I have no idea, but when I need to get an idea of the relative quality of a certain artist's albums, I use
I streamed some performances of these three, but the recordings themselves sounded less than stellar. BB King probably sounded the best, but this just represents a small sampling of each artist. I think that many of these were recorded from live performances, so that is probably the issue. I know that mid 50’s to mid 60’s recording technology can result in a great sound, but I guess that you have to value that at the front end and most of this probably was getting circulated via AM radio and they sound pretty compressed. Some Elvis recordings also sounded less than impressive. Thanks for the link. I’ll take a look around. |
@vonhelmholtz I am very fond of a BB King disk called Take It Home. Partly because he is backed up by the Jazz Crusaders. Also, and this may sound strange, BB's Chrismas LP called A Christmas Celebration of Hope, has some of his best vocal work ever. Give them a listen as see if you agree, Cheers. |
@vonhelmholtz - What streaming service are you using? |
Nearly anyone, I learned to start with the early stuff, when they made their reputations, and a bit after the best. i.e. BB King fell into a kind of caricature of himself: not playing much, not the whole song, a few short display intervals and let the band do most of the rest. Early stuff, he rips it up thru and thru. You didn't mention Buddy Guy, stream some Buddy, you will want some Buddy. |