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Buddy Guy - Living Proof on CD
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Buddy Guy - Living Proof on CD

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Review The legendary pioneer of the Chicago blues turned 74 in July this year, and he’s determined to show that he’s still in fine voice, and – more even importantly – that he’s still one of the most exhilarating and inventive guitarists in the world. "I’m 74 years young, there’s nothing I haven’t done / I’ve drunk wine with kings and The Rolling Stones," he notes cheerfully on the opening track, as he switches from a solid, slinky acoustic guitar riff to a sudden, furious and attacking solo that provides an instant reminder of why he is so special. Here, after all, is an artist who started out in Louisiana, moved to Chicago to be influenced by the likes of Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf, and played with such passion and fury that some blues purists criticised his furious guitar work as "noise" – though this style influenced and impressed blues-rockers from Hendrix to Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page and, of course, The Rolling Stones. A semi-autobiographical album like this can easily become an exercise in self-congratulation and nostalgia, but it succeeds because of the sheer quality and variety in the playing. After bragging about the fine condition that he’s still in, he switches to Thank Me Someday, a reminiscence of his early life, back on a Louisiana plantation, where he drove his family mad as he taught himself to play on a self-made two-string guitar. It starts with a compelling riff that echoes Howlin’ Wolf, and then switches to another blistering, screeching and exuberant guitar solo. Then he switches styles yet again with the upbeat On the Road, which provides another reminder that blues can be cheerful as well as sad, and there’s a further mood change for the thoughtful and emotional Stay Around a Little Longer. Here he’s joined by another blues legend, B.B. King, for a slower, soulful, gospel-tinged ballad on which the two great veterans congratulate themselves on how good they still sound. That may seem horribly mawkish, but they mean what they say and the result is a friendly, poignant little piece of blues history. There is only one other special guest involved, and that’s yet another guitar legend, Carlos Santana, who proves a predictably fine sparring partner for Guy on the rolling Where the Blues Begins. The crisp production work is by Tom Hambridge, who also plays drums in Guy’s backing band, and he keeps the changes coming throughout the set. The closing tracks include the thoughtful Everybody’s Got to Go, the upbeat Let The Doorknob Hit Ya, and the slow, keyboard-backed Guess What, on which Guy shows off powerful vocals. It ends with an instrumental, Skanky, and another demonstration of his exhilarating guitar work. Seventy-four years on, he has recorded what is surely the blues album of the year. --Robin Denselow Find more music at the BBC This link will take you off Amazon in a new window Product Description One of the most respected and lauded blues artists of our time, Buddy Guy is the greatest exponent of classic Chicago electric blues. He is a thrillingly inventive guitarist, a passionately soulful singer and a peerless showman. In the course of a 45-year professional career, he has sold millions of albums, earned five Grammy Awards and won twenty three W.C. handy Blues Awards – more than any other single artist. Any discussion of Buddy Guy invariably involves a recitation of his colossal musical resume and hard earned accolades. He’s a rock’n’roll Hall of Fame inductee, a chief guitar influence to rock titans like Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Stevie Ray Vaughan, a pioneer of Chicago’s fabled West Side Sound and a living link to that city’s halcyon days of electric blues. Living Proof includes 11 new studio cuts, including the first single, “Stay around A Little Longer” with B.B. King, the first time these two Blues greats have worked together. It also includes one other feature, this time with Carlos Santana on “Where the Blues Begins.” The opening track, “74 Years Young” establishes the t
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