10654 - BIG TIME SARAH - CRYING (1992)

BIG TIME SARAH
''CRYING''
2002
48:10
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1 Undecided 03:34 (Big Time Sarah)
2 30 Days In Jail 04:41 (Unknown)
3 Crying 07:27 (Big Time Sarah)
4 Hochie Coochie Woman 04:55 (McKinley Morganfield)
5 Jelly Roll Working 04:16 (Big Time Sarah)
6 Blues All Alone 05:30 (Big Time Sarah)
7 You Got Me Running 03:09 (Jimmy Reed)
8 Let The Good Times Roll 03:31 (Louis Jordan)
9 The Thrill Is Gone 04:23 (B.B. King)
10 Song For T.J. 06:40 (Big Time Sarah)
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Big Time Sarah (R.I.P.)/Vocals
Christoph Steiner/Guitar
Martin Scheer/Piano, Organ, Synthesizer, Harmonica, Vocals
Dirk Rummel/Drums
Bernd Klümper/Bass Guitar
Special Guests:
Steve Freund/Lead & Rhythm Guitars
Jörg Mikat/Guitar On 3
Uli Biggermann/Percussion 1, 3
Sam Burekardt/Saxophone On 5, 6, 7
Klaus Bernatski/Soprano Saxophone On 3
Thomas Wabkönig/Piano On 4
Horn Section:
Guido Wellers/Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Horn Section Arrangements
Henning Vollmer/Trumpet
Christian Heine/Trombone
Witold Grohs/Saxophone On 1, 8
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BIOGRAPHY/AMG
Ron Wynn
A rousing vocalist and dynamic entertainer, "Big Time" Sarah Streeter was among the more enterprising contemporary blues performers. She moved to Chicago from Coldwater, Mississippi, as a child, and sang in South Side gospel choirs before debuting as a blues vocalist on-stage at Morgan's Lounge at 14. She later worked with Buddy Guy, Junior Wells, and Sunnyland Slim. A single on Slim's Airway label helped launch her solo career. Big Time Sarah was a featured performer at many North Side clubs beginning in the late '70s, and appeared at several blues festivals. She formed the Big Time Express in 1989, and made her Delmark label debut, Lay It on 'Em Girls, in 1993. Blues in the Year One-D-One arrived in 1996, followed by A Million of You in 2001. Big Time Sarah died of heart complications at a nursing home in the Chicago area in 2015; she was 62 years old.
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TO THE TOP
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''CRYING''
2002
48:10
**********
1 Undecided 03:34 (Big Time Sarah)
2 30 Days In Jail 04:41 (Unknown)
3 Crying 07:27 (Big Time Sarah)
4 Hochie Coochie Woman 04:55 (McKinley Morganfield)
5 Jelly Roll Working 04:16 (Big Time Sarah)
6 Blues All Alone 05:30 (Big Time Sarah)
7 You Got Me Running 03:09 (Jimmy Reed)
8 Let The Good Times Roll 03:31 (Louis Jordan)
9 The Thrill Is Gone 04:23 (B.B. King)
10 Song For T.J. 06:40 (Big Time Sarah)
**********
Big Time Sarah (R.I.P.)/Vocals
Christoph Steiner/Guitar
Martin Scheer/Piano, Organ, Synthesizer, Harmonica, Vocals
Dirk Rummel/Drums
Bernd Klümper/Bass Guitar
Special Guests:
Steve Freund/Lead & Rhythm Guitars
Jörg Mikat/Guitar On 3
Uli Biggermann/Percussion 1, 3
Sam Burekardt/Saxophone On 5, 6, 7
Klaus Bernatski/Soprano Saxophone On 3
Thomas Wabkönig/Piano On 4
Horn Section:
Guido Wellers/Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Horn Section Arrangements
Henning Vollmer/Trumpet
Christian Heine/Trombone
Witold Grohs/Saxophone On 1, 8
**********
BIOGRAPHY/AMG
Ron Wynn
A rousing vocalist and dynamic entertainer, "Big Time" Sarah Streeter was among the more enterprising contemporary blues performers. She moved to Chicago from Coldwater, Mississippi, as a child, and sang in South Side gospel choirs before debuting as a blues vocalist on-stage at Morgan's Lounge at 14. She later worked with Buddy Guy, Junior Wells, and Sunnyland Slim. A single on Slim's Airway label helped launch her solo career. Big Time Sarah was a featured performer at many North Side clubs beginning in the late '70s, and appeared at several blues festivals. She formed the Big Time Express in 1989, and made her Delmark label debut, Lay It on 'Em Girls, in 1993. Blues in the Year One-D-One arrived in 1996, followed by A Million of You in 2001. Big Time Sarah died of heart complications at a nursing home in the Chicago area in 2015; she was 62 years old.
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