The Twelve Year Old Boy - Elmore James, London, Mel
Coming Home
It Hurts Me Too - Elmore James, James, Elmore [1]
Knocking at Your Door
Elmore's Contribution to Jazz
Cry for Me Baby - Elmore James, London, Mel
Take Me Where You Go
Bobby's Rock
The Sky Is Crying - Elmore James, James, Elmore [1]
Baby, Please Set a Date
Held My Baby Last Night
Dust My Broom
Rollin' and Tumblin'
I'm Worried
Done Somebody Wrong
Fine Little Mama
I Need You (Baby)
I Can't Stop Lovin' You - Elmore James, James, Elmore [1]
Strange Angels
Early One Morning
She Done Moved
Track Listings (21) - Disc #2
Something Inside Me
Stranger Blues
Anna Lee
Standing at the Crossroads - Elmore James, James, Elmore [1]
My Bleeding Heart
My Kind of Woman
Got to Move
So Unkind
Person to Person - Elmore James, McRae
One Way Out
Strange(r) Blues [Alternate Take]
Shake Your Moneymaker [Take 1/2]
Look on Yonder Wall
Go Back Home Again
Mean Mistreatin' Mama [Take 3]
Sunnyland Train
You Know You Done Me Wrong
Mean Mistreatin' Mama [Take 1]
Mean Mistreatin' Mama [Take 2}
You Know You're Wrong
Find My Kind of Woman [Take 1]
Track Listings (21) - Disc #3
My Baby's Gone
Find My Kind of Woman
Look on Yonder Wall (Look Up on the Wall)
Dust My Broom
It Hurts Me Too - Elmore James, James, Elmore [1]
Pickin' the Blues (Manhattan Slide)
Everyday I Have the Blues - Elmore James, Chatman, Peter
I Have a Right to Love My Baby
Twelve Year Old Boy - Elmore James, London, Mel
Got to Move (She's Got to Go)
I Gotta Go Now
Talk to Me Baby
Make My Dreams Come True
Hand in Hand [Take 4]
Can't Stop Loving My Baby
Dust My Broom
Elmore Jumps One (Up Jumped Elmore)
I Believe
Back in Mississippi [Conversation]
Hand in Hand [Take 1]
Hand in Hand [Take 3]
The complete Trumpet, Chief & Fire Sessions, 64 remastered tracks. Includes a 24-page illustrated booklet. 3 papersleeves packaged in a cardboard flip-top box. 'Elmore James was a major, maybe even the main reason, why... more » the Stones came about.' - Bill Wyman« less
The complete Trumpet, Chief & Fire Sessions, 64 remastered tracks. Includes a 24-page illustrated booklet. 3 papersleeves packaged in a cardboard flip-top box. 'Elmore James was a major, maybe even the main reason, why the Stones came about.' - Bill Wyman
CD Reviews
A fantastic box set
Docendo Discimus | Vita scholae | 06/07/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This reissue of the original 50-track "King Of The Slide Guitar" box set, with an additional 14 tracks, is magnificent. It presents every song Elmore James recorded for the Fire, Fury and Enjoy labels in the early 60s, with great sound and a few interesting rarities and alternate takes.
You'll need to hear Elmore's earlier recordings as well, of course (available on the fine "The Classic Early Recordings" box set, ASIN: B000000W62), but the fact that a few of his best early songs weren't re-recorded for Bobby Robinson's labels, and thus are missing from this collection, doesn't really detract anything from its greatness.
There are still so many blues classics here it's unbelievable - "Dust My Broom", "It Hurts Me Too", "The Sky Is Crying", "Shake Your Moneymaker" and "The Twelve Year Old Boy" are the best-known, obviously, but the rest of this material is not sub-par in any way...every song is good, most are great, and a lot of them are just magnificent, some of the most powerful electric blues you'll ever hear.
The brand of fiery electric blues that Elmore James played more than forty years ago packed an incredible punch. It is supremely gritty (in spite of the urbane arrangements featuring piano and saxophone), and Elmore had one of the greatest, most intense and expressive voices you'll ever hear. His slashing slide guitar playing has made him more influential than any other single guitarist.
"King Of The Slide Guitar" also includes several terrific instrumentals, like the smouldering "Up Jumped Elmore" and the dance-friendly boogie "Bobby's Rock". And even though most of the approximately fifty different songs aren't well known outside the circle of fanatical Elmore James-fan, there is an incredible number of high-quality cuts here.
The tough raver "Rollin' & Tumblin'" easily matches anything Cream or the Yardbirds ever did, "Done Somebody Wrong" is virtually hard rock, and the slide leads and saxophone fills on the funky "Can't Stop Loving My Baby" all blend together to create the kind of blues song you normally only dream about.
This wonderful collection of music can easily match any of the great Chess box sets, and that is saying something! Elmore James and the Broomdusters rock incredibly hard on their definitive reading of Robert Johnson's "Dust My Broom", and they smoulder on the ultimate slow blues, James' own "The Sky Is Crying".
There are so many excellent songs here that rarely or never show up on various Elmore James-compilations: "Got To Move", "Person To Person", "Strange Angels", "You Know You're Wrong", "Hand In Hand", "I've Got A Right To Love My Baby", "She's Got To Go"...well, just get it, allright?"
Incendiary!
Adam Fuller | Rochester, NY | 06/24/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"What can I say but WOW! "King of the Slide Guitar" is an apt title for James who was taken from us before his time.
The man could flat out play and belt out a tune from the bottom of his heart.
If you love the blues, heck if you love music I highly recommend picking up this set!"
The King of the Blues!
Michael D Shelfer | Gold Coast, Queensland Australia | 06/08/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Look, this guy was magic and this 3 CD set is just great! You must add this to your collection!!"
Dust My Broom on Trumpet -- For The Record
William E Donoghue | Healdsburg CA USA | 06/24/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"For the record and this seems a good place to publish it, Lillian McMurry of Trumpet Records did not record "Dust My Broom" "seriptiously" as on critic opined.
I interviewed Lillian McMurry for my upcoming Sonny Boy Williamson II documentary and biography. She showed me the royalty check that Elmore James signed and cashed the day BEFORE the session and told me about the recording process in her studios. This was before audio tape recording and thus she had to place the needle on the acetate exactly at the beginning of the tune, listen very closely to the music when it was being recorded (she couldn't play the record until a test pressing was made) and toss it if there was any problem. There is no way this could be done without Elmore being a fully willing participant.
Elmore did record the one side for Trumpet (as well as long lost test recording as part of Sonny Boy Williamson's band) and was subsequently seduced by the Bihari brothers who signed him to an exclusive recording contract which required that he not record for a year until Trumpet's contract expired.
Faced with the problem of this amazing single recording needing a second side, Lillian got a man she only knew as Slim to record "Catfish Blues." He was identified on both sides of the record as "Elmo James."
Faced with the problem of following up such a hit (independent record companies rarely got paid for the first records if the distributors or record store didn't have to pay to get the next recording), she got Big Joe Williams to record two tunes with Sonny Boy Williamson as "Elmer James"
To further add to the confusion, Ms. McMurry signed up Sonny Boy Williamson II as "Willie Williamson." Willie was Alex "Rice" Miller's bother's first name and Williamson was what Sonny Boy was using after John Lee "Sonny Boy" Williamson who died four years earlier.
Oddly while Lillian knew he was not the original "Sonny Boy Williamson" she was unaware of the highly-influential King Biscuit Time KFFA radio show on which his fame was based. The folks at KFFA were ironically unaware of the 1937 "Little Boy Blue" WEBQ radio show in Harrisburg Illinois on a 50,000 watt clear channel radio station.
These were the times when everyone didn't learn every fact on CNN at the same time and secrets could be kept.