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T-Bone Walker - The Talkin' Guitar (1990)

Posted By: Designol
T-Bone Walker - The Talkin' Guitar (1990)

T-Bone Walker - The Talkin' Guitar (1990)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 334 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 158 Mb | Scans ~ 65 Mb
Electric Texas Blues, Jump Blues | Label: Blues Encore | # CD 52010 | 01:09:06

Modern electric blues guitar can be traced directly back to this Texas-born pioneer, who began amplifying his sumptuous lead lines for public consumption circa 1940 and thus initiated a revolution so total that its tremors are still being felt today.

Few major postwar blues guitarists come to mind that don't owe T-Bone Walker an unpayable debt of gratitude. B.B. King has long cited him as a primary influence, marveling at Walker's penchant for holding the body of his guitar outward while he played it. Gatemouth Brown, Pee Wee Crayton, Goree Carter, Pete Mayes, and a wealth of other prominent Texas-bred axemen came stylistically right out of Walker during the late '40s and early '50s. Walker's nephew, guitarist R.S. Rankin, went so far as to bill himself as T-Bone Walker, Jr. for a 1962 single on Dot, "Midnight Bells Are Ringing" (with his uncle's complete blessing, of course; the two had worked up a father-and-son-type act long before that).

Aaron Thibeault Walker was a product of the primordial Dallas blues scene. His stepfather, Marco Washington, stroked the bass fiddle with the Dallas String Band, and T-Bone followed his stepdad's example by learning the rudiments of every stringed instrument he could lay his talented hands on. One notable visitor to the band's jam sessions was the legendary Blind Lemon Jefferson. During the early '20s, Walker led the sightless guitarist from bar to bar as the older man played for tips.

In 1929, Walker made his recording debut with a single 78 for Columbia, "Wichita Falls Blues"/"Trinity River Blues," billed as Oak Cliff T-Bone. Pianist Douglas Fernell was his musical partner for the disc. Walker was exposed to some pretty outstanding guitar talent during his formative years; besides Jefferson, Charlie Christian – who would totally transform the role of the guitar in jazz with his electrified riffs much as Walker would with blues, was one of his playing partners circa 1933.

T-Bone Walker split the Southwest for Los Angeles during the mid-'30s, earning his keep with saxophonist Big Jim Wynn's band with his feet rather than his hands as a dancer. Popular bandleader Les Hite hired Walker as his vocalist in 1939. Walker sang "T-Bone Blues"with the Hite aggregation for Varsity Records in 1940, but didn't play guitar on the outing. It was about then, though, that his fascination with electrifying his axe bore fruit; he played L.A. clubs with his daring new toy after assembling his own combo, engaging in acrobatic stage moves – splits, playing behind his back – to further enliven his show.

Capitol Records was a fledgling Hollywood concern in 1942, when Walker signed on and cut "Mean Old World" and "I Got a Break Baby" with boogie master Freddie Slack hammering the 88s. This was the first sign of the T-Bone Walker that blues guitar aficionados know and love, his fluid, elegant riffs and mellow, burnished vocals setting a standard that all future blues guitarists would measure themselves by.

Chicago's Rhumboogie Club served as Walker's home away from home during a good portion of the war years. He even cut a few sides for the joint's house label in 1945 under the direction of pianist Marl Young. But after a solitary session that same year for Old Swingmaster that soon made its way on to another newly established logo, Mercury, Walker signed with L.A.-based Black & White Records in 1946 and proceeded to amass a stunning legacy.

The immortal "Call It Stormy Monday (But Tuesday Is Just as Bad)" was the product of a 1947 Black & White date with Teddy Buckner on trumpet and invaluable pianist Lloyd Glenn in the backing quintet. Many of Walker's best sides were smoky after-hours blues, though an occasional up-tempo entry – "T-Bone Jumps Again," a storming instrumental from the same date, for example – illustrated his nimble dexterity at faster speeds.

Walker recorded prolifically for Black & White until the close of 1947, waxing classics like the often-covered "T-Bone Shuffle" and "West Side Baby," though many of the sides came out on Capitol after the demise of Black & White. In 1950, Walker turned up on Imperial. His first date for the L.A. indie elicited the after-hours gem "Glamour Girl" and perhaps the penultimate jumping instrumental in his repertoire, "Strollin' With Bones" (Snake Sims' drum kit cracks like a whip behind Walker's impeccable licks).

Walker's 1950-54 Imperial stint was studded with more classics: "The Hustle Is On," "Cold Cold Feeling," "Blue Mood," "Vida Lee" (named for his wife), "Party Girl," and, from a 1952 New Orleans jaunt, "Railroad Station Blues," which was produced by Dave Bartholomew. Atlantic was T-Bone Walker's next stop in 1955; his first date for them was an unlikely but successful collaboration with a crew of Chicago mainstays (harpist Junior Wells, guitarist Jimmy Rogers, and bassist Ransom Knowling among them). Rogers found the experience especially useful; he later adapted Walker's "Why Not" as his own Chess hit "Walking by Myself." With a slightly more sympathetic L.A. band in staunch support, Walker cut two follow-up sessions for Atlantic in 1956-57. The latter date produced some amazing instrumentals ("Two Bones and a Pick," "Blues Rock," "Shufflin' the Blues") that saw him dueling it out with his nephew, jazzman Barney Kessel (Walker emerged victorious in every case).

Unfortunately, the remainder of Walker's discography isn't of the same sterling quality for the most part. As it had with so many of his peers from the postwar R&B era, rock's rise had made Walker's classy style an anachronism (at least during much of the 1960s). He journeyed overseas on the first American Folk Blues Festival in 1962, starring on the Lippmann & Rau-promoted bill across Europe with Memphis Slim, Willie Dixon, and a host of other American luminaries. A 1964 45 for Modern and an obscure LP on Brunswick preceded a pair of BluesWay albums in 1967-68 that restored this seminal pioneer to American record shelves.

European tours often beckoned. A 1968 visit to Paris resulted in one of his best latter-day albums, I Want a Little Girl, for Black & Blue (and later issued stateside on Delmark). With expatriate tenor saxophonist Hal "Cornbread" Singer and Chicago drummer S.P. Leary picking up Walker's jazz-tinged style brilliantly, the guitarist glided through a stellar set list.

Good Feelin', a 1970 release on Polydor, won a Grammy for the guitarist, though it doesn't rank with his best efforts. A five-song appearance on a 1973 set for Reprise, Very Rare, was also a disappointment. Persistent stomach woes and a 1974 stroke slowed Walker's career to a crawl, and he died in 1975.

No amount of written accolades can fully convey the monumental importance of what T-Bone Walker gave to the blues. He was the idiom's first true lead guitarist, and undeniably one of its very best.

Biography by Bill Dahl, Allmusic.com

T-Bone Walker - The Talkin' Guitar (1990)



T-Bone Walker - The Talkin' Guitar (1990)


Tracklist:

01. Bobby Sox Blues (2:39)
02. Call It Stormy Monday (3:01)
03. Lonesome Woman Blues (2:23)
04. Too Much Trouble Blues (2:39)
05. Hypin' Women Blues (2:49)
06. Vacation Blues (2:54)
07. So Blues Blues (3:08)
08. Strollin' With Bones (2:30)
09. You Don't Love Me (2:55)
10. Travelin' Blues (2:20)
11. Evil Hearted Woman (2:36)
12. Glamour Girl (2:44)
13. The Hustle (2:30)
14. Alimony Blues (2:40)
15. Say! Pretty Baby (2:25)
16. I'm About To Lose My Mind (2:22)
17. Cold Cold Feeling (3:10)
18. Blues Is A Woman (2:47)
19. I Got The Blues (2:55)
20. Blue Mood (2:50)
21. Railroad Station Blues (2:41)
22. Play On Little Girl (2:31)
23. T-Bone Blues Special (2:36)
24. Two Bone And A Pick (2:50)
25. Mean Old World (4:08)


Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 6 from 9. April 2015

EAC extraction logfile from 3. October 2018, 23:08

T-Bone Walker / The Talkin' Guitar

Used drive : TEAC CD-W548E Adapter: 1 ID: 0

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

Read offset correction : 12
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 : Installed external ASPI interface

Used output format : User Defined Encoder
Selected bitrate : 320 kBit/s
Quality : High
Add ID3 tag : No
Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\Exact Audio Copy 1.b6\Exact Audio Copy\Flac\flac.exe
Additional command line options : -V -8 -T "Genre=%genre%" -T "Artist=%artist%" -T "Title=%title%" -T "Album=%albumtitle%" -T "Date=%year%" -T "Tracknumber=%tracknr%" -T "Comment=%comment%" %source%


TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
1 | 0:00.48 | 2:39.37 | 48 | 12009
2 | 2:40.10 | 3:00.73 | 12010 | 25582
3 | 5:41.08 | 2:23.22 | 25583 | 36329
4 | 8:04.30 | 2:39.15 | 36330 | 48269
5 | 10:43.45 | 2:49.25 | 48270 | 60969
6 | 13:32.70 | 2:53.68 | 60970 | 74012
7 | 16:26.63 | 3:07.40 | 74013 | 88077
8 | 19:34.28 | 2:29.45 | 88078 | 99297
9 | 22:03.73 | 2:55.32 | 99298 | 112454
10 | 24:59.30 | 2:20.25 | 112455 | 122979
11 | 27:19.55 | 2:36.08 | 122980 | 134687
12 | 29:55.63 | 2:44.37 | 134688 | 147024
13 | 32:40.25 | 2:29.55 | 147025 | 158254
14 | 35:10.05 | 2:39.53 | 158255 | 170232
15 | 37:49.58 | 2:24.60 | 170233 | 181092
16 | 40:14.43 | 2:22.35 | 181093 | 191777
17 | 42:37.03 | 3:10.27 | 191778 | 206054
18 | 45:47.30 | 2:46.45 | 206055 | 218549
19 | 48:34.00 | 2:55.33 | 218550 | 231707
20 | 51:29.33 | 2:50.37 | 231708 | 244494
21 | 54:19.70 | 2:41.03 | 244495 | 256572
22 | 57:00.73 | 2:31.32 | 256573 | 267929
23 | 59:32.30 | 2:36.10 | 267930 | 279639
24 | 62:08.40 | 2:50.25 | 279640 | 292414
25 | 64:58.65 | 4:07.58 | 292415 | 310997


Range status and errors

Selected range

Filename L:\Audio\SWF\CD\T-Bone Walker\T-Bone Walker - The Talkin' Guitar (1990 Blues Encore, CD 52010, EEC)\T-Bone Walker - The Talkin' Guitar.wav

Peak level 84.2 %
Extraction speed 6.2 X
Range quality 100.0 %
Test CRC AA7DA2D5
Copy CRC AA7DA2D5
Copy OK

No errors occurred


AccurateRip summary

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Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [353731EA] (AR v2)
Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [4569FC54] (AR v2)
Track 4 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [F41E31AC], AccurateRip returned [749C1AC5] (AR v2)
Track 5 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [71F5470C] (AR v2)
Track 6 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [D5910C9C], AccurateRip returned [1DB30659] (AR v2)
Track 7 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [951BACFC], AccurateRip returned [EC661C21] (AR v2)
Track 8 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [42CC8923] (AR v2)
Track 9 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [FEF2AAA6] (AR v2)
Track 10 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [047BF463], AccurateRip returned [E58D3E17] (AR v2)
Track 11 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [24C99355], AccurateRip returned [7C872D4F] (AR v2)
Track 12 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [E6F1A005], AccurateRip returned [2BAE6C00] (AR v2)
Track 13 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [F4B08536], AccurateRip returned [A62C4CF3] (AR v2)
Track 14 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [D4C8A988], AccurateRip returned [E106CFC8] (AR v2)
Track 15 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [EFD267F6], AccurateRip returned [EE16CF75] (AR v2)
Track 16 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [EB06F2EF] (AR v2)
Track 17 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [0B48CE94] (AR v2)
Track 18 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [EDACE3AC] (AR v2)
Track 19 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [FA4B6EC3], AccurateRip returned [E26939DA] (AR v2)
Track 20 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [6593B3EF] (AR v2)
Track 21 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [2B1C906C], AccurateRip returned [E88B408C] (AR v2)
Track 22 cannot be verified as accurate (confidence 5) [18911028], AccurateRip returned [B3C06736] (AR v2)
Track 23 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [DDC1BB8E] (AR v2)
Track 24 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [24DDD78D] (AR v2)
Track 25 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [E4783B34] (AR v2)

12 трек(и) скопированы точно
13 трек(и) не удалось проверить на точность

Some tracks could not be verified as accurate

End of status report

–– CUETools DB Plugin V2.1.6

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Submit result: rHcxnOeTwQ9cPIjn9Y6I8hy6Jz4- has been confirmed
Track | CTDB Status
1 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
2 | (11/12) Accurately ripped
3 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
4 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
5 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
6 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
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18 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
19 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
20 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
21 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
22 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
23 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
24 | (12/12) Accurately ripped
25 | (12/12) Accurately ripped


==== Log checksum 024BCD44039A603E863C537B17482262C269A46EAEB32AE3A4148A61A0E89B6A ====

foobar2000 1.2 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2018-10-04 18:21:11

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Analyzed: T-Bone Walker / The Talkin' Guitar
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR10 -3.64 dB -17.27 dB 2:39 01-Bobby Sox Blues
DR13 -4.32 dB -20.61 dB 3:01 02-Call It Stormy Monday
DR11 -3.67 dB -17.22 dB 2:23 03-Lonesome Woman Blues
DR11 -3.65 dB -17.08 dB 2:39 04-Too Much Trouble Blues
DR13 -1.58 dB -17.19 dB 2:49 05-Hypin' Women Blues
DR12 -3.59 dB -17.50 dB 2:54 06-Vacation Blues
DR13 -4.72 dB -22.12 dB 3:08 07-So Blues Blues
DR10 -1.50 dB -12.77 dB 2:30 08-Strollin' With Bones
DR10 -1.49 dB -14.17 dB 2:55 09-You Don't Love Me
DR11 -5.72 dB -20.06 dB 2:20 10-Travelin' Blues
DR10 -3.24 dB -16.79 dB 2:36 11-Evil Hearted Woman
DR11 -2.25 dB -16.41 dB 2:44 12-Glamour Girl
DR10 -2.87 dB -15.32 dB 2:30 13-The Hustle
DR10 -4.83 dB -17.26 dB 2:40 14-Alimony Blues
DR10 -3.77 dB -15.71 dB 2:25 15-Say! Pretty Baby
DR11 -5.20 dB -18.04 dB 2:22 16-I'm About To Lose My Mind
DR11 -3.49 dB -18.42 dB 3:10 17-Cold Cold Feeling
DR12 -4.11 dB -18.76 dB 2:47 18- Blues Is A Woman
DR12 -3.88 dB -18.23 dB 2:55 19-I Got The Blues
DR12 -4.44 dB -19.01 dB 2:50 20-Blue Mood
DR10 -4.08 dB -16.93 dB 2:41 21-Railroad Station Blues
DR12 -4.30 dB -19.61 dB 2:31 22-Play On Little Girl
DR13 -4.02 dB -18.86 dB 2:36 23-T-Bone Blues Special
DR11 -3.93 dB -17.18 dB 2:50 24-Two Bone And A Pick
DR14 -4.48 dB -21.48 dB 4:08 25-Mean Old World
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Number of tracks: 25
Official DR value: DR11

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 16
Bitrate: 676 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================

T-Bone Walker - The Talkin' Guitar (1990)

T-Bone Walker - The Talkin' Guitar (1990)

All thanks to original releaser

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