Bitrate: 320K/s
Year: 2016
Time: 40:46
Size: 94,7 MB
Label: Classic Music Vault
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front
Tracks Listing:
1. Big Boss Man (Live) - 5:12
2. Low Down Funk (Live) - 5:14
3. Lost Love (Live) - 4:25
4. I'm Losing You (Live) - 3:06
5. You Got Me Cryin' (Live) - 3:30
6. Hootchie Kootchie Man (Live) - 3:31
7. Cherry Jam (Live) - 15:46
Barry Goldberg was a regular fixture in the white blues firmament of the mid-'60s that seemed to stretch from Chicago to New York. A keyboardist (organ seemed to be his specialty), Barry was an in-demand session man — he appears with Michael Bloomfield on a Mitch Ryder album, for instance — along with Al Kooper and his blues-playing contemporary from the original Butterfield band, Mark Naftalin. Goldberg was a member of Charlie Musselwhite's first band, contributing great piano and organ lines to the Stand Back! album (his work on "Cristo Redentor" is moody and introspective, with a strong jazz-inflected feel, while still retaining strong blues roots) and a handful of others throughout the decade.
Blues From Chicago
Year: 2016
Time: 40:46
Size: 94,7 MB
Label: Classic Music Vault
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front
Tracks Listing:
1. Big Boss Man (Live) - 5:12
2. Low Down Funk (Live) - 5:14
3. Lost Love (Live) - 4:25
4. I'm Losing You (Live) - 3:06
5. You Got Me Cryin' (Live) - 3:30
6. Hootchie Kootchie Man (Live) - 3:31
7. Cherry Jam (Live) - 15:46
Barry Goldberg was a regular fixture in the white blues firmament of the mid-'60s that seemed to stretch from Chicago to New York. A keyboardist (organ seemed to be his specialty), Barry was an in-demand session man — he appears with Michael Bloomfield on a Mitch Ryder album, for instance — along with Al Kooper and his blues-playing contemporary from the original Butterfield band, Mark Naftalin. Goldberg was a member of Charlie Musselwhite's first band, contributing great piano and organ lines to the Stand Back! album (his work on "Cristo Redentor" is moody and introspective, with a strong jazz-inflected feel, while still retaining strong blues roots) and a handful of others throughout the decade.
Blues From Chicago
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