Sunday, 8 December 2013

Great Rock Albums of 1979: The Blues Brothers- A Briefcase Full of Blues

This album taught me a valuable lesson: Never judge an album until you've heard it all the way through. I first saw the Blues Brothers on the old Saturday Night Live show and seeing that the band was fronted by Dan Ackroyd and John Belushi, I expected it to be some kind of satirical take on music. After all, Gilda Radner introduced us to punk rock star Candy Slice on the show. As a result, I was somewhat disappointed at first when the music didn't have me rolling on the floor with laughter.
That changed one night in early 1979. I was at the roller rink, skating hard in an attempt to ignore all the disco being played when "Soul Man" came blasting out of the speakers. My first thought was, "This song is good" and then I recognised the voice of John Belushi as Jake Blues. The song immediately went to number one in my mind and a week later, I got to hear the album "Briefcase Full of Blues" in it's entirety. I was hooked!
The other thing that made me a bit wary of this album was that it was a blues album. I remember John Belushi saying in an interview that he had been getting tired of rock and roll and that was why he turned to the blues. Back then, I was way too naive to realise that rock music came out of the blues.  This album taught me different and I'm forever grateful for it. "Briefcase Full of Blues" is a bonefide classic album with some great tracks other than "Soul Man." "Rubber Biscuit," Messin' With the Kid" and "Hey Bartender" all do it for me. What helps make this album so good is the fact that Ackroyd and Belushi were able to round up some of the best studio musicians that were around at the time, including Paul Schaffer, who most people know from the David Letterman Show.
Track Listing:
1. Opening: I Can't Turn You Loose
2. Hey Bartender
3. Messin' With the Kid
4. (I Got Everything I Need) Almost
5. Rubber Biscuit
6. Shot Gun
7. Groove Me
8. I Don't Know
9. Soul Man
10. B- Movie Boxcar Blues
11. Flip Flop and Fly
12. Closing: I Can't Turn You Loose
Jake Blues (John Belushi)- lead vocals
Elwood Blues(Dan Ackroyd)- backing vocals, lead vocals on "Rubber Biscuit," harmonica
Matt "Guitar" Murphy- lead guitar
Steve "The Colonel" Cr0pper- lead guitar
Donald "Duck" Dunn- bass
Paul "The Shiv" Schaffer- keyboards
Steve "Getdwa" Jordan- drums
Lou "Blue Lou" Marini- alto and tenor saxophones
Tom "Triple Scale" Scott- alto and tenor saxophones
Tom "Bones" Malone- tenor and baritone saxophones, trombone, trumpet
Alan "Mr Fabulous" Rubin- Trumpet
This album opened my eyes to the wonderful world of the blues and forced me to appreciate its influence on rock. It also showed me that even people who have a reputation for being funny, can be serious singers too. A great album that helped me to see there are more types of good music out on the horizon.
Next post: Blondie- Parallel Lines
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