Southside Blues/Tobacco Road [Medley] - Lou Rawls, Loudermilk, John D.
Something Stirring in My Soul - Lou Rawls, Radcliffe, J.
Georgia on My Mind - Lou Rawls, Carmichael, H.
So Hard to Laugh, So Easy to Cry - Lou Rawls, Askew, R.
Old Folks - Lou Rawls, Hill, Dedette Lee
Somebody Have Mercy - Lou Rawls, Cooke, Sam
Why (Do I Love You So) - Lou Rawls, Alexander, James W.
Street of Dreams - Lou Rawls, Lewis, S.
I Wonder - Lou Rawls, Gant, C.
Let's Burn Down the Cornfield - Lou Rawls, Newman, Randy
One for My Baby, One More for the Road - Lou Rawls, Arlen, H.
Mean Old World [#][*] - Lou Rawls, Broonzy, Big Bill
Long Gone Blues [#][*] - Lou Rawls, Holiday, Billie
Fine and Mellow [#][*] - Lou Rawls, Holiday, Billie
The death of Lou Rawls on January 6, 2006 silenced one of the most distinctive voices in music. With his rich, resonant bariton, he could sing gospel, blues, jazz, pop and soul with equal authority and success. From a trad... more »itional hymn like 'Motherless Child' to 'Let's Burn Down The Cornfield', Randy Newman's ominous ode to boredom, Lou could get inside a song and make it his own without compromising its essence. This collection, drawn from 14 albums, covers the greatest blues and jazz performances of his Capitol years (1962-1970) and finds him in the company of such great arrangers as Benny Carter, Onzy Matthews, Benny Golson and H.B. Barnum and with Les McCann's trio and The Pilgrim Travelers. Researching this compilation uncovered an amazing, previously unissued session of three classic blues with saxophonist Curtis Amy's sextet with the legendary trumpeter Dupree Bolton. Now these wonderful performances are available at last. EMI.« less
The death of Lou Rawls on January 6, 2006 silenced one of the most distinctive voices in music. With his rich, resonant bariton, he could sing gospel, blues, jazz, pop and soul with equal authority and success. From a traditional hymn like 'Motherless Child' to 'Let's Burn Down The Cornfield', Randy Newman's ominous ode to boredom, Lou could get inside a song and make it his own without compromising its essence. This collection, drawn from 14 albums, covers the greatest blues and jazz performances of his Capitol years (1962-1970) and finds him in the company of such great arrangers as Benny Carter, Onzy Matthews, Benny Golson and H.B. Barnum and with Les McCann's trio and The Pilgrim Travelers. Researching this compilation uncovered an amazing, previously unissued session of three classic blues with saxophonist Curtis Amy's sextet with the legendary trumpeter Dupree Bolton. Now these wonderful performances are available at last. EMI.