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Paul Butterfield Blues Band
A slew of albums by young white men out of their minds in love with music made by older black men came from both sides of the Atlantic during the mid-1960s, but two records really laid the groundwork for the decade's blues revival--the self-titled releases by John Mayall's Bluesbreakers out of London and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band out of Chicago. Both bands were led by harmonica-blowing vocalists; both featured ascending guitar gods--Eric Clapton with Mayall and Mike Bloomfield with Butterfield. Butterfield's ensemble, however, came of age closer to the roots of the music. The rhythm section heard on the group's 1965 debut was hired away from Howlin' Wolf, and Butterfield, while still in his early 20s when the album shipped, was already a familiar face on the Windy City's club circuit. "Born in Chicago" opens the album on a gritty note that never flags through this 11-track landmark. The slashing duo guitars of Bloomfield and Elvin Bishop and Butterfield's flash harp helped make Muddy Waters fathomable for a new audience and, decades later, it's still easy to understand how. --Steven Stolder more
- From: Amazon
- Posted: Aug-20-2008
Chicago Blues Masterpiece
Along with Earl Hooker's "The Moon Is Rising", this album is a Chicago Blues masterpiece. Though the lead singer and harmonica player is white, his singing is more than credible and his harmonica playing is excellent. Guitarist Michael Bloomfield plays some incendiary lead guitar, and was taken...
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- Posted: Apr-28-2008
PLAY LOUD!
This was an amazing album when it was released in 1965, and it is now. While the vinyl seems superior to the CD [I have 2 copies of the vinyl]they are both amazing and full of energy. There is a note on the back of the original album cover advising to play loud for maximum effect. That is just as...
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- Posted: Jan-21-2008
Don't believe the "East/West" hype--get this one instead.
The general critical consensus seems to be that the PBBB's second album, "East/West," is the one to get, but I disagree. I own both, and I find that this, the band's first release, is much better than album #2. The songs here are played with more intensity and focus (the band is "tighter," as...
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- Posted: Sep-05-2007
Yawn...
this white boy blues stuff is so over-done. every band like this from this era all sound the same: boring, watered-down, stuck-in-the-same-groove, white-boy, schlock. pure torture!! sure, the PBBB, John Mayall, Clapton, etc, all did their part by bringing the underlying music (real blues) to the...
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- Posted: Jul-18-2007
Mike Bloomfield
I say they don't make music like this anymore.Its a twist of Rolling Stones an Cream and for Mike Bloomfield, to me he is one of the best in his field. So if you like the Stones or Cream you will like this, enjoy.
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- Posted: Jul-03-2007
Deserves the Hall of Fame
I echo anybody that says this is one of the great albums ever. Butter and Bloomer are transcendent. This album and any good Muddy Waters anthology belong at the top of any blues collection. Can't say enough about it. But there is one important point. Online there is a petition to get Paul...
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- Posted: Apr-23-2007
butterfield 1965
this is the best butterfield/bloomfield album.plenty of mikes stinging telecaster on this one.get this cd first.then east- west,mike is great here too.
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- Posted: Mar-17-2007
He was born in Chicago, in nineteen and forty-one
Well, actually Paul was born in '42, but as he later realized, "two" doesn't rhyme with "gun."This was the first electric blues album I ever bought - and it's still my favorite. Paul Butterfield's gritty singing and wild, dirty harp solos, Sam Lay's impeccably tight drumming, and Mike...
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- Posted: Feb-16-2007
Bob from Los Angeles is right
I got the digital remaster from the UK along with East-West, and I have no regrets. The sound is far superior, and the price was actually less than if you bought both albums separately. For any big blues fans, these albums are as essential as Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton, Mayall's A Hard Road...
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- Posted: Jan-10-2007
GREAT BLUES RECORD
THIS RECORD HAVE GREAT SONGS WITH FEELING AND INTENSITY BUT THE SOUND COUD BE BETTER, PAUL BUTTERFIELD ITS A GREAT HARMONIC PLAYER AND IN THIS DISC BRINGS GREAT PERFORMANCES AND MIKE BLOOMFIELD IT`S GREAT TOO. IF YOU LIKE THE BLUES AND YOU`RE STARTING A COLLECTION YOU SHOULD BUY IT.
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