
This blues compilation is Volume 3 in an extensive blues series of CDs from Rhino which is slowly finding its way to my collection. The previous Texas blues compilation that appeared in this space focused on the southeastern part of the state, including Houston (that area is represented on the map below in pink/red). This compilation features artists from the central and northeastern parts of the state in a swath that includes Austin, the Dallas-Fort Worth area, and parts of East Texas (blue on the map).

Only two artists appear on both compilations: Albert Collins & Gatemouth Brown. It is hardly surprising that the part of the state known for creation of the Texas blues subgenre is on the eastern side, closest to Mississippi, birth of the blues. Chronologically arranged (for the most part), this disc takes us from early Texas blues with its similarity to Texas swing music, through the introduction of boogie and R&B influences in the '50s and '60s, culminating in the rise in the '80s of Stevie Ray Vaughan's scorching electric blues.
Excellent, detailed liner notes by writer and music critic Alan Govenar, author of Meeting the Blues: The Rise of the Texas Sound.
Peak on the US Billboard Top 200 chart: Did not chart
Tracks:
Song | Artist |
Year
|
|
1 | Matchbox Blues | Blind Lemon Jefferson | 1927 |
2 | Cravin' A Man Blues | Lilian Glinn | 1930 |
3 | Driftin' Blues | Charles Brown | 1945 |
4 | Short-Haired Woman | Lightnin' Hopkins | 1947 |
5 | Call It Stormy Monday | T-Bone Walker | 1947 |
6 | Lucy Mae Blues | Frankie Lee Sims | 1953 |
7 | Texas Hop | Pee Wee Crayton | 1948 |
8 | Please Send Me Someone To Love | Percy Mayfield | 1950 |
9 | Why Don't You Eat Where You Slept Last Night | Zuzu Bollin | 1952 |
10 | Hound Dog | Willie Mae "Big Mama" Thorton | 1953 |
11 | Okie Dokie Stomp | Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown | 1954 |
12 | The Freeze | Albert Collins & His Rhythm Rockers | 1958 |
13 | Ella Speed | Mance Lipscomb | 1960 |
14 | Down On Bending Knees | Johnny Copeland | 1962 |
15 | The Stumble | Freddy King | 1970 |
16 | C-Boy's Blues | The Fabulous Thunderbirds | 1979 |
17 | Flood Down In Texas | Stevie Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble | 1986 |
18 | Changing Neighborhoods | Anson Funderburgh & The Rockets | 1987 |
Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None, but I'm thankful to my friend Jim for introducing me to Stevie Ray Vaughan's solo work when he bought the Couldn't Stand The Weather album back in 1984. Seventeen year-old me probably said something along the lines of "Hey! That sounds like David Bowie's guitarist on the Let's Dance album!" I may be a little slow on the uptake, but at least I eventually made the connection.
Previously revisited for the blog:
Blues Masters Sampler (1993)
Volume 8: Mississippi Delta Blues (1993)