LURRIE BELL
''BLUES IN MY SOUL''
JUNE 18 2013
66:07
1/Hey Hey Baby
T-Bone Walker/3:11
2/Blues In My Soul
Lurrie Bell/6:03
3/I Feel So Good
William Lee Conley Broonzy/4:14
4/She's a Good 'Un
John Eskridge/4:39
5/'Bout the Break of Day
Amos Blakemore/6:11
6/Going Away Baby
James A. Lane/4:15
7/24 Hour Blues
Lurrie Bell/3:55
8/My Little Machine
James A. Lane/5:29
9/I Just Keep Loving Her
Walter Jacobs/2:44
10/T-Bone Blues Special
T-Bone Walker/3:21
11/Just the Blues/6:59
12/South Side To Riverside
Lurrie Bell/5:38
13/If It's Too Late/3:50
14/Blues Never Die
Otis Spann/5:38
Lurrie Bell/Guitar, Vocals
Marques Carroll/Horn Arrangements, Trumpet
Willie Hayes/Drums
Mark Hiebert/Sax (Baritone)
Chris Neal/Sax (Tenor)
Roosevelt Purifoy/Organ, Piano
Matthew Skoller/Harmonica
Melvin Smith/Bass
BIOGRAPHY
by Bill Dahl
Lurrie Bell was born on December 13, 1958, in Chicago. His famous father, harpist Carey Bell, had him working out on guitar as a wee lad. By 1977, he was recording with his dad and playing behind a variety of established stars, tabbed by many observers at the time as a sure star on the rise. But personal problems took their toll on his great potential; Bell's recorded output and live performances were inconsistent in the '80s and early '90s. Among the highlights of Bell's discography are three tracks in tandem with harpist Billy Branch under the Sons of Blues banner (Bell was a founding member of the band) from Alligator's first batch of 1978 Living Chicago Blues anthologies and a 1984 collaboration, Son of a Gun, with his old man for Rooster Blues. Then there's his set for Delmark, Mercurial Son, as bizarre a contemporary blues album as you're likely to encounter. Bell followed Mercurial Son with the more straightforward 700 Blues in spring 1997; The Blues Had a Baby appeared two years later. Let's Talk About Love (2007) and The Devil Ain't Got No Music (2012), both appeared on Bell's own record label Aria B.G. In 2013, he returned to Delmark with the release of Blues in My Soul, which celebrated the guitarist's straight-ahead Chicago blues roots.
DoWnLoAd
''BLUES IN MY SOUL''
JUNE 18 2013
66:07
1/Hey Hey Baby
T-Bone Walker/3:11
2/Blues In My Soul
Lurrie Bell/6:03
3/I Feel So Good
William Lee Conley Broonzy/4:14
4/She's a Good 'Un
John Eskridge/4:39
5/'Bout the Break of Day
Amos Blakemore/6:11
6/Going Away Baby
James A. Lane/4:15
7/24 Hour Blues
Lurrie Bell/3:55
8/My Little Machine
James A. Lane/5:29
9/I Just Keep Loving Her
Walter Jacobs/2:44
10/T-Bone Blues Special
T-Bone Walker/3:21
11/Just the Blues/6:59
12/South Side To Riverside
Lurrie Bell/5:38
13/If It's Too Late/3:50
14/Blues Never Die
Otis Spann/5:38
Lurrie Bell/Guitar, Vocals
Marques Carroll/Horn Arrangements, Trumpet
Willie Hayes/Drums
Mark Hiebert/Sax (Baritone)
Chris Neal/Sax (Tenor)
Roosevelt Purifoy/Organ, Piano
Matthew Skoller/Harmonica
Melvin Smith/Bass
BIOGRAPHY
by Bill Dahl
Lurrie Bell was born on December 13, 1958, in Chicago. His famous father, harpist Carey Bell, had him working out on guitar as a wee lad. By 1977, he was recording with his dad and playing behind a variety of established stars, tabbed by many observers at the time as a sure star on the rise. But personal problems took their toll on his great potential; Bell's recorded output and live performances were inconsistent in the '80s and early '90s. Among the highlights of Bell's discography are three tracks in tandem with harpist Billy Branch under the Sons of Blues banner (Bell was a founding member of the band) from Alligator's first batch of 1978 Living Chicago Blues anthologies and a 1984 collaboration, Son of a Gun, with his old man for Rooster Blues. Then there's his set for Delmark, Mercurial Son, as bizarre a contemporary blues album as you're likely to encounter. Bell followed Mercurial Son with the more straightforward 700 Blues in spring 1997; The Blues Had a Baby appeared two years later. Let's Talk About Love (2007) and The Devil Ain't Got No Music (2012), both appeared on Bell's own record label Aria B.G. In 2013, he returned to Delmark with the release of Blues in My Soul, which celebrated the guitarist's straight-ahead Chicago blues roots.
DoWnLoAd