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Lil' Ed & The Blues Imperials, Rattleshake CD cover artwork

Lil' Ed & The Blues Imperials, Rattleshake

Audio CD

Disk ID: 1638990

Disk length: 50m 35s (13 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 2006

Label: Unknown

View all albums by Lil' Ed & The Blues Imperials...

Tracks & Durations

1. Leaving Here 3:28
2. Tired Of Crying 2:45
3. Golden Rule 3:21
4. You Just Weren't There 4:25
5. Icicles In My Meatloaf 5:01
6. Broken Promises 3:51
7. Tramp On Your Street 4:10
8. Maybe Another Time 3:56
9. Spend Some Time With Me 2:57
10. Nobody's Fault But My Own 6:49
11. You Know You're Wrong 3:49
12. That's The Truth 2:49
13. It's A Beautiful World 3:03

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

Although Alligator Records no longer exclusively traffics in "genuine houserockin' music," as long as the label continues releasing albums from Lil' Ed & the Blues Imperials it won't have to change slogans anytime soon. The sixth release from the veteran foursome is another rollicking, electrified romp through old-school Chicago boogie blues. Lil' Ed Williams is the nephew of, and was schooled by, slide guitar legend J.B. Hutto, so it's no surprise that the Blues Imperials' sound is driven by the high-octane, raw, bottleneck attack popularized by Hutto and the great Elmore James. Both are covered here, and even though Williams's originals adhere to the standard blues format, the energy generated by this live-in-the-studio recording could power a small city. You can practically see the sweat dripping down Ed's fez-covered head as he charges through the humorous yet driving "Icicles in My Meatloaf" and the fast shuffle of "Broken Promises." Slow blues such as "You Just Weren't There" and "Nobody's Fault But My Own" maintain a tough edge while providing a change of pace to the party-hearty rave-ups that dominate the album. The no-frills production is crisp and crackling. It captures the excitement of the opening version of Holland/Dozier's rocking soul shouter "Leaving Here" as well as the heartfelt emotions in the country-influenced cover of Billy Joe Shaver's "Tramp on Your Street," the disc's most surprising track. The blurred shot of the band in action on the cover perfectly represents the music inside--which, as the album's title accurately suggests, rattles, shakes, and rolls. --Hal HorowitzOn their new Alligator album, Rattleshake, Lil' Ed's romping, sizzling guitar and his rough-hewn vocals, his half-brother James "Pookie" Young's thumping bass, Mike Garrett's feral rhythm guitar and Kelly Littleton's unpredictable yet bone-crunching drumming produce a modern blues firestorm steeped in tradition. Produced by Alligator president Bruce Iglauer and Williams, Rattleshake features 13 houserocking songs, and captures all of Lil' Ed and The Blues Imperials' legendary live energy on disc. The variety on the CD, from stomping, houserocking slide workouts, to deep, slow blues, to blues-ified country, makes this the most rewarding and soul-satisfying album the band has ever recorded.

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