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Taj Mahal - The Hidden Treasures of Taj Mahal 1969-1973 (2012) [Country Blues, Modern Electric Blues]; mp3, 320 kbps

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CountryBlues
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Taj Mahal - The Hidden Treasures of Taj Mahal 1969-1973 (2012) [Country Blues, Modern Electric Blues]; mp3, 320 kbps

Unread postby CountryBlues » 11 Mar 2020, 15:45


Artist: Taj Mahal
Album: The Hidden Treasures of Taj Mahal 1969-1973
Genre: Country Blues, Modern Electric Blues, Delta Blues
Origin: USA
Released: 2012
Quality: mp3, 320 kbps
Tracklist:
    CD 1:
  1. Chainey Do
  2. Sweet Mama Janisse (1970 Version)
  3. Yan-Nah Mama-Loo
  4. Tomorrow May Not Be Your Day (1970 Version)
  5. I Pity the Poor Immigrant
  6. Jacob's Ladder
  7. Ain't Gwine Whistle Dixie (Any Mo')
  8. Sweet Mama Janisse
  9. You Ain't No Street Walker Mama, Honey but I Do Love the Way You Strut Your Stuff
  10. Good Morning Little Schoolgirl
  11. Shady Grove
  12. Butter

    CD 2:
  13. Runnin' by the Riverside (Live at The Royal Albert Hall, London)
  14. John, Ain't It Hard (Live at The Royal Albert Hall, London)
  15. Band Introduction (Live at The Royal Albert Hall, London)
  16. Sweet Mama Janisse (Live at The Royal Albert Hall, London)
  17. Big Fat (Live at The Royal Albert Hall, London)
  18. Divin' Duck Blues (Live at The Royal Albert Hall, London)
  19. Checkin' Up On My Baby (Live at The Royal Albert Hall, London)
  20. Oh Susanna (Live at The Royal Albert Hall, London)
  21. Oh Baby, Why Do You Wanna Make It Fat (Live at The Royal Albert Hall, London)
  22. Tomorrow May Not Be Your Day (Live at The Royal Albert Hall, London)

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In celebration of his 70th birthday, The Hidden Treasures of Taj Mahal 1969-1973 is the first of a series of volumes issued by Legacy that will eventually encompass his entire Columbia catalog. Hidden Treasures consists of a studio disc and a live one. The studio set contains a dozen tracks that were rejected from the final versions of Mahal's albums for various reasons, as well as alternate takes. All tracks are unreleased. The quality of the material can be slightly uneven, but that's to be expected (being rejects after all). That said, disc one is not without sufficient charm, and even revelatory moments. Its first four tracks feature Mahal and guitarist Jesse Ed Davis in the company of Jim Dickinson's Dixie Flyers. "Chainey Do" and the first of the two alternate takes of "Sweet Mama Janisse" are excellent showcases for Davis in the company of a stellar garage band. Other standouts on disc one include "You Ain't No Street Walker Mama, Honey But I Do Love the Way You Strut Your Stuff," with its studio intro where Mahal instructs the band on how to make it cook. And it does. The band includes a five-piece horn section that stars tuba masters Bob Stewart and Howard Johnson. Mahal's banjo playing works beautifully in the extended jam on "Shady Groove." "Butter" closes the disc and features Mahal fronting the band on harmonica, playing a sweet, instrumental version of "People Get Ready." Disc two, recorded at the Royal Albert Hall in 1970, is worth the purchase price alone. Mahal plays his National Steel guitar and harmonica, and is backed by a band with the late, great Davis on lead guitar. This set reveals Mahal as a musical shaman early on. He was even then able to skip across centuries, traditions, forms, and singing, telling tales and jokes without hesitation or faltering. He fully inhabits each musical persona he takes on as his own, yet they are all part of a single but multi-limbed lineage in his musicology. The disc is by turns rousing, rocking, and intimate. Whether it's in the a cappella take on the traditional "Runnin' by the Riverside," a cover of the Band's "Bacon Fat," the funky, gritty, original blues of "Big Fat" and "Sweet Mama Janisse," or the definitive version of "Tomorrow May Not Be Your Day," this is all-killer, no-filler. Fans of Mahal's especially of his Columbia period will greet The Hidden Treasures of Taj Mahal 1969-1973 with cheers.

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