Live In Cook County Jail Download
- Listen free to B.B. King – Live In Cook County Jail (Introduction, Everyday I Have The Blues and more). 8 tracks (38:55). King has cut a lot of albums since the success of Live at the Regal. And, like the live shows they document, none of them are any less than solid and professional, hallmarks of King’s work aesthetic.
- Live in Cook County Jail is one of those great concerts that the record company was smart enough to be there to capture, documenting B.B. Firing on all cylinders.
- Nov 22, 2016 Recorded: September 10, 1970, Cook County Jail, Chicago, Illinois One of the best live blues albums of all time from the spokesman of the Blues. The record spent three weeks at the top of the Souls Albums chart and is listed in Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
- CHICAGO (WBBM NEWSRADIO) - A detainee at Cook County Jail has died of COVID-19, the sheriff’s office announced Monday, marking the first death of a detainee at the jail from the coronavirus.The 59-year-old man was pronounced dead Sunday at Stroger Hospital, where he had been hospitalized since March 30 after testing positive for the virus, the Cook County sheriff’s office said in a statement.
Review by Cub Koda
Live in Cook County Jail is one of those great concerts that the record company was smart enough to be there to capture, documenting B.B. Firing on all cylinders in front of an audience that's just damn happy for him to be there. Possibly the best live version of 'The Thrill Is Gone' of all its many incarnations, and rock solid renditions of. Here you can find bb king live in cook county jail shared files. Download B b king live in cook county jail 1971 from filefactory.com (276 B), B b king live in cook county jail 1971 vinyl flac zip from uploaded.to (5 MB) free from TraDownload.
B.B. King has cut a lot of albums since the success of Live at the Regal. And, like the live shows they document, none of them are any less than solid and professional, hallmarks of King's work aesthetic. But every so often B.B. truly catches fire; his playing and singing comes up an extra notch or two, and the result is a live album with some real sparks to it. Live in Cook County Jail is one of those great concerts that the record company was smart enough to be there to capture, documenting B.B. firing on all cylinders in front of an audience that's just damn happy for him to be there. Possibly the best live version of 'The Thrill Is Gone' of all its many incarnations, and rock solid renditions of classics like 'Everyday I Have the Blues,' 'How Blue Can You Get?,' 'Sweet Sixteen' and a great medley of '3 O'Clock Blues' and 'Darlin' You Know I Love You.' Live at the Regal is still the champ of King's live output, but many say this runs a close second, and they just may be right.
Title/Composer | Performer | Time | Stream |
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1 | 01:51 | Amazon | |
2 | Peter Chatman / Memphis Slim | 01:42 | Amazon |
3 | 05:12 | Amazon | |
4 | Pluma Davis / Plummer Davis / Davis Plumber / Denyse Plummer / Jules Taub | 09:53 | Amazon |
5 | 06:18 | Amazon | |
6 | Joe Josea / B.B. King | 04:21 | Amazon |
7 | 06:19 | Amazon | |
8 | B.B. King / Sam Ling | 03:08 | Amazon |
Concert: Friday the 13th – Cook County Jail | ||||
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Live album by Jimmy McGriff with George Freeman + O'Donel Levy/Lucky Thompson | ||||
Released | 1973 | |||
Recorded | October 13, 1972 | |||
Venue | Cook County Jail, Chicago, ILL | |||
Genre | Jazz | |||
Length | 40:44 | |||
Label | Groove Merchant GM 515 | |||
Producer | Sonny Lester | |||
Jimmy McGriff chronology | ||||
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Lucky Thompson chronology | ||||
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Concert: Friday the 13th – Cook County Jail is a live split album recorded at Cook County Jail in October 1972 featuring performances by jazz organist Jimmy McGriff's Quintet with guitarists George Freeman and O'Donel Levy, and saxophonist Lucky Thompson's Quartet which was released on the Groove Merchant label.[1][2][3]
Live In Cook County Jail Download Free
Reception[edit]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [4] |
Allmusic's Scott Yanow said: 'This album contains two separate sets that were both performed before inmates at the Cook County Jail one day in 1972. Organist Jimmy McGriff and his quintet performs his lengthy two-part 'Freedom Suite,' generating a great deal of heat. Lucky Thompson, mostly on soprano, jams on three standards .. Thompson's hot playing (particularly on 'Cherokee') makes this album worth searching for'.[4]
Track listing[edit]
All compositions by Jimmy McGriff except where noted
- 'Freedom Suite (Part 1) – 8:58
- 'Freedom Suite (Part 2) – 15:45
- 'Green Dolphin Street' (Bronisław Kaper, Ned Washington) – 5:51
- 'Everything Happens to Me' (Matt Dennis, Tom Adair) – 5:41
- 'Cherokee' (Ray Noble) – 4:29
Personnel[edit]
Tracks 1 & 2:
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- Jimmy McGriff – organ
- George Freeman, O'Donel Levy – guitar
- Mickey Bass – bass
- Marion J. Booker – drums
Tracks 3–5:
- Lucky Thompson – tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone
- Cedar Walton – electric piano
- Sam Jones – bass
- Louis Hayes – drums
References[edit]
Cook County Jail Inmate Search
- ^Payne, D. Jimmy McGriff Discography, accessed April 4, 2018
- ^Jazzlists: Groove Merchant Records 500 Series, accessed April 4, 2018
- ^Jazzlists: Album details, accessed April 4, 2018
- ^ abYanow, Scott. Friday the 13th at the Cook County Jail – Review at AllMusic. Retrieved April 4, 2018.