Rating:
Genre:
R&B
Release Date: 05/13/2008
Run Time: 0:00
When
Louis Jordan hitched up with
Mercury for a brief stint in 1956 and 1957, his commercial fortunes were way in decline. The strategy hit upon as an attempt to revive his recording career was not one bound to find favor with critics when his catalog was reassessed in the decades to come. On
Mercury, he'd concentrate on re-recording his jump blues classics, modernizing the arrangements somewhat with an eye for the then-exploding rock & roll market. This 28-track compilation has much of what he recorded for the label, taken from two LPs and various singles. As
Dave Penny's sympathetic liner notes point out, it wasn't as crass an approach at the time as it might seem from a distance; the long-playing market had just emerged, and since
Jordan's original hit singles were no longer in print, for a while this was the only way to hear
Louis do these tunes on record at all. Now that those classic original jump blues versions are ready available, of course, these remakes can't help but seem not only less essential, but inessential. Inessential, however, doesn't mean that these were bad recordings by any means, even if no one should acquire these before getting the original versions.
Jordan's performances were nothing if not professional and lively; the backing players were talented, including quite a few sides with
Mickey Baker on guitar and
Quincy Jones as musical director; and he did sprinkle some tunes into the sessions that weren't remakes of familiar old hits (though listeners should be aware that one of these tracks features
Dottie Smith on vocals rather than
Jordan himself). Still, those remakes of familiar old hits like
"Saturday Night Fish Fry" and
"Caldonia" couldn't compete with the prototypes, and
Baker didn't let loose on guitar as much as he could have, though he'll occasionally burn it up, especially on
"Caldonia." If this was all that survived of
Jordan as a recording artist, the material would be viewed more kindly, since his considerable abilities as a jump bluesman and R&B singer are well in evidence, and he wasn't all that bad even when the arrangements kowtowed to rock & roll trends. But viewed within the context of his entire discography, this has to be considered a lower-priority item, and one mostly for devoted
Jordan fans.
~Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide