Buddy's Baddest: The Best of Buddy Guy
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| 価格: | ¥ 1,258 1500円以上は送料無料 詳細 |
発送可能時期: 在庫あり。
販売、発送は Amazon.co.jp
曲目リスト
- Damn Right, I've Got the Blues
- Five Long Years
- Mustang Sally
- Rememberin' Stevie
- She's a Superstar
- Feels Like Rain
- She's Nineteen Years Old
- I Smell Trouble
- Someone Else Is Steppin' in (Slippin' Out, Slippin' In)
- My Time After Awhile [Live]
- Midnight Train
- Miss Ida B.
- I Need Your Love So Bad [#]
- Innocent Man
商品の詳細
- Amazon.co.jp ランキング: #248484 / ミュージック
- 発売日: 2003-01-31
- ディスク枚数: 1
- 形式: Best of, Import, from US
- 寸法: .21 ポンド
エディターレビュー
From Amazon.com
The title's baloney. Sure, some of Buddy Guy's most blistering guitar playing has been captured on his '90s recordings for Silvertone, but with albums like Muddy Waters's 1964 Folk Singer and his own 1967 solo debut A Man & the Blues on his résumé, Guy's status as a Chicago blues giant was assured long before his 1991 comeback Damn Right, I've Got the Blues. Nonetheless, that tune, the instrumental tribute "Remembering Stevie" (for the late guitar-slinger Vaughan), "Five Long Years," and the previously unissued "Miss Ida B" testify that at age 65 Guy still possesses rare depth and fire. His singing is big and soulful, capable of cheerleading a party or hurtling down to the depths of Delta blues heartache. His six-stringing remains wildly inventive and unpredictable, even on slight numbers like "She's a Superstar." And the inclusion of blatant stabs at the pop charts such as his "Midnight Train" duet with Jonny Lang take nothing away from the passion he puts into true blues performances like "I Need Your Love So Bad" and "Innocent Man," leftovers from earlier sessions that surface here. Baddest or not, this CD spotlights one of our greatest bluesmen in fine form. --Ted Drozdowski




