Junior Wells - SouthSide Blues Jam
  • 01 Stop Breaking Down
  • 02 I Could Have Had Religion
  • 03 I Just Want To Make Love To You (Just Make Love To Me)
  • 04 Lend Me Your Love
  • 05 Long Distance Call
  • 06 Blues For Mayor Daley
  • 07 In My Younger Days
  • 08 Trouble Don't Last Always featuring Buddy Guy
  • 09 It's Too Late Brother
  • 10 Warmin' Up
  • 11 Love My Baby
  • 12 I Could Have Had Religion (alternate take)
  • 13 Rock Me
  • 14 Lexington Movies
  • 15 Got To Play The Blues
  • 01 Stop Breaking Down
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (03:33) [8.64 MB]
  • 02 I Could Have Had Religion
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (03:10) [7.73 MB]
  • 03 I Just Want To Make Love To You (Just Make Love To Me)
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (04:50) [11.55 MB]
  • 04 Lend Me Your Love
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (07:04) [16.66 MB]
  • 05 Long Distance Call
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (03:16) [7.97 MB]
  • 06 Blues For Mayor Daley
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (05:58) [14.14 MB]
  • 07 In My Younger Days
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (04:06) [9.89 MB]
  • 08 Trouble Don't Last Always featuring Buddy Guy
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (07:48) [18.36 MB]
  • 09 It's Too Late Brother
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (06:12) [14.2 MB]
  • 10 Warmin' Up
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (01:16) [2.91 MB]
  • 11 Love My Baby
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (03:39) [8.36 MB]
  • 12 I Could Have Had Religion (alternate take)
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (07:38) [17.49 MB]
  • 13 Rock Me
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (05:52) [13.43 MB]
  • 14 Lexington Movies
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (01:19) [3.03 MB]
  • 15 Got To Play The Blues
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (07:37) [17.44 MB]
Biography
radio promo contact: Kevin Johnson
promo@delmark.com

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We have tried to capture on this album what a listener would hear any monday night at Theresa’s Blues Bar (now defunct) at 48th and Indiana on Chicago’s Southside. The blue Monday regulars, includng Buddy Guy are joined by the late Otis Spann, the greatest blues pianist of his generation, making his last studio appearance and to whom this album is respectfully dedicated by Junior, the musicians, and…the Delmark staff.


1) Stop Breaking Down (Sonny Boy Williamson I) (03:30)
2) I Could Have Had Religion (03:04)
3) I Just Want to Make Love to You (Willie Dixon)
(04:45)
4) Baby, Please Lend Me Your Love (06:59) (Peter Chatman,
aka Memphis Slim)
5) You Say You Love Me (Long Distance Call) (03:11)
(Muddy Waters)
6) Blues for Mayor Daley (05:52)
7) I Wish I Knew What I Know Now (In My Younger Days)
(Sonny Boy Williamson) (04:02)
8) Trouble Don't Last Always (Eddie Jones, aka Guitar
Slim) (07:48)
9) It's Too Late Brother (Al Duncan) (6:09)
10) Warmin' Up (1:12)
11) Love My Baby (4:16)
12) I Could Have Had Religion (alternate) (7:35)
13) Rock Me (Muddy Waters) (5:49)
14) Lexington Movies (1:16)
15) Got To Play The Blues (7:37)

(9-15) bonus CD tracks on deluxe reissue

recorded December 30, 1969 (2, 7, 9, 12-15) and January 8, 1970 (1, 3-6, 8, 10, 11)

all songs by Amos Blakemore, aka Junior Wells except noted


Junior Wells, vocals, harmonica
Buddy Guy, guitar (1, 3-6, 8, 10, 11), vocal (8)
Louis Myers, guitar (1, 2, 3, 7, 9, 12-15)
Otis Spann, piano
Earnest Johnson, bass
Fred Below, drums

On tracks 1 & 3 Louis is on the left channel, Buddy is on the right.

Liner notes

Hoodoo Man Blues (612) was the first LP recording of modern Chicago blues by a working band. Sam Charters said he did the Chicago blues Vanguard anthology of three volumes because of that classic album. This resulted in Junior's contract to Vanguard and Mercury, so we couldn't record Junior again for three year. Junior called me to say he was free to do another record before signing with Atlantic.

On this second record, I think we again captured what a listener might hear at Theresa's Lounge (4815 S. Indiana). When issued in 1970 many reviewers thought it was a gathering of musicians who didn't often work together even though this was Junior's regular band.

I was pleasantly surprised when the first guy who showed up at the studio was Otis Spann whom Junior had run into the night before and invited him to the session. This turned out to be Otis's last record date and I’m glad we recorded a trio piece while waiting for the rest of the band to arrive. It’s on Blues Piano Orgy (626).
We owe thanks to Theresa Needham's massive contribution to the blues for paying decent wages to the artists that played her club and putting up with occasional lapses. She worked fourteen to sixteen hours a day. I remember one night, for some reason, I had bugged a patron. When we left, Theresa, Junior, Buddy and a bunch of others made sure we got to our car all right. I always felt secure in the south and west side clubs because the owners didn't want anything to happen that might jeopardize their license. I felt even more secure at T's.

Blue Mondays took place at a lot of Chicago clubs but the sitters-in at Theresa’s included Sam Lawhorn and Lefty Dizz (both of whom worked with Junior when Buddy was away), Little Walter, Eddie Clearwater, Byther Smith, Billy Boy Arnold, Mojo Buford, Muddy Jr., Phil Guy, James Cotton, King Edward, and Carl Jones.

Carl Jones may be an unfamiliar name, but was a colorful character. He was a standup singer who had recorded for Mercury in 1945 accompanied by a Richard M. Jones group of ‘20s-era musicians and Lonnie Johnson (who sang one line). One of his tunes on that date referred to "Indiana & 49th" - one block from where Theresa's was twenty years later. CJ was the bartender at T's but he was also issuing blues 45s (including Hound Dog Taylor's first record) on his CJ label. Sadly, his master tapes disappeared when he passed away, apparently stolen from his apartment above T's club.
There seemed to be two kinds of blues in Chicago: the mellow Mississippi-born Muddy-Wolf-Junior kind, which we called south side style. And then the stinging west side sounds of Magic Sam, Luther Allison, and Buddy Guy.
You get my point? Junior was able to blend his stuff with Buddy's.

The Southside Blues Jam sessions present Junior's knack for making up lyrics during a performance, notable on the second and sixth tracks (from the original LP release) and the eleventh and last tracks on this expanded CD. I don't think anyone ever caught Junior doing the non-verbal vocals as heard on track 9 and 17.

Shortly after the album's release, Junior toured Europe with the Rolling Stones. Thanks to Dick Waterman, Junior and Buddy spent a lot of time making better money on the road. (Dick entered the blues booking business after discovering Son House - and only left it when his secretary, Bonnie Raitt needed a fulltime manager.)

Everybody knows Otis Spann was Muddy Waters' greatest pianist but I should mention that guitarist Louis Myers was, with Fred Below, a member of The Aces, Little Walter's accompanists. They also appeared on Junior's first records for the States label (now available on Blues Hit Big Town (640)

Junior had a way of making his singing confidential, somehow sounding as if he were only singing to you.

Bob Koester, September 2014

Junior Wells, vocals, harmonica
Buddy Guy, guitar (1, 3-6, 8, 10, 11), vocal (8)
Louis Myers, guitar (1, 2, 3, 7, 9, 12-15)
Otis Spann, piano
Earnest Johnson, bass
Fred Below, drums

Recorded December 30, 1969 (2, 7, 9, 12-15) and January 8, 1970

On tracks 1 & 3 Louis is on the left channel, Buddy is on the right.
55
  • Members:
    Bass – Earnest Johnson, Drums – Fred Below, Guitar – Buddy Guy
  • Sounds Like:
    Chicago Blues
  • Influences:
    Delta Blues
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