*** Welcome to piglix ***

The Complete Recordings (Robert Johnson album)

The Complete Recordings
Robert Johnson - The Complete Recordings.jpg
Compilation album by Robert Johnson
Released August 28, 1990
Recorded November 1936 and June 1937
Genre Blues
Length 104:53
Label Columbia
Producer Don Law (original recordings),
Frank Driggs (Reissue Producer),
Lawrence Cohn (Reissue Producer),
Stephen LaVere (Reissue Producer)
Robert Johnson chronology
King of the Delta Blues Singers, Vol. II
(1970)
Robert Johnson: The Complete Recordings
(1990)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 5/5 stars
Baltimore Sun (favorable)
Chicago Tribune 4/4 stars
Down Beat 5/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly (A+)
Los Angeles Times (favorable)
Q 5/5 stars
Rolling Stone 5/5 stars
Time (favorable)
Washington Post (favorable)

The Complete Recordings is a compilation album by American blues musician Robert Johnson, released August 28, 1990 on Columbia Records. The album's recordings were recorded in two sessions in Dallas and San Antonio, Texas for the American Record Company (ARC) during 1936 and 1937. Most of the songs were first released on 78rpm records in 1937. The Complete Recordings contains every recording Johnson is known to have made, with the exception of an alternate take of "Travelling Riverside Blues".

The Complete Recordings peaked at number 80 on the Billboard 200 chart. The album has sold more than a million copies, and won a Grammy Award in 1991 for "Best Historical Album." In 1992, the Blues Foundation inducted the album into the Blues Hall of Fame. It also was included by the National Recording Preservation Board in the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry in 2003. The board selects recordings on an annual basis that are "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".

Prior to his death in 1938, through the help of H. C. Speir Johnson recorded 29 songs for the American Record Company (ARC). His complete canon of recordings includes these 29 masters, plus 13 surviving alternate takes, all recorded at two ARC sessions held in San Antonio and Dallas, Texas. The Mississippi Delta—two hundred miles of fertile lowlands stretching from Memphis, Tennessee in the north to Vicksburg, Mississippi in the south—was one of the primary locales in which the blues originated and developed. He is said to have been heavily influenced by early blues artists like Skip James, who was recorded in 1931, around the same time that Johnson amazed his elders with his mastery of the guitar. James's eerie, distinctive style is reflected throughout Johnson's recordings, most notably in "32-20 Blues," which he adapted from James's "22-20 Blues."


...
Wikipedia

...