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Jimmy Johnson - Tobacco Road (1978)

Posted By: countryfreak
Jimmy Johnson - Tobacco Road (1978)

Jimmy Johnson - Tobacco Road (1978)
EAC Rip | FLAC (Image) + CUE + LOG | 371 MB | + Covers
Genre: Blues/Modern Electric/Chicago Blues | Label: Storyville | Catalog Number: 8042 | Release Date: 1978
RAR 5% Rec. | Rapidshare + Filesonic

In many photographs of disco,Jimmy Johnson's recording career begins with the Delmark LPs Johnson's Whacks (1979) and North/South (1982).Tobacco Road, 1978 on the French label MCM appeared, but was the first blues album by Jimmy Johnson.It was recorded limited line up live (without audience!) golden slipper in Chicago with one on two guitars (Jimmy Johnson,David Matthews),bass (Ike Anderson) and drums (Dino Neal) of Marcelle Morgantini on 19 October 1977 in the Westside Club.Johnson with a high, soul infected voice sings and plays guitar in the tradition of three kings.He interpreted "Sweet Little Angel", by b.b.of Albert "Breaking Up Somebody's Home"."Look Over Yonder" comes from Elmore James.The title track of "Tobacco road",a classic,is known in versions by the Blues Magoos, Eric Burdon, Lou Rawls, Edgar winter, etc. On the 1997 reissue of Storyville records, four bonus tracks, an instrumental,two Wilson Pickett hits ("engine No.")located in addition to the eight original recordings ("Nine", "In The Midnight Hour"), which occupy the temporary home of Jimmy Johnson in the soul genre in the 1970s and the jazzy "take five" by Dave Brubeck, once again released later on Johnson's Whacks.The album features an hour of good Blues!–Bluesbreaker

––––––
Tracklist
––––––
1. Long About Midnight 7:08
2. Strange Things Happening 5:27_Play_
3. Look On Yonder Wall 3:36
4. I'm Crazy About My Baby 4:29
5. Tobacco Road 6:00_Play_
6. Breaking Up Somebody's Home 5:03
7. Sweet Little Angel 5:20
8. Three Times Chicago 4:43
9. Boe Ties Riff 4:55
10. Engine No. 9 5:13
11. Midnight Hour 4:10_Play_
12. Take Five 4:55

Personnel:
Jimmy Johnson - Guitar,Vocals
David Matthews - Guitar
Ike Anderson - Bass
Dino Neal - Drums

Jimmy Johnson - Tobacco Road (1978)

Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 3 from 29. August 2011

EAC extraction logfile from 18. October 2011, 22:31

Jimmy Johnson / Tobacco Road

Used drive : ASUS DRW-24B1LT Adapter: 3 ID: 0

Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No

Read offset correction : 6
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

Used output format : User Defined Encoder
Selected bitrate : 1024 kBit/s
Quality : High
Add ID3 tag : Yes
Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\Exact Audio Copy\FLAC\FLAC.EXE
Additional command line options : -6 -V -T "ARTIST=%artist%" -T "TITLE=%title%" -T "ALBUM=%albumtitle%" -T "DATE=%year%" -T "TRACKNUMBER=%tracknr%" -T "GENRE=%genre%" -T "COMMENT=%comment%" %hascover%–picture="%coverfile%"%hascover% %source% -o %dest%


TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
1 | 0:00.00 | 7:08.35 | 0 | 32134
2 | 7:08.35 | 5:27.35 | 32135 | 56694
3 | 12:35.70 | 3:36.50 | 56695 | 72944
4 | 16:12.45 | 4:29.60 | 72945 | 93179
5 | 20:42.30 | 6:00.50 | 93180 | 120229
6 | 26:43.05 | 5:03.55 | 120230 | 143009
7 | 31:46.60 | 5:20.60 | 143010 | 167069
8 | 37:07.45 | 4:43.70 | 167070 | 188364
9 | 41:51.40 | 4:55.15 | 188365 | 210504
10 | 46:46.55 | 5:13.40 | 210505 | 234019
11 | 52:00.20 | 4:10.30 | 234020 | 252799
12 | 56:10.50 | 4:54.65 | 252800 | 274914


Range status and errors

Selected range

Filename D:\MUSIK\Jimmy Johnson - Tobacco Road [FLAC] (1978)\Jimmy Johnson - Tobacco Road.wav

Peak level 99.2 %
Extraction speed 7.7 X
Range quality 100.0 %
Copy CRC E2119221
Copy OK

No errors occurred


AccurateRip summary

Track 1 not present in database
Track 2 not present in database
Track 3 not present in database
Track 4 not present in database
Track 5 not present in database
Track 6 not present in database
Track 7 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 1) [05860E74], AccurateRip returned [A94B6766] (AR v2)
Track 8 not present in database
Track 9 not present in database
Track 10 not present in database
Track 11 not present in database
Track 12 not present in database

1 Track(s) nicht als akkurat verifiziert
11 Track(s) nicht in der AccurateRip Datenbank vorhanden

No tracks could be verified as accurate
You may have a different pressing from the one(s) in the database

End of status report

==== Log checksum 97D0B6673C256469097271F946915035EE11705B6EED9EBA97D7AB89E3F87176 ====


AllMusic

BIO: Chicago guitarist Jimmy Johnson didn't release his first full domestic album until he was 50 years old. He's determinedly made up for lost time ever since, establishing himself as one of the Windy City's premier blues artists with a twisting, unpredictable guitar style and a soaring, soul-dripping vocal delivery that stand out from the pack.Born into a musical family (younger brother Syl Johnson's credentials as a soul star are all in order, while sibling Mack Thompson was Magic Sam's first-call bassist), Jimmy Thompson moved to Chicago with his family in 1950. But his guitar playing remained a hobby for years – he toiled as a welder while Syl blazed a trail on the local blues circuit. Finally, in 1959, Jimmy Thompson started gigging with harpist Slim Willis around the West Side. Somewhere down the line, he changed his surname to Johnson (thus keeping pace with Syl).Since there was more cash to be realized playing R&B during the 1960s, Jimmy Johnson concentrated on that end of the stylistic spectrum for a while. He led polished house bands on the South Side and West Side behind Otis Clay, Denise LaSalle, and Garland Green, also cutting an occasional instrumental 45. Johnson found his way back to the blues in 1974 as Jimmy Dawkins' rhythm guitarist. He toured Japan behind Otis Rush in 1975 (the journey that produced Rush's album So Many Roads – Live in Concert).With the 1978 release of four stunning sides on Alligator's first batch of Living Chicago Blues anthologies and the issue of Johnson's Whacks, his first full domestic set on Delmark the next year, Jimmy Johnson's star began ascending rapidly. North/South, the guitarist's 1982 Delmark follow-up, and the 1983 release of Bar Room Preacher by Alligator continued to propel Johnson into the first rank of Chicago bluesdom. Then tragedy struck: on December 2, 1988, Johnson was driving his band's van when it swerved off the road in downstate Indiana, killing bassist Larry Exum and keyboardist St. James Bryant.Understandably, Johnson, himself injured in the wreck, wasn't too interested in furthering his career for a time after the tragedy. But he was back back in the harness by the mid-'90s, cutting a solid set for Verve in 1994, I'm a Jockey, that spotlighted his blues-soul synthesis most effectively. Every Road Ends, recorded in France and released on Ruf, followed in 1999. A collaboration with his brother Syl appeared in the summer of 2002, the cleverly titled Two Johnsons Are Better Than One. Brothers Live, recorded by Jimmy Johnson and the Chicago Dave Blues Band featuring saxophonist Sam Burckhardt at Switzerland’s Basel Blues Festival in 2002, arrived in 2004.–by Bill Dahl

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