
  • 発売日: 2001-08-14
  • ディスク枚数: 1
  • 形式: Best of, Import, from US

エディターレビュー

From Amazon.com
From the 1920s to the 1960s, guitarist Lonnie Johnson broke new ground for jazz and blues guitar, performing stunning displays of six-string virtuosity on recordings with Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Kid Ory, and on numerous solo efforts. But, perhaps because he was so versatile--jumping between hundreds of Delta blues and hot-jazz studio sessions--he's never received his due accolades for being one of the great guitar pioneers. Playing with the Strings captures Johnson's earliest output, from the 1925 recordings with Charlton Creath's Jazz-O-Maniacs to the stunning 1932 solo 78 he recorded featuring "I'm Nuts About That Gal" and "Racketeers Blues." JSP's compilation shows how, in just seven years, Johnson went from playing in Louis Armstrong's Hot Five to working with Duke Ellington to performing in one of the first interracial studio sessions with Eddie Lang, King Oliver, and Hoagy Carmichael (all performing as Blind Willie Dunn's Gin Bottle Four). Throughout, Johnson is in top form on guitar, picking single-note lines in a fashion that would anticipate future jazz guitar sounds. We can hear Johnson playing other instruments, too--kazoo, violin, and banjo--but his guitar mastery steals the show. JSP's transfers of these old 78s are at times spotty, but it's still a great collection of classic tunes. --Jason Verlinde