James Cotton - Best of The Verve Years
by John Marchant
Best Of The Verve Years captures James Cotton in peak form blasting
out 20 tracks of rowdy Chicago Blues. Cotton apprenticed on harp in the
Delta playing with Sonny Boy Williamson as a teenager
and later writing some songs for Sam Phillip's Sun Label (including 'Cotton Crop Blues' with Pat Hare-- who
penned "I'm Going To Murder My Baby" and later did time in the state pen
for the infraction). Moving to Chicago, Cotton joined Muddy Waters' band
taking on harp in the tradition of Junior Wells and Little Walter.
Manager Albert Grossman helped Cotton strike a deal with
Verve putting together a band which complimented his raw vocal style and
searing harmonica breaks. This band was chock full o' vibrant characters
including guitarist Luther Tucker who was run out of Memphis by the cops
at the age of nine and drummer Sam Lay who shot his own pecker by hastily
pulling a pistol on a stagebound assailant.
Verve Years (recorded March '67 through December
'68) condenses Cotton's first three LPs for Verve: The James Cotton
Blues Band, Pure Cotton and Cotton In your Ears. This
tasty cd consistently yields raunchy tunes including "Jelly, Jelly", "The
Creeper", "Blues In My Sleep"
and Cotton's take on classics such as "Knock
On Wood", "Sweet Sixteen", and "Good Time Charlie".
The Best of the Verve Years is an indispensible
collection of James Cotton which gets down to the nitty gritty of the
blues.
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