


And you might say it all boiled down to this single-disc distillation, which draws upon the vaults of major labels Universal and Sony. Taj Mahal - Tajs Blues (1968) Martin Scorsese Presents the Blues - J.B. Martin Scorsese Presents The Blues 08 Dvd Extras.rar Subttulos en castellano (ajustados para la versin XviD, en formato ssa ): Para verlos en un reproductor DvdDivX es conveniente convertirlos previamente a formato srt, utilizando SubtitleWorkshop o un programa similar. Even if all of that other material didn't make it clear, the absurdity of reducing the blues to a one-hour, 17-track album would be obvious anyway. Director Martin Scorsese (The Last Waltz, Raging Bull, Gangs of New York) pays homage to the Delta blues. The Derek Trucks Band - The Derek Trucks Band (1997) (Repost) Rob Thomas - Something to Be (2005) Little Walter - Boss Blues Harmonica (1986) Bruce Conte - Bullet Proof (2002) Clarence Spady - Just Between Us (2008) V.A.

Musician Corey Harris travels through Mississippi and on to West Africa, exploring the. But the way one judges this disc may depend upon whether it is trying to be "the best of the blues" or "the best of 'The Blues.'" It hasn't much hope of being the former, but as a one-CD sampler of the five-CD set, it does just fine. One of the most unique and intimate concerts from the British blues revival of the 1960s was the Blues and Gospel Train, filmed in a suburb of Manchester, England. At the very least, it contains many indisputably classic blues performances by some of the indisputably major blues artists. In 2011 we posted an excerpt featuring Muddy Waters singing You Can’t Lose What You Ain’t Never Had.

Purists may object reasonably that it covers a very wide range, from the rural blues of Robert Johnson to the Southern rock of the Allman Brothers Band and the - what can one call it? - designer blues of Keb' Mo'. #MARTIN SCORSESE PRESENTS THE BLUES DVD TORRENT SERIES#īut that is in keeping with the series of films on which the five-CD set and this highlights disc are based. If the album doesn't really work as a collection, despite the individual talents and performances included, that may suggest that "the blues" has long-since become an umbrella term covering many different musical styles, not all of which work well together.
