Chuck Berry - The Chess Box :Chuck Berry
Facts
| Artist(s) | Chuck Berry |
| Studio | Chess |
| Release Date | October 25, 1990 |
| UPC Code | 076741080120 |
| Buy this item | $44.99 at Amazon.com As of Jan 6 1:28 EST (details) 3 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Box set |
About Chuck Berry - The Chess Box :Chuck Berry
We may not know who wrote the book of love, but the author of the rock & roll dictionary was Charles Edward "Chuck" Berry. You've got a signature guitar riff that other giants (think Rolling Stones) have based entire careers on. Songs such as "School Day" told teen tales as though they were novels. "Too Much Monkey Business" in where Bob Dylan discovered poetry and rap music found a contemporary starting point. "Johnny B. Goode," "Sweet Little Sixteen," "Roll Over Beethoven," "Back in the USA"--the titles alone evoke unparalleled rock atmosphere. If this three-CD set contains less unreleased ephemera than the usual box, it's because there are so many essentials to squeeze in. This one's got 'em all, A to Z. --Ben Edmonds Amazon.com
Tracks
Disc 1- Maybellene
- Wee Wee Hours
- Thirty Days
- You Can't Catch Me
- No Money Down
- Downbound Train
- Brown Eyed Handsome Man
- Drifting Heart
- Roll over Beethoven
- Too Much Monkey Business
- Havana Moon
- School Days
- Rock & Roll Music
- Oh Baby Doll
- I've Changed
- Reelin' and Rockin'
- Rockin' at the Philharmonic
- Sweet Little Sixteen
- Johnny B. Goode
- Time Was - Chuck Berry, Luna, Gabriel
- Around and Around
- Beautiful Delilah
- House of Blue Lights - Chuck Berry, Raye, Don
- Carol
- Memphis
- Anthony Boy
- Jo Jo Gunne
- Sweet Little Rock & Roller
- Merry Christmas, Baby - Chuck Berry, Baxter, Lou
- Run Rudolph Run - Chuck Berry, Brodie, Marvin
- Little Queenie
- Almost Grown
- Back in the U.S.A.
- Betty Jean
- Childhood Sweetheart
- Let It Rock
- Too Pooped to Pop
- Bye Bye Johnny
- Jaguar and Thunderbird
- Down the Road a Piece - Chuck Berry, Raye, Don
- Confessin' the Blues - Chuck Berry, Brown, Walter
- Thirteen Question Method
- Crying Steel
- I'm Just a Lucky So and So - Chuck Berry, David, Mack
- I'm Talking About You
- Come On
- Nadine
- Crazy Arms - Chuck Berry, Seals, Chuck
- You Never Can Tell
- The Things I Used to Do - Chuck Berry, Guitar Slim [Eddie
- Promised Land
- No Particular Place to Go
- Liverpool Drive
- You Two
- Chuck's Beat
- Little Marie
- Dear Dad
- Sad Day, Long Night
- It's My Own Business
- It Wasn't Me
- Ramona Say Yes
- Viva Viva Rock & Roll
- Tulane
- Have Mercy Judge
- My Dream
- Reelin' and Rockin'
- My Ding-A-Ling
- Johnny B. Goode
- A Deuce
- Woodpecker
- Bio
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User Reviews
Average user review:| It's all here! |
Thankfully, the reissue Producer(s) lost some affection for funky but tired things like "I Want To Be Your Driver" and used some later numbers I've been pining for on sets like this: "It Wasn't Me" (no excuse for this missing the Top 100); "Viva Viva Rock And Roll" (actually on the shelf for five years!); and my love, "Ramona, Say Yes". In the wotld of R & R Dreams, here was the ultimate Chuck Berry lip-sync production number on The Lloyd Thaxton Show. Go-go dancers ga-ga over Mister Rick And Roll.
(you tube?....).
A nice collection. Except for "A Duece". Gotta be kiddin'. A thrice-recycled melody and a lame scenario. Why not something cool from that "Chuck Berry '75" opus? November 22, 2008
| This Is A Gas |
It comes with a wonderful big booklet of info on Chuck along with a conversation (interview), pics, and song info (chart positions) included.
For such an important artist in the history of Rock And Roll, this is an important set to have, a very nice collection of songs to crank any time of the year. Berry is a legend, and this box is a very nice representation of his overall body of work throughout the years. September 20, 2007
| Images From The Very Heart Of Rock 'n' Roll |
Then comes four pages of the text of an interview conducted by Andy McKaie of MCA, a complete listing of his Billboard Pop Top/Hot 100 singles, and ALL his album covers plus their contents, and a discography of the contents of the three CDs, complete wth the names of supporting musicians. The music speaks for itself and is well-covered in the other reviews, although I will add that the AAD sound quality, from the earliest cuts from 1955 to the last in 1975, is superb. As indicated in the accompanying book "Digitally remastered from original Chess Records mono and stereo masters by Doug Schwartz at MCS Studios, Glendale, CA."
So why 4 stars and not 5? Well, I have to agree with those who bemoan the omission of 11 flipsides from his hit singles. If you are going to produce something this ambitious, and for a R&R legend, why not go the whole nine yards and either expand the contents of the three CDs, or add a fourth? I don't think the added cost would have dissuaded his legions of fans.
Looking back I have to think that Chuck, while he certainly knew the commercial path to follow, never lost sight of his love for bluesy-jazz pieces, as each of his earliest hits were always backed by one such selection. Starting with Maybelline. That clarion call for the R&R Era was backed by the haunting Wee Wee Hours, which charted at # 10 R&B.
Drifting Heart, which backed Roll Over Beethoven, was another in the same vein. But while those two are included here, the B-side of School Day - Deep Feeling - is not. Nor are Lajuanda [b/o Oh Baby Doll], Blue Feeling [b/o Rock & Roll Music], Vacation Time [b/o Beautiful Delilah], Hey Pedro [b/o Carol], That's My Desire [b/o Anthony Boy], O Rangutang [b/o Nadine (Is It You?)], Brenda Lee [b/o You Never Can Tell], Go, Bobby Soxer [b/o Little Marie], Lonely School Days [b/o Dear Dad], and Let's Boogie [b/o Reelin' & Rockin' - the 1972 version].
It's ironic to note, too, that his ONLY Billboard Pop Hot 100 # 1 was the novelty tune My Ding-A-Ling which, done with the Average White Band in 1972, reached that pinnacle in late summer 1972. Significantly, it only reached # 42 on the R&B charts. His # 1 hits there were Maybelline (11 weeks at the top spot as well as # 5 Pop Top 100), School Days (5 weeks there and # 3 Top 100), and Sweet Little Sixteen (3 weeks and # 2 Top 100). In 1963 The Beach Boys would "borrow" the music from Sweet Little Sixteen for their # 3 Hot 100 Surfin' U.S.A. They wouldn't acknowledge that on the record until the 1974 release (# 36 Hot 100).
Maybe some day we'll see a re-release of this set with a fourth CD added to include those missing B-sides. In the meantime, consider this a beautiful and essential addition to your collection. August 29, 2007
| Chuck Berry's Chess Box |
| If money isn't an issue, this remains the best Chuck Berry collection available |
Apart from Berry's musical contributions, which were formidable, he brought a sense of playful theatricality that was key in defining early on that rock `n' roll, whatever else it was, was fun. Many of the early rock `n' rollers were great, great showmen in a way that few today aspire to be. Most contemporary performers rely on light shows, gimmicks, and props for their shows, but several early performers were precisely that: performers. To this day few guitarists have been as much fun to watch as Berry, not just during his legendary duck walks, but in a myriad of minor antics onstage.
But most of all, Chuck Berry has established a legacy of great, great songs. Most people know that the lone rock `n' roll song put on Voyager's data disc for any extraterrestrial who happens upon it was none other than Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode." Perhaps one day it will be as big a hit in Alpha Centauri as it has been on earth. What many today may not know is just how much very great music he produced. In fact, his string of hits outstrips nearly any of his contemporaries other than Elvis. His notorious stint in prison probably kept him from charting a few more hits (that he transported an underage girl across state lines is undeniable, but it is hard today to realize how vigorously he was prosecuted by St. Louis authorities and he certainly seems innocent of incitation to prostitution charges), but he eventually recovered from his ordeal to generate a second run of hits in the sixties.
Luckily, though in my and others' opinion Berry is not today given the credit he deserves for his major role in creating rock `n' roll, he has been exceedingly well served by a host of absolutely first rate anthologies. What I would like to do here is map out the five Chuck Berry collections I would most recommend. Each has its virtues and none any vices and it would be very hard to go wrong with any of them. I do think a couple of choices are better than others. Here are the main Chuck Berry collections available today:
CHESS BOX--If price is no consideration and you want almost all of the great music that Chuck Berry, this is unquestionably the one to get. The 3-CD set collects over 70 songs and has every one of the songs that the vast majority of music fans will have heard, all the way to his Christmas hit "Run Rudolph Run." There are a few cuts that are less than essential, but no current collection gives such a great view of his work as a whole, except for the complete collection of his Chess work, but in my opinion it collects too much that is of at most secondary interest.
ANTHOLOGY--Chess released this superb 2-CD culling from the larger CHESS BOX. Though less than half the price of the box, it collects over two-thirds of the songs, though without the Christmas songs that I frankly find endearing. But if you are willing to live without "Run Rudolph Run," this has just about all the Chuck Berry that most fans could crave.
GOLD--This is the big bargain of Chuck Berry anthologies. It contains all the major hits and familiar songs--though, again, without "Run Rudolph Run," which for some reason is omitted from almost all hits collections--and several nice extras as well. Though its 50 songs are slightly different than the one from the ANTHOLOGY, the heart of both collections is the same. If you don't own any Chuck Berry and are not sure that you want to spring the bucks for the CHESS BOX, this is probably the safest best. Lots of Chuck Berry for not very much money.
THE DEFINITIVE COLLECTION--Well, no, this isn't definitive, but this newest Chuck Berry is arguably the finest single-disc edition. But here is the problem: The GOLD collection is only a buck more and contains 20 more songs. Plus, one of the 30 songs on this disc is the dreadful gimmick song "My Ding-A-Ling," a slightly ribald and not very good song that was Berry's last hit in the early seventies. My own belief is that shorter anthologies are improved by its exclusion.
THE GREAT TWENTY-EIGHT--This is back in print after being unavailable for a long time. Unlike THE DEFINITIVE COLLECTION, this is pretty much definitive. Most anthologies basically take the songs off this disc and then add to it. It is canonical in a way that none of the other discs is. Nonetheless, while I think it deserves five stars simply for the role it has played in introducing fans to Berry and for its historical importance, I think it has been surpassed by other collections. Also, the sound on the later discs is better than what you will find on this disc. (Caveat: I own an earlier version of this disc, and it is not impossible that on its re-release the remastered versions of the recordings have been utilized.) Still, for a long, long time this was the Chuck Berry disc to get.
So, if I were buying my first Chuck Berry disc and couldn't afford the CHESS BOX, which one would I go for? I would probably go with the GOLD collection. It is cheap, contains a heap of songs, and has decent sound quality. Then, if I were sufficiently moved to the point where I wanted more, I would go for the CHESS BOX. That really is the best one to get, but there are some really inexpensive compromises that one can make and still get a lot of music by one of the towering figures in rock `n' roll. June 6, 2006
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