Mose John Allison Jr. (November 11, 1927 – November 15,
2016) was an American jazz and blues pianist, singer, and songwriter. He became
notable for playing a unique mix of blues and modern jazz, both singing and
playing piano.
He was born outside Tippo, Mississippi on his
grandfather's farm, which was known as The Island "because Tippo Bayou
encircles it." He took piano lessons from age five. His father, a piano
stride player himself, encouraged the young Mose in his playing but also taught
him the meaning of “work on the farm.” Mose picked cotton, played piano in grammar school and
trumpet in high school, and wrote his first song at age thirteen.
In his youth, he had easy access, via the radio, to the
music of Pete Johnson, Albert Ammons, and
Meade "Lux" Lewis. Allison also credited the songwriter Percy Mayfield, "the Poet Laureate of the Blues," as being a major inspiration on his songwriting. In high school he listened to the music of Louis Armstrong, Fats Waller, Duke Ellington, Louis Jordan, and another of his prime inspirations, Nat Cole of the King Cole Trio. He went to college at the University of Mississippi for a while and then enlisted in the U.S. Army for two years. Shortly after mustering out, he enrolled at Louisiana State University, from which he was graduated in 1952 with a BA in English with a minor in Philosophy.
Meade "Lux" Lewis. Allison also credited the songwriter Percy Mayfield, "the Poet Laureate of the Blues," as being a major inspiration on his songwriting. In high school he listened to the music of Louis Armstrong, Fats Waller, Duke Ellington, Louis Jordan, and another of his prime inspirations, Nat Cole of the King Cole Trio. He went to college at the University of Mississippi for a while and then enlisted in the U.S. Army for two years. Shortly after mustering out, he enrolled at Louisiana State University, from which he was graduated in 1952 with a BA in English with a minor in Philosophy.
He worked in nightclubs throughout the Southeast and
West, blending the raw blues of his childhood with the modern pianistic
influences of John Lewis, Thelonius Monk and Al Haig. In 1956 he moved to New
York City and launched his jazz career as a piano accompanist with artists such
as Stan Getz, Gerry Mulligan, Al Cohn, Zoot Sims, and Phil Woods. His debut
album, "Back Country Suite", was issued on the Prestige label in
1957. His keyboard playing retained a delightful eccentricity throughout his
career, an uncategorisable style of whirling runs and marching left-hand
countermelodies that was his alone. He formed his own trio in 1958.
It was not until 1963 that his record label allowed him
to release an album entirely of vocals. Entitled "Mose Allison
Sings", it was a collection of songs that paid tribute to artists of the
Mojo Triangle: Sonny Boy Williamson (2) ("Eyesight to the Blind"),
Jimmy Rogers ("That's All Right") and Willie Dixon ("The Seventh
Son"). However, it was an original composition in the album that brought
him the most attention – "Parchman Farm". This was his most requested
song for more than two decades, but he dropped it from his playlist in the
1980's because some critics felt it was politically incorrect.
Allison’s best songs surfaced ever more prolifically in
the period between 1960 and 1964, with I Don’t Worry About a Thing, Your Mind
Is on Vacation and Don’t Forget to Smile appearing on an impeccable series of
albums for Atlantic. He began to tour
internationally through the 60s and 70s, and his bluesy vocals and the enthusiasm of such influential fans as Morrison helped him avoid the effects of the rock-driven downturn in jazz’s fortunes in that period.
internationally through the 60s and 70s, and his bluesy vocals and the enthusiasm of such influential fans as Morrison helped him avoid the effects of the rock-driven downturn in jazz’s fortunes in that period.
Allison wrote some 150 songs. His own performances have been described
as "delivered in a casual conversational way with a melodic southern
accented tone that has a pitch and range ideally suited to his idiosyncratic
phrasing, laconic approach and ironic sense of humour."
His 1987 recorded album "Ever Since The World
Ended" - Blue Note 48015 received the highest rating (5 starts) in Down
Beat February 1988. Prestige Records tried to market Allison as a pop star, but
Columbia and later Atlantic tried to market him as a blues artist. Because he
sang blues, Jet magazine thought that he was black and wanted to interview him.
Allison was inducted into the Long Island Music Hall of
Fame in 2006. Allison's March 2010 album, "The Way of the World",
"marked his return to the recording studio after a 12-year absence."
In 2012, Allison was honoured with a blues marker on the
Mississippi Blues Trail in his hometown of Tippo. On January 14, 2013, Allison
was honoured as a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts at a
ceremony at Lincoln Centre in New York. The NEA Jazz Masters Fellowship is the
nation's highest honour in jazz.
Allison died of natural causes on November 15, 2016, four
days after his 89th birthday, at his home in Hilton Head, South Carolina. (Compiled and edited from Wikipedia,
discogs.com & The Guardian)
For “Mose Allison - The Collection (2-Disc Set)” go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://www51.zippyshare.com/v/alSuc1RB/file.html
and here:
https://www51.zippyshare.com/v/CGcsfM2L/file.html
CD1
[2:36] 1. The Seventh Son
[1:40] 2. Eyesight To The Blind
[3:09] 3. Do Nothin’ ‘till You Hear From Me
[3:30] 4. Lost Mind
[2:47] 5. I’ve Got A Right To Cry
[3:13] 6. Baby, Let Me Hold Your Hand
[3:16] 7. Parchman Farm
[2:28] 8. If You Live
[2:46] 9. Don’t Get Around Much Anymore
[2:59] 10. One Room Country Shack
[2:30] 11. I Hadn’t Anyone ‘till You
[1:23] 12. Young Man’s Blues
[2:25] 13. That’s Alright
[2:32] 14. Baby Please Don’t Go
[1:53] 15. ‘deed I Do
[2:21] 16. I Love The Life I Life, I Live The Life I Love
[3:29] 17. Fool’s Paradise
[2:12] 18. You’re A Sweetheart
[2:10] 19. Mad With You
[1:50] 20. I Ain’t Got Nobody
CD2
[2:08] 1. New Ground
[1:50] 2. Train
[1:47] 3. Warm Night
[1:28] 4. Blues
[1:24] 5. Saturday
[2:15] 6. Scamper
[1:38] 7. January
[2:03] 8. Promised Land
[1:23] 9. Spring Song
[1:38] 10. Highway 49
[3:00] 11. Blueberry Hill
[3:46] 12. You Won’t Let Me Go
[3:53] 13. I Thought About You
[3:45] 14. In Salah
[4:08] 15. Somebody Else Is Taking My Place
[3:24] 16. Yardbird Suite
[4:37] 17. Creek Bank
[3:16] 18. Dirt Road
[2:28] 19. City Home
[1:38] 20. Cuttin' Out
[3:21] 21. Gotham Day
[4:26] 22. Gotham Night
[1:07] 23. Echo
[4:07] 24. The River
[0:46] 25. Finale
[3:46] 26. Crepuscular Air
[3:18] 27. A Pretty Girl Is Like A Melody
[3:24] 28. Am I Blue
This two disc set collects several of Mose Allison’s key tracks from the 1950s, with the first disc, which includes the pianist’s classic versions of “Parchman Farm” and “Young Man’s Blues,” functioning as a sort of “greatest hits” while the second disc features his debut LP Back Country Suite from 1957, which was issued by Prestige Records, along with his first record for Columbia Records, 1959’s The Transfiguration of Hiram Brown. It makes for a great introduction to a one-of-a-kind artist. ~Steve Leggett
A very big thank you to mat.tiggas @ Silky Dennims blog for active links.
Oh man....this one also please
ReplyDeleteneeds a re-up
haven't heard Mose in a minute, lol
thanks BB
Sorry Denis, I searched through my entire database and other unsorted storage and got zilch, plus the links are dead on Silky Denims blog. But I have got this Rhino Anthology if it will suffice.
ReplyDeleteFor “Mose Allison – Allison Wonderland
- The Mose Allison Anthology” (Rhino Records 1994) go here:
https://mega.nz/file/4ioAWSRC#CjwQS0QtzBUr6aHFKh4RzMkd7eSFLzF8Ng7zs0TOJDY
Disc One
1. "Back Country Suite: Blues [A.K.A. 'Young Man's Blues']" (Mose Allison)
2. "Lost Mind"
3. "Parchman Farm" (Mose Allison)
4. "If You Live" (Mose Allison)
5. "The Seventh Son" (Willie Dixon)
6. "Eyesight to the Blind"
7. "Baby, Please Don't Go"
8. "Fool's Paradise"
9. "V-8 Ford Blues"
10. "Ask Me Nice" (Mose Allison)
11. "Hey, Good Lookin'"
12. "Back On The Corner" (Mose Allison)
13. "Your Mind Is On Vacation" (Mose Allison, Audre Mae)
14. "Meet Me At No Special Place"
15. "I Don't Worry About A Thing" (Mose Allison)
16. "I Ain't Got Nothing But The Blues"
17. "Swingin' Machine" (Mose Allison)
18. "Stop This World" (Mose Allison)
19. "I'm Not Talking" (Mose Allison)
20. "I'm The Wild Man" (Stanley Willis, Don Barksdale)
21. "Your Red Wagon"
22. "Foolkiller" (Mose Allison)
23. "Wild Man On The Loose" (Mose Allison)
24. "You Can Count On Me To Do My Part" (Mose Allison)
25. "Smashed" Live (Mose Allison)
26. "I Love The Life I Live" Live
27. "That's Alright" Live
28. "Fool's Paradise" Live
Disc Two
1. "If You're Goin' To The City" (Mose Allison)
2. "Everybody Cryin' Mercy" (Mose Allison)
3. "Feel So Good" (Mose Allison)
4. "Molecular Structure" (Mose Allison)
5. "Monsters Of The Id" (Mose Allison)
6. "Hello There, Universe" (Mose Allison)
7. "I Don't Want Much" (Mose Allison)
8. "How Much Truth" (Mose Allison)
9. "Western Man" (Mose Allison)
10. "I'm Just a Lucky So-and-So" (Duke Ellington, lyrics-Mack David)
11. "The Tennessee Waltz"
12. "Ever Since The World Ended" (Mose Allison)
13. "Top Forty" (Mose Allison)
14. "Josephine"
15. "Gettin' There" (Mose Allison)
16. "Ever Since I Stole The Blues" (Mose Allison)
17. "You Call It Joggin'"
18. "Big Brother" (Mose Allison)
19. "The Gettin' Paid Waltz" (Mose Allison)
This Mose Allison Anthology is a two disc compilation released in 1994. Rhino sequenced the selected songs (which span over 40 years, from 1957 to 1989), and include all of his best-known songs chronologically.
more than perfect.....thanks buddy
ReplyDelete