John Lee Hooker - The Definitive Collection
Facts
| Artist(s) | John Lee Hooker |
| Studio | Hip-O Records |
| Release Date | May 23, 2006 |
| UPC Code | 602498797501 |
| Buy this item | $9.97 at Amazon.com As of Sep 6 20:44 EDT (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Original recording remastered |
Tracks
- Boogie Chillen
- Hobo Blues
- Crawlin' King Snake
- John L's House Rent Boogie
- Leave My Wife Alone
- I'm In The Mood
- Walkin' The Boogie
- Sugar Mama
- Dimples
- Boom Boom
- It Serves You Right To Suffer
- One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer
- The Waterfront
- I'm Bad Like Jesse James
- The Motor City Is Burning
- Think Twice Before You Go
- Backbiters And Syndicaters
- Burning Hell
- The Healer
- I'm In The Mood
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User Reviews
Average user review:| American music |
I don't even have anything to say.
I took a look at the reviews below and can't add a single thing except just to express my heartfelt agreement with them and to recommend this CD to anybody that comes along. So read the reviews below and buy this amazing collection of legendary John Lee Hooker's music. April 21, 2008
| Excellent overview |
There are dozens of mediocre Hooker-compilations out there, many of which only cover his output for one particular label, but here you get almost all of the Hook's best and best-known songs, from his sparse 40s recording of "Boom Boom" to his modern-day collaborations with Santana and Bonnie Raitt.
I wouldn't have chosen the stylistically challenged "The Healer" to represent the album of the same name, and a single CD can't quite hold all of John Lee Hooker's best songs, but this is still one of the finest compilations of its kind currently on the market. The sound is terrific, the liner notes are fine, and songs like "Dimples", "Boom Boom", "I'm Bad Like Jesse James", "It Serves You Right To Suffer", and "Think Twice Before You Go" are all part of the fabric of the blues.
In time you'll want to hear John Lee Hooker's extraordinarily gritty live album from the Café au Go Go, and ALL of his magnificent 50s and 60s waxings for the Vee-Jay label - available on the Tomato albums "The Early Years" vol. I and II - but everybody's gotta start somewhere. And this collection is quite as good as the other five-star, single-disc Hooker-compilation out there, Rhino's "The Very Best of John Lee Hooker", and while the Rhino label's rather more pricey two-disc "Ultimate Collection (1948-1990)" is a bit closer to actually being definitive, this is still a very, very good place to start. Perhaps even the best. January 13, 2008
| The King of the Boogie |
| Boom Boom - Boogie Chillen |
| A true bluesman for the blues lover |
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