Don't Turn Me from Your Door

Don't Turn Me from Your Door, subtitled John Lee Hooker Sings His Blues, is an album by blues musician John Lee Hooker, compiling six songs originally recorded for De Luxe Records in 1953 along with six new tunes recorded in 1961. Atco Records released the album in 1963.

Don't Turn Me from Your Door
Compilation album by
ReleasedFebruary 1963 (1963-02)
Recorded
  • Cincinnati, Ohio, July 1953
  • Miami, Florida, July 1961
GenreBlues
Length31:53
LabelAtco
ProducerHenry Stone
John Lee Hooker chronology
The Big Soul of John Lee Hooker
(1963)
Don't Turn Me from Your Door
(1963)
John Lee Hooker on Campus
(1963)

Reception

AllMusic reviewer Steve Leggett stated: "you really can't go wrong with this guy  he always delivered what he was supposed to deliver with no frills and no fuss, generating a kind of endless boogie that, no matter what embellishments producers added in, was always poised between old country blues and its next-generation urban blues counterpart. None of Hooker's signature songs are here, but one still gets a solid sense of him, and truthfully, the only bad Hooker is no Hooker at all".[1]

Track listing

All compositions credited to John Lee Hooker

  1. "Stuttering Blues" – 2:13
  2. "Wobbling Baby" – 2:32
  3. "You Lost a Good Man" – 2:50
  4. "Love My Baby" – 2:35
  5. "Misbelieving Baby" – 2:30
  6. "Drifting Blues" – 3:33
  7. "Don't Turn Me from Your Door" – 2:40
  8. "My Baby Don't Love Me" – 2:58
  9. "I Ain't Got Nobody" – 2:28
  10. "Real Real Gone" – 2:22
  11. "Guitar Lovin' Man" – 2:38
  12. "Talk About Your Baby" – 2:33

Recorded in Cincinnati, Ohio in July, 1953 (tracks 1, 2, 4, 8, 10 & 11) and Miami, Florida in July, 1961 (tracks 3, 5-7, 9 & 12)

Personnel

gollark: The gradient descent thing is basically moving down hills by going in whichever direction is slightly lower, except it's not hills it's higher-up regions in several million-dimensional abstract spaces of some kind.
gollark: (Apparently you can maybe get somewhat better performance from image recognition neural networks by feeding them "DCT" things which also conveniently happen to be what JPEG images contain, but almost nobody does this?)
gollark: Also that.
gollark: The image is just 3 matrices of R/G/B values.
gollark: There are 129057189471894718247141491807401825701892912 random details and things but that's the gist of it.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.