- Electric Mud
:"This article concerns the album Electric Mud by the artist
Muddy Waters . For the band Electric Mud seeGus Lambros and Electric Mud ".Infobox Album |
Name = Electric Mud
Type =Album
Artist =Muddy Waters
Released =October 5 ,1968
Recorded = May 1968
Genre = Blues
Length = 36:54
Label = Chess, MCA
Producer =Marshall Chess
Reviews =
*Allmusic Rating|1.5|5 [http://wm10.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:fifexqugldte link]
Last album = "Brass and the Blues"
(1967)
This album = "Electric Mud"
(1968)
Next album = "After the Rain"
(1969)"Electric Mud" is a 1968 album by
Muddy Waters which mixed blues withpsychedelic rock arrangements on several of Waters' classic songs. The album was a major commercial success, but wasn't well received by critics. It has at once been considered a groundbreaking experiment and a commercial sell-out.Background
Riding the wave of the folk-rock boom of the 1960s as well as a revived interest in the original form spurred by the success of blues-based rockers such as
The Rolling Stones , Waters had found a mainstream white audience after more than two decades of jukeboxrace music hits onChess Records and playing theChicago blues club circuit. In an attempt to capitalize on this new popularity, producerMarshall Chess (son of label founder and ownerLeonard Chess ) convinced Waters to move away from the blues style he had become famous for and "modernize" his sound.Recording
Chess brought in a host of studio musicians and worked up
Jimi Hendrix -inspiredpsychedelic rock arrangements of several Waters classics, some new material, and a cover of the Stones' "Let's Spend the Night Together ".Reception
The resulting disc, titled "Electric Mud" and featuring a back-cover photo of a dressed-down Waters holding a customized guitar of the sort favored by psychedelic rockers, was an immediate and severe critical debacle. Blues purists decried the move, rock critics derided the playing as derivative and pretentious, and psychedelic devotees were not generally impressed. Even Waters himself would eventually dismiss the album as "not real blues" (Waters also revealed that he played little, if any, guitar on the album). ["Waters dismisses album, and didn't play guitar on it." http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6106175 - Retrieved 13/09/07]
John Paul Jones, the Led Zeppelin bassist, has cited this album as the inspiration behind the song "Black Dog".
The album was a commercial success by blues standards, however, selling over 100,000 copies and reaching #127 on the Billboard Pop Albums chart; adventurous progressive FM stations picked up the album. Despite its success, the album was
out of print by the end of the 1970s.The album took on a second life in the 1990s, as hip-hop artists, notably
Chuck D of Public Enemy, discovered the album as a source of fresh samples and funky arrangements. The album was released on a deluxe CD edition in 1996; in 2003 many of the original players reunited with Chuck D to record a rap tribute to "Electric Mud" (these sessions were filmed as part of thePBS television series "The Blues"). In June 2003 the reunited band, fronted by Chuck D, headlined theChicago Blues Festival playing new versions of several tracks from the "Electric Mud" sessions.Track listing
# "
I Just Want to Make Love to You "
# "I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man "
# "Let's Spend the Night Together "
# "She's Alright"
# "Mannish Boy "
# "Herbert Harper's Free Press News"
# "Tom Cat"
# "The Same Thing"Album personnel
*
Pete Cosey - lead guitar
*Phil Upchurch - guitar
*Roland Faulkner - rhythm guitar
*Louis Satterfield - bass
*Gene Barge - tenor saxophone
*Charles Stepney - organ
*Morris Jennings - drums
*Muddy Waters - vocals ["Album personnel" http://www.furious.com/PERFECT/muddywaterselectricmud.html - 3rd para. - Retrieved 13/09/07]References
External links
* [http://www.muddywaters.com/disc.html/ www.muddywaters.com]
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