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Showing posts with label Chicken Heads: A 50-Year History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicken Heads: A 50-Year History. Show all posts

Monday, May 15, 2017

Bobby Rush's 'Chicken Heads' box set wins Blues Music Award in Memphis












BOBBY RUSH’S CHICKEN HEADS BOX SET ON OMNIVORE
TAKES HOME “BEST HISTORICAL ALBUM” HONOR
IN BLUES MUSIC AWARDS 
Grammy Award-winning blues legend’s career compilation
spans 50 years and more than 20 labels



MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Chicken Heads: A 50-Year History of Bobby Rush box set, on Omnivore Recordings, won Best Historical Album at the Blues Foundation’s Blues Music Awards (BMAs), held at the Cook Convention Center in Memphis on May 11. The BMAs are recognized as the highest honor given to blues musicians, and are awarded by the vote of Blues Foundation members.
Nominated in multiple BMA categories for his new music throughout the night, Bobby Rush earlier this year also took home the Best Traditional Blues Grammy® for his latest release, Porcupine Meat. His lengthy career was the subject of the BMA-winning Chicken Heads, Omnivore’s four-CD, decades-spanning overview project. 
The set contains over five hours of music culled from more than 20 labels including Rush’s Checker, Galaxy, and Jewel sides, through Philadelphia International, Malaco/Waldoxy, LaJam, and Urgent cuts, as well as material from his own Deep Rush label. Chicken Heads tells the story of Bobby Rush: unfiltered, unedited and unbelievable. 



Bobby Rush, 1951
The 32-page, full-color booklet is filled with photos, ephemera, liner notes from Bill Dahl and testimonials from friends and fans including Mavis Staples, Keb’ Mo’, Elvin Bishop, Denise LaSalle, Leon Huff, Al Bell, and many more. 
Produced by Rush himself along with Omnivore’s co-founder and Grammy®-winning producer Cheryl Pawelski; Jeff DeLia, Rush’s manager; and long-time publicist Cary Baker, Chicken Heads traces the bluesman’s career, from 1964’s “Someday” to the title track, from 1979 collaborations with Gamble & Huff to tracks from 2004’s FolkFunk. With mastering and restoration handled by Grammy® winner Michael Graves, Bobby’s vintage recordings have never sounded better.
According to Omnivore’s Pawelski, “When you’ve played with Elmore James, Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, and Jimmy Reed, you must be on to something. When you’ve had a multi-generational career in music, spanning blues, soul and funk, that’s something else.”  
# # #
  



Chicken Heads co-produders Jeff DeLia, Cheryl Pawelski, Bobby Rush
and Cary Baker

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Bobby Rush 4-CD box set 'Chicken Heads' collects 50 years and 20+ labels










50 YEARS OF MISSISSIPPI BLUES LEGEND BOBBY RUSH
— CULLED FROM MORE THAN 20 LABELS — 
COMING ON FOUR DISCS FROM OMNIVORE RECORDINGS
ON NOVEMBER 27, 2015
Chicken Heads: A 50-Year History of Bobby Rush box set
contains nearly five hours of music with 32-page booklet, noted by Bill Dahl, with quotes from Mavis Staples, Keb’ Mo’, Elvin Bishop, Leon Huff, Al Bell and more.
“Bobby Rush is among the most treasured blues singers of all time. Because when the blues saints go marching in, Bobby Rush will be in that number.” —Leon Huff


Bobby Rush (Photo by James Patterson)
Bobby Rush
(Photo by James Patterson)
LOS ANGELES, Calif. — When you’ve played with Elmore James, Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, and Jimmy Reed, you must be on to something. When you’ve had a multi-generational career in music, spanning blues, soul and funk, that’s something else. 
Bobby Rush’s incredible half century of recorded music is ready to be devoured by those who’ve never tasted and those who want another helping on Chicken Heads: A 50-Year History of Bobby Rush, due out November 27, 2015 on Omnivore Recordings
Nearly 100 tracks from the three-time Grammy® nominee’s storied career are finally collected in this unprecedented set. Including his Checker, Galaxy, and Jewel sides through Philadelphia International, Malaco/Waldoxy, LaJam, and Urgent cuts, as well as material from his own Deep Rush label, Chicken Heads tells the story of Bobby Rush: unfiltered, unedited and unbelievable. With almost five hours of music on four CDs, Chicken Heads traces his career from 1964’s “Someday” through the title track, from 1979 collaborations with Gamble & Huff to tracks from 2004’s FolkFunk
The 32-page, full-color booklet is filled with photos, ephemera, liner notes from Bill Dahl and testimonials from friends and fans including Mavis Staples, Keb’ Mo’, Elvin Bishop, Denise LaSalle, Leon Huff, Al Bell, and many more. With mastering and restoration by Grammy® winner Michael Graves, Bobby’s vintage recordings have never sounded better.
Born in Homer, La. in 1933, Rush cut his musical teeth in the Pine Bluff, Ark. area with the likes of Elmore James and Big Moose Walker. A move to Chicago in the 1950s put him in the company of Muddy Waters and Jimmy Reed, and led to sessions at the city’s Chess Records. 1971’s “Chicken Heads” proved his breakthrough, notching #34 on the Billboard R&B chart. He since recorded for a variety of labels and relocated in the 1980s to the Deep South, where he became one of the kings of the Chitlin’ Circuit. His crossover began largely in the early 2000s when he was included in the Martin Scorsese-produced, Clint Eastwood-directed The Blues documentary for PBS. Since then, he’s received three Grammy® nominations and 41 Blues Music Award nominations (of which he’s won ten, including 2015’s award for B.B. King Entertainer of the Year). He performed with Dan Aykroyd and the Roots on The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon in 2014, and appeared in the documentary film Take Me to the River, pairing blues and soul legends with young artists. At the age of 80, he still performs more than 200 shows all over the world.
Mavis Staples attests, “He’s been a longtime friend, an honorable man, and my father loved him. He’s a joyful, happy person, and that rubs off on you when you run into him — you can’t help but feel good when you’re around Bobby. He’s always been respectful of me and my sisters, and he was like a son to Pops. I’m a big fan.”
According to Rush, “It’s very exciting. Truly I feel honored that someone would think enough of me to do this. The record side of it is the glory side of me and that’s the side that I want people to know and I’m grateful for that. I’m happy that someone thought before I leave this land to tell my story. I’m proud of it and flattered about it. I want the world to know that this is my first time and I want to say it for people to be enthused about me. I’m not enthused about all of the songs because at the time I didn’t think they were all good. But after you become a ‘legend,’ you look back and it all looks good. There are things you had in the can you didn’t want to put out, and then you get asked what you have in the can that’s never been heard to put it out.”
As annotator Dahl comments at the opening of his essay: “Blues never get funkier than when Bobby Rush swaggers up to the mic and lets fly with his homespun truisms. He’s always in motion, always smiling, always on fire as his skintight band cooks up irresistible elastic grooves behind him.” 
So, prepare to get funky with Chicken Heads: A 50-Year History of Bobby Rush
DISC ONE:
1. Someday
2. Let Me Love You

3. Sock Boo Ga Loo

4. Much Too Much

5. Gotta Have Money

6. Camel Walk

7. Wake Up

8. The Things That I Used To Do 
9. Let It All Hang Out
10. Just Be Yourself

11. Done Got Good To Me, Part 1 
12. Chicken Heads

13. Mary Jane

14. Gotta Be Funky

15. Gotta Find You Girl

16. Bowlegged Woman, Knock-Kneed Man Part 1
17. Niki Hoeky
18. She’s A Good ’Un

19. Get Out Of Here, Part 1

20. I’m Still Waiting

21. She Put The Whammy On Me 
DISC TWO:
1. I Wanna Do The Do
2. Hey Western Union Man

3. Let’s Do It Together

4. Be Still

5. Talk To Your Daughter

6. Sue (Single Version)

7. Making A Decision (Single Version)
8. Bertha Jean (Single Version)

9. What’s Good For The Goose Is Good For The Gander
10. Dr. Funk
11. Never Would Have Thought It

12. A Man Can Give It (But He Can’t Take It)
13. Nine Below Zero

14. I Ain’t Studdin’ You (Single Version)

15. You, You, You (Know What To Do)

16. Time To Hit The Road Again

17. I’m Gone

18. Handy Man

19. One Monkey Don’t Stop No Show 
DISC THREE:
1. Hen Pecked
2. She’s So Fine

3. Buttermilk Bottom 
4. Big Fat Woman

5. Booga Bear

6. Hoochie Man

7. Scootchin’

8. He Got My Attention
9. Always On My Mind
10. Wet Match

11. Undercover Lover

12. Tough Titty

13. When She Loves Ya

14. Evil (Live)

15. Ride In My Automobile
16. River’s Invitation 
DISC FOUR:
1. Feeling Good (Pt. 1) 
2. Night Fishin’
3. Take Me To The River 
4. Help Me
5. Howlin’ Wolf

6. Uncle Esau

7. What’s Goin’ On
8. I Got 3 Problems
9. Blind Snake
10. Show You A Good Time 
11. Down In Louisiana

12. You Just Like A Dresser 
13. Swing Low
14. Another Murder In New Orleans –
Dr. John And Bobby Rush With Blinddog Smokin’
15. Sittin’ Here Waitin’ –
Bobby Rush With Blinddog Smokin’
16. If That’s The Way You Like It – Bobby Rush With Blinddog Smokin’
17. Push And Pull – Featuring Frayser Boy
18. Dedication (Excerpt)