The Modern, Chess & Veejay Singles Collection 1949-1962
Acrobat
There have been so many reissues of John Lee Hooker's amazingly prolific recording career, especially those of his early recording career, to which a four-disc set from Acrobat is another addition. The title of this collection, "The Modern, Chess & Veejay Singles Collection 1949-1962," fairly describes its contents. It is not an exhaustive reissue of Hooker's early recordings, but one simply organized around those commercially issued 78s and 45 of Hooker's music that was released on the Bihari Brothers Modern label, recordings issued on Chess, and then a good selection of Hooker' s Vee-Jay recordings ending in 1962. That date likely reflects that those recordings were not affected by European copyright law changes that extended the period for copyright of recordings for recordings issued in 1963 and after, so that they were not in the public domain in Europe.
This is one of a number of recent public domain reissues that have compiled complete A and B sides of various musical performers. In the case of performers like Eddie Boyd who have not exactly been over-represented by reissues, this has been very valuable and hopefully made more folks aware of the artist's importance. In Hooker's case where so much has been reissued, and whose importance is undeniable, perhaps there is less value, but one cannot dismiss having such a nice chunk of his early, pre-Endless Boogie recordings available. The value of this release is such even if some of Hooker's most gripping recorded performances are excluded because they were issued on other labels like Specialty, King, Sensation, and other small labels, some of which might have been unavailable for copyright or contractual reasons per the liner notes from Paul Watts.
So we get to hear the original classic Hooker recordings including "Boogie Chillun," "Hobo Blues," "Crawlin' King Snake," "Drifting From Door To Door," "Women in My Life," "I'm in the Mood," "It's My Own Fault," "Dimples," and "Boom Boom," some heard in several versions. The chronological presentation of the material allows one to hear the evolution of Hooker's recordings, including the increasing presence of small groups backing him, along with a few recordings from performances he made originally for the folk market that Vee-Jay released. Generally the sound is quite acceptable although a couple of the tracks apparently came from worn originals. It is also fascinating to listen to the early Vee-Jay recordings where the group and Hooker sometimes seemed not totally together. There is simply too much music here to go into depth about specific performances but it does provide a generous sampling of his music directed towards the commercial record buying public.
Full discographical information is provided and Paul Watts provides an nice overview of Hooker's biography and the recordings on this which as he observes provides a substantial chunk of the recordings during the period he established his reputation and made some of his most influential recordings. If one wanted a collection of early John Lee Hooker, one could do far worse this convenient set.
I received from a publicist. This review appeared in the November-December 2016 Jazz & Blues Report (Issue 369) although on the initial posting of the issue was labelled a DVD. Here is the King of the Boogie from the sixties doing one of his more famous numbers.
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