Saturday, September 11, 2021

Sunnyland Slim Legacy of the Blues


This is a review that I wrote in Fall 2006 and published in the November-December 2006 Jazz & Blues Report (Issue 288). I will be posting other reviews from this every few days in next couple weeks.

Universal Music on the Verve label has released the second batch of CDs in its series, The Sonet Blues Story. These sides make available albums from the 1970s that were issued in Europe on the Sonet label although some were imported in the United States and some were even issued in the US, as GNP-Crescendo issued The Legacy of the Blues recordings stateside. This latest batch includes more from that series along with other albums that Samuel Charters had produced for Sonet. I will be posting these reviews every few days.

Albert Luandrew, the legendary Chicago pianist known as Sunnyland Slim, is represented by some 1974 solo recordings recorded in Stockholm for The Legacy of the Blues. With his unique touch and his vibrato-laden vocals, Slim is heard hear on ten solid performances that includes such staples of his repertoire as She’s Got a Thing Goin’ On, Bessie Mae and She Used to Love Me

Slim’s strong two-fisted piano and singing is displayed on the rocking Gonna Be My Baby while he gets down in the alley on Couldn’t Find a Mule singing about “Oh Captain,” and his own recasting of Woman I Ain’t Gonna Drink No More Whiskey” singing about how his woman and whiskey take advantage of him laying down firmly played but spare bass while pounding out some strong right hand lines. The longest track Days of Old recalls his early days where he experienced the harsh conditions of a southern black laborer in the dark segregation days. 

Slim remained a foundation of the Chicago blues scene until he died in 1995 at the age of 88 and these recordings are a welcome reminder of his well-documented legacy.

I likely received my review copy from Jazz & Blues Report. Here is Sunnyland Slim performing.

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