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Album
Hound Dog Taylor and J.B. Hutto were the last disciples of the king of post-war slide guitar, the great Elmore James, and Joseph Benjamin Hutto's main source of inspiration is obvious on this his first studio album, "Hawk Squat". The first track, "Speak My Mind", is in fact a thinly-veiled cover of "Dust My Broom". But don't let that deter you. This is one of the all-time great Chicago blues albums, recorded between 1966 and 1968, and perfectly showcasing Hutto's raw, slash-and-burn approach without ever getting muddled or losing its sense of restraint. "Hawk Squat" boasts both powerful, hard-rocking tracks like the awesome "Hip-Shakin'", and the deep-dug grooves of "20% Alcohol" and "Notoriety Woman". J.B. Hutto and the Hawks are accompanied by sixty-year-old Albert Luandrew, better known as Sunnyland Slim, on piano and organ, and Maurice McIntyre plays tenor saxophone on a few tracks. The sound is good, and the production brings Hutto's loud, wailing, but seemingly effortless vocals to the forefront where they belong. There are no obvious #1 hit singles on this album - it is not a pop record, after all - but nor does it contain a single weak track. Every minute is worth listening to - and that is rare praise for a twelve-track LP! User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Speak My Mind
J.B. Hutto
If You Change Your Mind
J.B. Hutto
Too Much Pride
J.B. Hutto
What Can You Get Outside That You Can't Get at Home
J.B. Hutto
The Same Mistake Twice
J.B. Hutto
Alcohol
J.B. Hutto
Hip Shakin'
J.B. Hutto
THE FEELING IS GONE
J.B. Hutto
Notoriety Woman
J.B. Hutto
Too Late
J.B. Hutto
Send Her Home to Me
J.B. Hutto
Hawk Squat
J.B. Hutto