Blues The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808.html Fri, 26 Apr 2024 02:54:22 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb Champion Jack Dupree - St Claude And Dumaine (2002) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/24351-champion-jack-dupree-st-claude-and-dumaine-2002.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/24351-champion-jack-dupree-st-claude-and-dumaine-2002.html Champion Jack Dupree - St Claude And Dumaine (2002)

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1 	My Baby's Coming Home 	3:55
2 	You Rascal You 	4:14
3 	No Tomorrow 	5:00
4 	The Heart Of The Blues Is Sound 	5:25
5 	Hard Feeling 	6:11
6 	Blues From 1921 	5:34
7 	Don't Mistreat Your Woman 	6:16
8 	Mercy On Me 	5:04
9 	I'm A Gambling Man 	4:15
10 	A Good Woman Is Hard To Find 	3:58
11 	I Hate To Be Alone 	3:47
12 	I'm Growing Older Every Day 	4:14

 

New Orleans and Champion Jack. In my opinion, he's the best one to come up of the city that brought us Fats Domino, Dr. John, even the famous Louis Armstrong, although I might take that back where the man with the horn is concerned. In fact, I will. Second place ain't nothing to sneeze at, though. ---amazon.com

 

William Thomas Dupree, 4 July 1910, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, d. 21 January 1992, Hanover, Germany. (Dupree’s birth date is the matter of some conjecture and is sometimes listed as 23 July 1909). Orphaned in infancy, Dupree was raised in the Colored Waifs Home for Boys until the age of 14. After leaving, he led a marginal existence, singing for tips, and learning piano from musicians such as Willie ‘Drive-’em-down’ Hall. Dupree also became a professional boxer, and blended fighting with hoboing throughout the 30s, before retiring from the ring in 1940, and heading for New York. Initially, he travelled only as far as Indianapolis, where he joined with musicians who had been associates of Leroy Carr. Dupree rapidly became a star of the local black entertainment scene, as a comedian and dancer as well as a musician. He acquired a residency at the local Cotton Club, and partnered comedienne Ophelia Hoy. In 1940, Dupree made his recording debut, with music that blended the forceful, barrelhouse playing and rich, Creole-accented singing of New Orleans with the more suave style of Leroy Carr. Not surprisingly, a number of titles were piano/guitar duets, although on some, Jesse Ellery’s use of amplification pointed the way forward. A few songs covered unusual topics, such as the distribution of grapefruit juice by relief agencies, or the effects of drugs.

Dupree’s musical career was interrupted when he was drafted into the US Navy as a cook; even so he managed to become one of the first blues singers to record for the folk revival market while on leave in New York in 1943. Dupree’s first wife died while he was in the navy, and he took his discharge in New York, where he worked as a club pianist, and formed a close musical association with Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee. His own post-war recording career commenced with a splendid series of solo recordings for Joe Davis, on some of which the influence of Peetie Wheatstraw is very evident. More typical were the many tracks with small groups recorded thereafter for a number of labels from 1946-53, and for King Records between April 1953 and late 1955. As ever, these recordings blend the serious with the comic, the latter somewhat tastelessly on songs such as ‘Tongue Tied Blues’ and ‘Harelip Blues’. ‘Walking The Blues’, a comic dialogue with Teddy ‘Mr Bear’ McRae, was a hit on King, and the format was repeated on a number of titles recorded for RCA Records’ Vik and Groove. In 1958, Dupree made his last American recordings until 1990; ‘Blues From The Gutter’ appears to have been aimed at white audiences, as was Dupree’s career thereafter. In 1959, he moved to Europe, and lived in Switzerland, England, Sweden and Germany, touring extensively and recording prolifically, with results that varied from the excellent to the mediocre. This served both as a stamp of authenticity and as a licensed jester to the European blues scene. The tracks on the 1993 release One Last Time were drawn from Dupree’s final recording session before his death the previous year. ---oldies.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Champion Jack Dupree Fri, 09 Nov 2018 13:07:44 +0000
Champion Jack Dupree - The Women Blues (1961) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/16596-champion-jack-dupree-the-women-blues-1961.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/16596-champion-jack-dupree-the-women-blues-1961.html Champion Jack Dupree - The Women Blues (1961)

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01 - Ain't That A Shame
02 - Talk To Me Baby
03 - Tell Me When
04 - Old Woman Blues
05 - Hard Feelings Blues
06 - Bus Station Blues
07 - Rattlesnake Boogie
08 - Black Wolf Blues
09 - Jail House
10 - Come Back Baby
11 - My Way To Moe Asch

Champion Jack Dupree - vocals, piano
Chris Lange -  guitar
Fritz Ruegg - bass
Bobby Reutwiler – washboard

 

Orphaned at age 2, William Thomas Dupree grew up in the same New Orleans boys’ home where Louis Armstrong first played the cornet. Continuing his music education with barrelhouse piano musicians, Dupree became known for his gritty yet soulful piano blues and boogie–woogie style. During the Depression, he started boxing for a living and earned the nickname “Champion Jack,” which stuck with him for the rest of his life. Here, Dupree’s theme is clear: “Bad women and good women. Hard times… hot hands, and hot music.” --- folkways.si.edu

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Champion Jack Dupree Fri, 26 Sep 2014 16:21:59 +0000
Champion Jack Dupree - Blues from the Gutter (1958) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/16012-champion-jack-dupree-blues-from-the-gutter-1958.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/16012-champion-jack-dupree-blues-from-the-gutter-1958.html Champion Jack Dupree - Blues from the Gutter (1958)

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1. Strollin'	3:03	
2. T.B. Blues	3:42	
3. Can't Kick The Habit	3:45
4. Evil Woman	4:23	
5. Nasty Boogie		3:12
6. Junker's Blues	3:14	
7. Bad Blood (Think You Need A Shot)	4:01	
8. Goin' Down Slow	4:06
9. Frankie And Johnny	3:25
10. Stack-O-Lee		3:56

Champion Jack Dupree - Piano, Drums, Keyboards, Vocals
Ennis Lowery - Guitar 
Wendell Marshall - Bass
Willie Jones – Drums
Pete Brown - Sax (Alto)

 

The 1958 masterwork album of Champion Jack Dupree's long and prolific career. Cut in New York (in stereo!) with a blasting band that included saxist Pete Brown and guitarist Larry Dale, the Jerry Wexler-produced Atlantic collection provides eloquent testimony to Dupree's eternal place in the New Orleans blues and barrelhouse firmament. There's some decidedly down-in-the-alley subject matter -- "Can't Kick the Habit," "T.B. Blues," a revival of "Junker's Blues" -- along with the stomping "Nasty Boogie" and treatments of the ancient themes "Stack-O-Lee" and "Frankie & Johnny." --- Bill Dahl, Rovi

 

Hey blues piano lover, I really think you should get hold of ALL of Champion Jack Dupree's recordings! Failing that, make absolutely certain you get this one - buy, beg, borrow, or steal. Recorded as a stereo album in 1958 in New York, Jack never sounded better, backed here by a small group including sax and electric guitar. Every track is memorable: Strollin' - "All you got to do is put one foot in front of the other!"; Can't Kick The Habit; Junker Blues (revisited from 1944 original); Nasty Boogie (it is!); Stack-O-Lee - "Stack-O-Lee, shot Billy De Lyon; and he shot him two or three times".

It was just after this recording that Jack decamped to Europe for many years, recording many sides especially with with John Mayall, until his triumphant return "back home to New Orleans" in the late 1980s. Only drawback is short playing time (37:17) but with quality like this... just play it again! I have twice given my copy away when I wanted to give someone a single blues CD - the music is accessible to all, and at the same time it's as blues as blues can be. --- Steven R. Sims, amazon.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Champion Jack Dupree Tue, 13 May 2014 15:51:43 +0000
Champion Jack Dupree - Natural & Soulful Blues (1959) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/15721-champion-jack-dupree-natural-a-soulful-blues-1959.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/15721-champion-jack-dupree-natural-a-soulful-blues-1959.html Champion Jack Dupree - Natural & Soulful Blues (1959)

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1. Seafood Blues (3:18)
2. Death of Big Bill Broonzy (3:54) 
3. Don't Leave Me Mary (2:55) 
4. Rampart Street Special (3:04)
5. How Long Blues (2:52)
6. Bad Life (3:10) 
7. Mother In Law Blues (3:14) 
8. Slow Drag (3:31)
9. Dennis Rag (3:34)
10. Bad Luck Bound to Change (3:17)

Champion Jack Dupree, vocal, piano;
Jack Fallon, bass;
Alexis Korner, guitar 

 

Champion Jack Dupree had a very long and successful career in the blues making many albums for many labels. His zenith may have come in the late fifties and early sixties when he had a very successful run at Atlantic Records. This album finds Jack's strolling piano and booming voice backed by bass and drums. He sings a touching tribute to a friend in "Death of Big Bill Broonzy" and a very nice version of the standard "How Long Blues." He can't resist getting a few shots in during "Mother in Law's Blues." When the fellas ask Jack why he keeps bringing his wife to work, Jack responds with a wink that his wife is so ugly that he can't bear to kiss her goodbye in the morning! The album ends on a gentle note with Jack playing a couple of instrumental pieces, "The Dennis Rag" and "The Slow Drag" which show off the instrumental skill of the small group. It's hard to go wrong with any of Jack Dupree's music from this time period and this excellent album is no exception. --- Timothy G. Niland, amazon.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Champion Jack Dupree Mon, 17 Mar 2014 17:13:48 +0000
Champion Jack Dupree - The Sonet Blues Story (1971) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/12387-champion-jack-dupree-the-sonet-blues-story-1971.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/12387-champion-jack-dupree-the-sonet-blues-story-1971.html Champion Jack Dupree - The Sonet Blues Story (1971)

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01. Vietnam Blues - 5:01
02. Drunk Again - 4:36
03. Found My Baby Gone - 4:10
04. Anything You Want - 3:45
05. Will It Be - 4:29
06. You're The One - 3:04
07. Down And Out - 5:03
08. Roamin' Special - 4:36
09. The Life I Lead - 4:25
10. Jit-A-Bug Jump - 4:30
+
11. Vietnam Blues (alternate take) - 4:47
12. One Scotch, One Bourbon, One Beer - 4:11
13. Drinking And Gambling - 5:19
14. Rolling And Tumbling - 3:49
15. Every Man's A King - 5:18

- Champion Jack Dupree (William Thomas Dupree) - piano, vocals
- Huey Flint - drums
- Benny Gallagher - bass
- Peter Curtley - guitar
- Paul Rowan - harmonica

 

Recorded in London in 1971, this is Champion Jack Dupree with a small group of unknown British blues musicians. Sonet, begun in the '50s as a company to issue and distribute American jazz records in Sweden, had grown considerably by 1970. They approached blues historian and documentarian Samuel Charters to produce blues records for them -- Charters, who had done blues records in the '60s, had been producing rock artists at the time. Nonetheless, this Sonet Blues Story session is 15 tunes strong and presented here in 24-bit remastered glory. Dupree is playing piano and singing, with Hughie Flint on drums, bassist Benny Gallagher, guitarist Peter Curtley, and harmonica player Paul Rowan. Dupree is in amazing form here. His playing is brilliant, deep in-the-pocket, carrying much of his native, New Orleans stride in his style. Curtley is a little busy and high in the mix, but it's clearly Dupree who carries the day. The two takes of "Vietnam Blues," are both high points on the set, and the bonus tracks -- four of them -- are truly bonuses, rounding out a loose, powerful set where Dupree is clearly enjoying himself. ---Thom Jurek, allmusic.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Champion Jack Dupree Wed, 20 Jun 2012 16:53:49 +0000
Champion Jack Dupree and His Blues Band featuring Mickey Baker (1967) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/12342-champion-jack-dupree-and-his-blues-band-featuring-mickey-baker-1967.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/12342-champion-jack-dupree-and-his-blues-band-featuring-mickey-baker-1967.html Champion Jack Dupree and His Blues Band featuring Mickey Baker (1967)

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01. Barrelhouse Woman - 2:00
02. Louise - 3:04
03. One Dirty Woman - 2:20
04. When Things Go Wrong - 2:35
05. Cut Down On My Overheads - 2:58
06. Troubles (William Thomas Dupree, MacHouston Baker) - 4:34
07. Tee-Nah-Nah - 1:59
08. Caldonia (Fleecie Moore) - 2:22
09. Under Your Hood - 2:36
10. Come Back Baby - 3:00
11. Baby Let Me Go With You - 1:41
12. Garbage Man - 3:41
13. I Feel Like A Millionaire - 2:42
14. Right Now - 3:22
15. Georgiana - 3:11
16. Shake, Baby, Shake - 2:16

Personnel:
- Champion Jack Dupree (William Thomas Dupree) - piano, vocals
- Mickey Baker (MacHouston Baker) - guitar, vocals (04,06,13), tambourine (01,03,13)
- John Baldwin - bass guitar
- Ronnie Verrell - drums
- Albert Hall - trumpet
- Rex Morris, Bob Efford  - tenor saxophone
- Harry Klein - baritone saxophone (01,09)
- Mike Vernon - whistle (01), producer

 

A formidable contender in the ring before he shifted his focus to pounding the piano instead, Champion Jack Dupree often injected his lyrics with a rowdy sense of down-home humor. But there was nothing lighthearted about his rock-solid way with a boogie; when he shouted "Shake Baby Shake," the entire room had no choice but to acquiesce.

Dupree was notoriously vague about his beginnings, claiming in some interviews that his parents died in a fire set by the Ku Klux Klan, at other times saying that the blaze was accidental. Whatever the circumstances of the tragic conflagration, Dupree grew up in New Orleans' Colored Waifs' Home for Boys (Louis Armstrong also spent his formative years there). Learning his trade from barrelhouse 88s ace Willie "Drive 'em Down" Hall, Dupree left the Crescent City in 1930 for Chicago and then Detroit. By 1935, he was boxing professionally in Indianapolis, battling in an estimated 107 bouts.

In 1940, Dupree made his recording debut for Chicago A&R man extraordinaire Lester Melrose and OKeh Records. Dupree's 1940-1941 output for the Columbia subsidiary exhibited a strong New Orleans tinge despite the Chicago surroundings; his driving "Junker's Blues" was later cleaned up as Fats Domino's 1949 debut, "The Fat Man." After a stretch in the Navy during World War II (he was a Japanese P.O.W. for two years), Dupree decided tickling the 88s beat pugilism any old day. He spent most of his time in New York and quickly became a prolific recording artist, cutting for Continental, Joe Davis, Alert, Apollo, and Red Robin (where he cut a blasting "Shim Sham Shimmy" in 1953), often in the company of Brownie McGhee. Contracts meant little; Dupree masqueraded as Brother Blues on Abbey, Lightnin' Jr. on Empire, and the truly imaginative Meat Head Johnson for Gotham and Apex.

King Records corralled Dupree in 1953 and held onto him through 1955 (the year he enjoyed his only R&B chart hit, the relaxed "Walking the Blues.") Dupree's King output rates with his very best; the romping "Mail Order Woman," "Let the Doorbell Ring," and "Big Leg Emma's" contrasting with the rural "Me and My Mule" (Dupree's vocal on the latter emphasizing a harelip speech impediment for politically incorrect pseudo-comic effect).

After a year on RCA's Groove and Vik subsidiaries, Dupree made a masterpiece LP for Atlantic. 1958's Blues From the Gutter is a magnificent testament to Dupree's barrelhouse background, boasting marvelous readings of "Stack-O-Lee," "Junker's Blues," and "Frankie & Johnny" beside the risqué "Nasty Boogie." Dupree was one of the first bluesmen to leave his native country for a less racially polarized European existence in 1959. He lived in a variety of countries overseas, continuing to record prolifically for Storyville, British Decca (with John Mayall and Eric Clapton lending a hand at a 1966 date), and many other firms.

Perhaps sensing his own mortality, Dupree returned to New Orleans in 1990 for his first visit in 36 years. While there, he played the Jazz & Heritage Festival and laid down a zesty album for Bullseye Blues, Back Home in New Orleans. Two more albums of new material were captured by the company the next year prior to the pianist's death in January of 1992. Jack Dupree was a champ to the very end. --- Bill Dahl, allmusic.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Champion Jack Dupree Mon, 11 Jun 2012 18:49:21 +0000
Champion Jack Dupree - Champion Jack Dupree (1968) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/8365-champion-jack-dupree-champion-jack-dupree-1970.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/8365-champion-jack-dupree-champion-jack-dupree-1970.html Champion Jack Dupree - Champion Jack Dupree (1968)

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1.- Mercy On Me
2.- Sleeping In The Street play
3.- I'm A Gambling Man
4.- I'm Growing Older Every Day
5.- Door To Door Blues play
6.- When I've Been Drinking
7.- The Cold Ground Is My Bed
8.- Lonesome Bedroom Blues
9.- Good Woman Is Hard To Find
10.- I Hate To Be Alone
Champion Jack Dupree - Drums, Keyboards, Vocals Mogens Seidelin - Double Bass [Uncredited]

 

William Thomas Dupree, best known as Champion Jack Dupree, was an American blues pianist. Champion Jack Dupree was the embodiment of the New Orleans blues and boogie woogie pianist, a true barrelhouse "professor". Dupree's playing was almost all straight blues and boogie-woogie. He was not a sophisticated musician or singer, but he had a wry and clever way with words: "Mama, move your false teeth, papa wanna scratch your gums." He sometimes sang as if he had a cleft palate and even recorded under the name Harelip Jack Dupree. This was an artistic conceit, as Dupree had excellent, clear articulation, particularly for a blues singer. Dupree would occasionally indulge in a vocalese style of sung word play, similar to Slim Gaillard's "Vout", as in his "Mr. Dupree Blues" included on the The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions album.

He sang about life, jail, drinking and drug addiction; although he himself was a light drinker and did not use other drugs. His "Junker's Blues" was also transmogrified by Fats Domino into his first hit, "The Fat Man". Dupree's songs included not only gloomy topics, such as "TB Blues" and "Angola Blues" (about Angola Prison, the infamous Louisiana prison farm), but also cheerful subjects like the "Dupree Shake Dance": "Come on, mama, on your hands and knees, do that shake dance as you please".

On his best known album, Blues from the Gutter for Atlantic, in 1959 he was accompanied on guitar by Larry Dale, whose playing on that record inspired Brian Jones of The Rolling Stones. Dupree was also noted as a raconteur and transformed many of his stories into songs. "Big Leg Emma's" takes its place in the roots of rap music as the rhymed tale of a police raid on a barrelhouse. In later years he recorded with John Mayall, Mick Taylor and Eric Clapton.

Although Jerry Lee Lewis did not record Dupree's "Shake Baby Shake", the lyrics in his version of "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" - "You can shake it one time for me!" - echo Dupree's song. Although best known as a singer and pianist in the New Orleans style, Dupree occasionally pursued more musically adventurous projects, including Dupree `n` McPhee, a collaboration with English guitarist Tony McPhee, recorded for Blue Horizon Records.

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Champion Jack Dupree Fri, 25 Feb 2011 09:14:19 +0000
Champion Jack Dupree – Back Home In New Orleans (1990)In New Orleans 1990 http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/6729-champion-jack-dupree-back-home-in-new-orleans-1990.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/6729-champion-jack-dupree-back-home-in-new-orleans-1990.html Champion Jack Dupree – Back Home In New Orleans (1990)

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1-When I'm Drinking
2-Lonesome Bedroom Blues
3-I Don't Know
4-Calcutta Blues
5-Freedom
6-My Woman Left Me
7-Broken Hearted Blues
8-Way Down
9-The Blind Man
10-No Future

Personnel:
Champion Jack Dupree – piano, vocals
Kenn Lending - guitar
Wayne Bennett – guitar
Walter Payton – bass
Stanley Stephens – drums
Alvin "Red" Tyler, Fred Kemp  – tenor sax
Sax Gordon – tenor, baritone sax
Teddy Riley - trumpet

 

By far the best of Dupree's three albums for Bullseye Blues, this collection was cut during the pianist's first trip home to the Crescent City in 36 long years. With his longtime accompanist Kenn Lending on guitar, Dupree sounds happy to be back in his old stomping grounds throughout the atmospheric set. ---Bill Dahl, Rovi

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Champion Jack Dupree Thu, 09 Sep 2010 09:19:05 +0000
Champion Jack Dupree - Early Cuts (2009) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/6578-champion-jack-dupree-early-cuts-2009.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/6578-champion-jack-dupree-early-cuts-2009.html Champion Jack Dupree - Early Cuts ... (2009) (4CD)

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CD1 - Chicago 1940-41
01 - Champion Jack Dupree - Gamblin' Man Blues
02 - Champion Jack Dupree - Warehouse Man Blues
03 - Champion Jack Dupree - Chain Gang Blues
04 - Champion Jack Dupree - New Low Down Dog
05 - Champion Jack Dupree - Black Woman Swing
06 - Champion Jack Dupree - Cabbage Greens No 1
07 - Champion Jack Dupree - Cabbage Greens No 2
08 - Champion Jack Dupree - Angola Blues
09 - Champion Jack Dupree - My Cabin Inn
10 - Champion Jack Dupree - Bad Health Blues
11 - Champion Jack Dupree - That's All Right
12 - Champion Jack Dupree - Gibing Blues
13 - Champion Jack Dupree - Dupree Shake Dance
14 - Champion Jack Dupree - My Baby's Gone
15 - Champion Jack Dupree - Weed Head Woman
16 - Champion Jack Dupree - Junker Blues
17 - Champion Jack Dupree - Oh, Red
18 - Champion Jack Dupree - All Alone Blues
19 - Champion Jack Dupree - Big Time Mama
20 - Champion Jack Dupree - Shady Lane
21 - Champion Jack Dupree - Hurry Down Sunshine
22 - Champion Jack Dupree - Jackie P Blues
23 - Champion Jack Dupree - Heavy Heart Blues
24 - Champion Jack Dupree - Morning Tea
25 - Champion Jack Dupree - Black Cow Blues

CD2 - Chicago, NY 1941-45
01 - Champion Jack Dupree - My Cabin Inn (alt)
02 - Champion Jack Dupree - Bad Health Blues (alt)
03 - Champion Jack Dupree - Gibing Blues (alt)
04 - Champion Jack Dupree - Dupree Shake Dance (alt)
05 - Champion Jack Dupree - My Baby's Gone (alt)
06 - Champion Jack Dupree - Jackie P Blues (alt)
07 - Champion Jack Dupree - Black Cow Blues (alt)
08 - Champion Jack Dupree - Jitterbug
09 - Champion Jack Dupree - Slow Boogie
10 - Champion Jack Dupree - Mexico Reminiscences
11 - Champion Jack Dupree - Too Evil To Cry
12 - Champion Jack Dupree - Clog Dance (Stomping Blues)
13 - Champion Jack Dupree - Rum Cola Blues
14 - Champion Jack Dupree - She Makes Good Jelly
15 - Champion Jack Dupree - Johnson Street Boogie Woogie
16 - Champion Jack Dupree - I'm Going Down With You
17 - Champion Jack Dupree - Fdr Blues
18 - Champion Jack Dupree - God Bless Our New President
19 - Champion Jack Dupree - County Jail Special
20 - Champion Jack Dupree - Fisherman's Blues
21 - Champion Jack Dupree - Black Wolf
22 - Champion Jack Dupree - Lover's Lane
23 - Champion Jack Dupree - Walkin' By Myself
24 - Champion Jack Dupree - Outside Man
25 - Champion Jack Dupree - Forget It Mama

CD3 - NY 1945-49
01 - Champion Jack Dupree - You've Been Drunk
02 - Champion Jack Dupree - Santa Clause Blues
03 - Champion Jack Dupree - Gin Mill Sal
04 - Champion Jack Dupree - Let's Have A Ball
05 - Champion Jack Dupree - Going Down Slow
06 - Champion Jack Dupree - Hard Feeling
07 - Champion Jack Dupree - How Long, How Long Blues
08 - Champion Jack Dupree - Mean Old Frisco
09 - Champion Jack Dupree - I Think You Need A Shot
10 - Champion Jack Dupree - Bad Whiskey And Wild Woman
11 - Champion Jack Dupree - Bus Station Blues
12 - Champion Jack Dupree - Love Strike Blues
13 - Champion Jack Dupree - Wet Deck Mama
14 - Champion Jack Dupree - Big Legged Mama
15 - Champion Jack Dupree - I'm A Doctor For Women
16 - Champion Jack Dupree - Cecelia, Cecelia
17 - Champion Jack Dupree - Going Down To The Bottom
18 - Champion Jack Dupree - Fifth Avenue Blues
19 - Champion Jack Dupree - Highway 31
20 - Champion Jack Dupree - Come Back Baby
21 - Champion Jack Dupree - Chittlins And Rice
22 - Champion Jack Dupree - One Sweet Letter
23 - Champion Jack Dupree - Lonesome Bedroom Blues
24 - Champion Jack Dupree - Old Woman Blues
25 - Champion Jack Dupree - Mean Mistreatin' Mama
26 - Champion Jack Dupree - Featherweight Mama
27 - Champion Jack Dupree - Day Break

CD4 - NY, Cincinnati 1951-53
01 - Champion Jack Dupree - Deacon's Party
02 - Champion Jack Dupree - My Baby's Comin' Back Home
03 - Champion Jack Dupree - Just Plain Tired
04 - Champion Jack Dupree - I'm Gonna Find You Someday
05 - Champion Jack Dupree - Goin' Back To Louisiana
06 - Champion Jack Dupree - Barrel House Mama
07 - Champion Jack Dupree - Old, Old Woman
08 - Champion Jack Dupree - Mean Black Snake
09 - Champion Jack Dupree - The Woman I Love
10 - Champion Jack Dupree - All Night Party
11 - Champion Jack Dupree - Heart Breaking Woman
12 - Champion Jack Dupree - Watchin' My Stuff
13 - Champion Jack Dupree - Ragged And Hungry
14 - Champion Jack Dupree - Somebody Changed The Lock
15 - Champion Jack Dupree - Stumbling Block Blues
16 - Champion Jack Dupree - Highway Blues
17 - Champion Jack Dupree - Shake Baby Shake
18 - Champion Jack Dupree - Number Nine Blues
19 - Champion Jack Dupree - Drunk Again
20 - Champion Jack Dupree - Shim Sham Shimmy
21 - Champion Jack Dupree - Ain't No Meat On De Bone
22 - Champion Jack Dupree - The Blues Got Me Rckin'
23 - Champion Jack Dupree - Tongue Tied Blues
24 - Champion Jack Dupree - Please Tell Me Baby
25 - Champion Jack Dupree - Walkin' Upside Your Head
26 - Champion Jack Dupree - Rub A Little Boogie
27 - Champion Jack Dupree – Camille

download (mp3 @320 kbs):

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uloz.to: CD1 CD2 CD3 CD4

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bayfiles: CD1 CD2 CD3 CD4

 

 

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Champion Jack Dupree Sun, 29 Aug 2010 09:48:54 +0000
Champion Jack Dupree - Dupree Shake Dance (2005) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/4068-champion-jack-dupree-dupree-shake-dance-2005.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/808-championjackdupree/4068-champion-jack-dupree-dupree-shake-dance-2005.html Champion Jack Dupree - Dupree Shake Dance (2005)

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01. How Long Blues 2:43
02. Mean Ole' Frisco 2:58
03. Bad Whiskey and Bad Women 2:37
04. Bus Station Blues 2:32
05. Dupree Shake Dance 2:52
06. Junker's Blues 2:44
07. Angola Blues 2:53
08. All Alone Blues 2:46
09. Bad Health Blues 2:39
10. Jackie P. Blues 2:38
11. Chaing Gang Blues 2:34
12. Cabbage Greens 2:38
13. Big Time Mama 2:39
14. Warehouse Man Blues 2:51
15. Morning Tea 2:48
16. Black Woman Swing 2:52
17. Weed Head Woman 2:56
18. Heavy Heart Blues 2:31

Champion Jack Dupree - Piano & Vocals
Brownie McGhee - Guitar
Jesse Ellery - Guitar
Count Edmundson - Bass
Ransom Knowling - Bass
Wilson Swain – Bass

download (mp3 @320 kbs):

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Champion Jack Dupree Sun, 28 Mar 2010 13:26:11 +0000