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Audio CD review:
Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all B.B. King reviews here, or go back to the B.B. King tabs.
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| B.B. King - Live & Well |
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Band: B.B. King Title: Live & Well Rating: Release Date: 25 October, 1990 Media: Audio CD Tracks: 1: Don't Answer The Door 2: Just A Little Love 3: My Mood 4: Sweet Little Angel 5: Please Accept My Love 6: I Want You So Bad 7: Friends 8: Get Off My Back Woman 9: Let's Get Down To Business 10: Why I Sing The Blues |
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Customer Reviews A Must! Although I own this album on vinyl, this is the first I have ever see of it on cd. This album is actually two separate recordings in different places. Side one of the LP, or the first five tracks, are deffinately the smoother and in general, a cooler venue. It has some of his cool early guitar riffs as it's right out of the sixties, and LIVE at that! The quality on vinyl, although not as crisp as something recorded digitally, has kind of a club sound to it so it sounds actually live. "Please Accept My Love" is deffinately a must listen to!.
Live AND Well: What An Interesting Concept!
Mix of studio and concert material is mostly thumbs-up The best of the live material is the menacing "Don't Answer the Door," which King shouts over a pulsing organ line and punctuates with some wicked guitar licks. "Sweet Little Angel," a staple of his songbook, is also great, especially vocally. B. B's still one of the best blues singers around, and on "Angel" he shows off the power and sense of vulnerability he can deliver simultaneously. There are a couple of clunkers in the live offerings, however. "Please Accept My Love" has another strong vocal, but the tune is hampered by sappy lyrics. "Just a Little Love" is a sing-along that doesn't offer a whole lot musically or lyrically. The studio work includes a genuine classic, "Why I Sing the Blues," which is surely the definitive statement on that subject. King here is again in complete command as he storms through verse after powerful verse and unleashes some of his best solos on the record, if not ever. "I Want You So Bad" is a dark blues, mournful in the way that his hit "The Thrill Is Gone" was. Again, not all of the studio material is as strong as these two tunes, suggesting that King wasn't completely on his game for this date. Still, there are plenty of good moments on the recording, making it a good representation of B. B. 's late '60s work, when he was working toward crossover status.
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