Hound Dog Taylor - Tearing The Roof Off: Hard Rocking Chicago Slide Guitar Blues

Artist: Hound Dog Taylor

Title: Tearing The Roof Off: Hard Rocking Chicago Slide Guitar Blues 1962-1982

Condition: Used Very Good

Format: CD

Release Date: 2021

Label: JSP Records

UPC: 788065250522

Genre: Soul/R & B

Album Tracks

DISC 1:
1. Whiskey Headed Woman
2. Poison Ivy
3. Watermelon Man
4. Poor Boy Blues
5. Pretty Baby
6. Whole Lotta Love
7. Okee Dokee Stomp
8. Woke Up This Morning
9. Cleo
10. Everyday I Have the Blues
11. Just Pickin'
12. Christine
13. Alley Music
14. Christine
15. I Know You Don't Love Me No More
16. I Held My Baby Last Night
17. Ships on the Ocean
18. Rockin' with the Dog

DISC 2:
1. Everyday I Have the Blues
2. No Hair
3. Stompin'
4. I Held My Baby Last Night
5. Funky
6. You Can't Sit Down
7. Hound Dog's Blues
8. Coming Round the Mountain
9. Rock Me
10. Florence's Shuffle
11. Juke Joint Boogie
12. Goodnight Boogie
13. Walking the Ceiling
14. Mother in Law Blues
15. Stingin' the Blues
16. Rockin' Boogie
17. Blues Stomp

When I die, they'll say 'he couldn't play shit, but he sure made it sound good!' Hound Dog Taylor While producing this set JSP's John Stedman remarked 'the reason this music is so tough, it's played by tough old bastards.' Hound Dog Taylor and The HouseRockers (Hound Dog on slide guitar, Brewer Phillips on guitar and Ted Harvey on drums) were indeed tough - both on and off stage. Greg Lawrie, a musician who toured with Hound Dog during a 1975 Australian tour (with Freddie King, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee, Alexis Korner and Duster Bennett) described Hound Dog and the HouseRockers as 'one of the rock 'n' rollinest bands ever, completely authentic, 100% raw blues, real rock and roll blues. Hound Dog tore the roof off every night with his slide guitar. He was a fantastic player, very basic, but he hit what needed to be hit, no more, no less.' Bruce Iglauer described Brewer Phillips as: 'The rawest and most energised bluesmen I ever heard. His playing and singing were totally unpolished. He took lots of musical chances and made tons of mistakes, but his playing was full of infectious rhythmic drive, and he had more fun on the bandstand than virtually anyone I've ever seen.' Brewer's guitar sound is described as 'deep rooted in the Delta blues' and as having an 'ice pick-in-your-ear sheet-metal tone produced from his battered Telecaster executed with a thumb pick and bare fingers.

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