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Recyclables
Elmore James Completism, Volumes I Through V (or VI)
I always knew I loved Elmore James, but not until Rhino let Robert
Palmer loose on him did I know how much--one of the great albums of
the '90s, The Sky Is Crying: The History of Elmore James
exemplifies the compiler's craft like some Trevor Herman Afropop
summum. Now two lesser recent comps replacing treasured earlier ones
have me considering Elmore James completism as a life option: Shake
Your Moneymaker: The Best of the Fire Sessions on Buddha and
James's entry in Virgin's/The Right Stuff's spotty-by-definition
Blues Kingpins series, which share 10 and 12 songs respectively
with Music Club's devilishly entitled The Sky Is Crying (Bobby
Robinson sessions in Chicago, New Orleans, and NYC) and Virgin's
deleted "Let's Cut It" (Bihari brothers in Mississippi,
Chicago, and L.A.). Only a madman would covet so much redundancy, but
I just played the unshared tracks back to back--plus all four "Dust My
Broom"s, why not?--and wasn't bored a minute. Even the new Virgin
(what genius decided to do without "My Best Friend," or lose the
"Let's Cut It" from "Dust My Broom"?) could whomp your joint or get
you through a traffic jam with the AC down. The Music Club has a
better (meaning different) "Dust My Broom" as well as piano on the
equally classic "It Hurts Me Too," the Buddha more muscle
overall. James was the original houserocker, a wilder party animal
than Little Richard, Jerry Lee, or any of the three W's. Augment
Rhino's (caveat: Not Music Club's) The Sky Is Crying (caveat:
not Rhino's Blues Masters) with whichever one of these you can
find cheapest, and proceed.
Village Voice, Sept. 30, 2003
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Nov. 11, 2003 |
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