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  1. 4. Aug. 2019 · 60th anniversary reissue of John Lee Hooker's debut on Riverside Records. All-analog mastering from the original stereo tapes by Kevin Gray at Coherent Audio. Features "Pea Vine Special," "Bundle Up and Go," "Tupelo Blues" and more. Pressed on 180-gram vinyl at Memphis Record Pressing. ℗ 2019 & ©1959 Craft Recordings, a division of Concord ...

  2. John Lee Hooker’s debut on Riverside Records is perhaps the truest to his Mississippi roots. Unaccompanied and playing acoustically instead of his usual amplified guitar, he turned in a wonderfully varied set of deep Delta blues, moans, boogies, one field holler, and even a bit of hokum. Some songs are autobiographical, others reworkings of blues standards–all stamped with the hauntingly ...

  3. 22. Aug. 2023 · Among them was an essential track for every John Lee Hooker playlist, ” Crawlin’ King Snake ,” which Hooker first recorded in 1949 – and copyrighted. Hence when rock came along and the ...

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  4. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1959 Vinyl release of "The Country Blues Of John Lee Hooker" on Discogs.

  5. John Lee Hooker (August 22, 1912 [1] or 1917 [4] [5] – June 21, 2001) was an American blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist. The son of a sharecropper, he rose to prominence performing an electric guitar-style adaptation of Delta blues that he developed in Detroit. Hooker often incorporated other elements, including talking blues and early ...

  6. John Lee Hooker’s true love was the electric guitar, and he played it like no one else on earth. However, in 1959, acoustic so-called “country blues” was what white, authenticity-obsessed audiences wanted to hear, so that’s what Riverside wanted from Hooker when he went into the studio to record this album, released in January 1960.

  7. Blues. Length. 36:56. Label. Vee-Jay. Producer. Esmond Edwards. The Folk Lore of John Lee Hooker is an album by blues musician John Lee Hooker, released by Vee-Jay Records in August or September 1961. [1] [2] Hooker recorded most of the songs on January 4, 1961, in Chicago, with two recorded live at the Newport Folk Festival June 25, 1960.