Floyd Dixon Time Brings About A Change - Celebrating The Legends (CD + 3-DVD Japan)
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- catalog number:CDBSMF7025
- weight in Kg 0.19
Floyd Dixon: Time Brings About A Change - Celebrating The Legends (CD + 3-DVD Japan)
A special CD and 3-DVD set of recordings of the historic live event that took place in June 2006, some two months before the death of famed blues pianist Floyd Dixon, the original performer of the Blues Brothers song "Hey Bartender," is now being re-released! In addition to the two now deceased pianist legends Pine Top Perkins and Henry Gray, many others have participated, including Kim Wilson, Johnny Tucker and Kid Ramos! The three DVDs, which include live recordings as well as plenty of rare bonus material, also won the BMA in 2014.
Disc 1: CD (Live), Disc 2: DVD (Documentary), Disc3: Bonus DVD (Live: Day 1), Disc4: Bonus DVD (Live: Day 2)
Article properties:Floyd Dixon: Time Brings About A Change - Celebrating The Legends (CD + 3-DVD Japan)
Interpret: Floyd Dixon
Album titlle: Time Brings About A Change - Celebrating The Legends (CD + 3-DVD Japan)
Genre Blues
Label HIGH JOHN
Artikelart CD
EAN: 4546266219603
- weight in Kg 0.19
| Dixon, Floyd - Time Brings About A Change - Celebrating The Legends (CD + 3-DVD Japan) CD 1 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | Don't Lose Your Cool | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 02 | Do You Wanna Dance | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 03 | Henry's House Rocker | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 04 | Sweet Home Chicago | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 05 | Dust My Broom | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 06 | Down In Mississippi | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 07 | Come Back Baby | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 08 | Since I Lost My Baby | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 09 | Hole In The Wall | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 10 | Cold Cold Feeling | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 11 | I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 12 | Glory Of Love | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 13 | Caledonia | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 14 | Time Brings About A Change | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 15 | Call Operator 210 | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 16 | Rita | Floyd Dixon | ||
| 17 | So Long | Floyd Dixon | ||
Floyd Dixon
The Lone Star state sired three of the top R&B pianists to record for Los Angeles-based Aladdin Records in the postwar era. Charles Brown, Amos Milburn, and Floyd Dixon all enjoyed great success for the Mesner brothers' label; Dixon was something of a stylistic combination of the other two, combining Milburn's proclivity for houserocking boogies with Brown's subtly shaded blue melancholy.
Dixon (born February 8, 1928) hailed from Marshall, Texas, and was inspired by a blues pianist he witnessed as a lad named Roadmaster. He moved to L.A. in his teens and found encouragement in his musical endeavors from an older white gent named Mark Hurley and Charles Brown, who took the young pianist under his wing. Floyd won amateur contests at the Million Dollar Theater and the Barrelhouse, and ventured down to Modern Records to cut what he believed was a demo. The Biharis thought it good enough to release, and in 1949 Dixon scored his first hit on Modern with that very tune, Dallas Blues (Mississippi Blues followed suit later that year).
Dixon joined forces with ex-Three Blazers bassist Eddie Williams to form the Brown Buddies, and with Floyd singing, they hit for Al Patrick's Supreme logo with Broken Hearted, again in 1949.
It was on to Don Robey's Peacock logo in Houston for four Dixon 78s that were quickly sold to Aladdin (Sad Journey Blues was a 1950 hit). That's how Floyd ended up on Aladdin, where he cut in the good company of Johnny Moore's Three Blazers, by then without Charles Brown but with Oscar Moore on the other guitar, Johnny Miller on bass, and Ellis Walsh on drums. That line-up backed Dixon on his '51 hit Telephone Blues. With saxist Maxwell Davis added, they accompanied the pianist as he delighted a throng at the Shrine Auditorium in July of '51 for Frank Bull & Gene Norman's Blues Jubilee. Floyd was wilder than usual in this ribald atmosphere; the crowd hoots it up throughout the self-penned Baby Let's Go Down To The Woods, the Moores letting loose with some savory fret pyrotechnics.
After one more hit for Aladdin without the Blazers (Call Operator 210) in 1952, Floyd moved on to Specialty, then Atlantic's short-lived Cat imprint (where he waxed the original Hey Bartender in 1954), Combo, Checker, Cash, Ebb, Swingin', Dodge, Kent, Duchess, Reva, Chattahoochee, and more without ever smelling the R&B charts again. There were long stretches where Floyd was absent from the scene, but he was back to make an acclaimed 1996 CD for Alligator. He died of cancer on July 26, 2006 in L.A., where he originally staked his claim to stardom.
Bill Dahl
Chicago, Illinois

Ready to ship today, delivery time** appr. 1-3 workdays

Ready to ship today, delivery time** appr. 1-3 workdays

Ready to ship today, delivery time** appr. 1-3 workdays

Ready to ship today, delivery time** appr. 1-3 workdays

Ready to ship today, delivery time** appr. 1-3 workdays

Ready to ship today, delivery time** appr. 1-3 workdays




