Description: Wow. Deluxe Edition. 4 Lp box set, lovingly compiled by the good folks at Third Man.Sealed, new. “I been looking forward to this for a long time. And I thought this would happen in the future and it did, so now I hope it lasts long. Fact of business, I believe it will.” - Lightnin’ Hopkins“The Ann Arbor Blues Festival was really like our blues Woodstock. It brought together such an astonishing array of legendary artists, and for me, will always remain one of the greatest and most historic festivals ever.” - Bonnie Raitt (musician and festival attendee)“Ann Arbor set both the stage and the standard for all the blues festivals that followed… Survivors of the 1960s still ask one another, ‘Were you at Woodstock?’ Those of us who became blues converts ask, ‘Were you at Ann Arbor?’” - Jim O’Neal, cofounder of Living Blues Third Man Records has revealed the details for the deluxe edition of the ANN ARBOR BLUES FESTIVAL 1969, a 50th anniversary celebration collecting 24 previously unheard songs by blues legends out this Friday, August 2, 2019 The ANN ARBOR BLUES FESTIVAL 1969 collection is a powerful document of a historic gathering featuring, among others, Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, B.B. King, James Cotton, Son House, Magic Sam, T-Bone Walker, Junior Wells, Big Mama Thornton, Clifton Chenier, Son House, Mississippi Fred McDowell, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Pinetop Perkins, J. B. Hutto & His Hawks, Roosevelt Sykes, Luther Allison, Otis Rush, Big Joe Williams, and Charlie Musselwhite. The first ever release of music recorded live at the landmark event, ANN ARBOR BLUES FESTIVAL 1969 will be available in two individual 2x LP volumes, exclusively on 180 gram vinyl housed in gatefold packaging featuring fan snapshots, and on CD. Produced by Parker Fishel and Jim Fishel, the ANN ARBOR BLUES FESTIVAL 1969 was coordinated by Third Man co-founders Ben Blackwell and Ben Swank. Both volumes include never-before-seen photographs, artist biographies, an exclusive reminiscence from Jim Fishel, and extensive liner notes by Parker Fishel, Sophie Abramowitz and David Beal. The set will also be available in a special edition featuring two single-color (one blue, one red) printed jackets with complementary colored vinyl, a 58-page perfect bound book with transparent vellum inserts and a short recollection from festival organizer John Fishel, die-cut reproductions of his original festival booking notes, a full-size reproduction of Jim Fishel’s festival program on newsprint paper that includes nearly every artists’ signature, a reproduction of the original festival tickets on various colored papers and a reprint of the original festival poster on silver metallic paper. The package will also include 13 reproductions of original news articles and ads on newsprint paper housed in a hand-stamped envelope. All of this will be packaged in a telescoping box printed on the same silver metallic paper as the poster reproduction with poster art on the cover. August 1969 might have seen another musical gathering grabbing the world’s attention, but the Ann Arbor Blues Festival has since proven a cultural milestone in its own unique right – the first American festival devoted solely to blues music. Held August 1-3, 1969 at Fuller Flatlands, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, for three days it was not unusual to find scenes like B.B. King playing his forthcoming single for Mississippi Fred McDowell, Big Mama Thornton and Junior Wells or Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf and Big Joe Williams catching up about grandchildren, life on the road and the recent moon landing. The family reunion backstage led to an all-star game onstage as an audience of eager young blues converts was treated to a living history of the blues from some of its inventors, innovators and greatest talents. The historic gathering was presented by a small group of blues-obsessed U of M students determined to give their blues heroes and heroines a public spotlight where they might shine before it was too late. Among those enterprising student-promoters was John Fishel, whose teenage brother Jim Fishel, gathered some friends to help record the festival as a personal memento. Taking advantage of their all-access pass and juggling a small Norelco tape recorder from set to set, the friends let the 1⁄4” tape roll. Though field recordings in the literal sense of the term, they capture the brilliance of the musicians, the excitement of the crowd and the loose, convivial nature of the entire festival. Those tapes, long thought to be lost, have now been lovingly restored to capture the electric energy of the landmark concert. ANN ARBOR BLUES FESTIVAL 1969 is produced by Parker Fishel and Jim Fishel; the project was coordinated by Third Man co-founders Ben Blackwell and Ben Swank. Both volumes include never-before-seen photographs, artist biographies, an exclusive reminiscence from Jim Fishel, and extensive liner notes by Parker Fishel, Sophie Abramowitz and David Beal. “Across three days in early August 1969, [the Ann Arbor Blues Festival] exposed the work of black blues musicians to a reverential young white audience (many of whom had probably chosen to attend Ann Arbor over Woodstock, which took place two weeks later),” writes Fishel, Abramowitz and Beal in the album’s liner notes. “From the city to the country, the West Coast to the Gulf Coast, Mississippi to Chicago, 24 masters of the idiom were booked to perform for this new audience – an estimated 10,000-plus kids, listening to the artists they saw as vanguards of the music that had dominated the decade’s counterculture. But more importantly, the festival presented a view in miniature of the changing blues community and the often surprising relationships between the musicians who comprised it – some who were still sharecroppers or working day jobs, some who had popular recording careers years before the blues and folk revivals brought them back into the spotlight, and some who had yet to release a full album…The 1969 festival was an exemplary space of communion and reunion. During an interview the following year, Roosevelt Sykes reflected on the experience: ‘We really had some kicks, the musicians. That was one thing that they really didn’t know, they really should have charged the musicians a fee to come. It was worth it, for what y’all paid, it’s worth it for us to see one another! ‘Cause speaking of it, we really enjoy one another that much.’ DownBeat magazine concluded, ‘The Ann Arbor Blues Festival did not make headlines. Yet it was without a doubt the festival of the year, if not the decade.’” COMPLETE TRACKLISTING ANN ARBOR BLUES FESTIVAL 1969 LP Vol. 1 1. Roosevelt Sykes – Dirty Mother For You 2. Arthur ‘Big Boy’ Crudup - So Glad You’re Mine 3. J.B. Hutto & His Hawks – Too Much Alcohol 4. Jimmy “Fast Fingers” Dawkins - I Wonder Why 5. Junior Wells – Help Me (A Tribute To Sonny Boy Williamson) 6. B.B. King with Sonny Freeman And The Unusuals – I’ve Got A Mind To Give Up Living 7. Mississippi Fred McDowell – John Henry 8. Pinetop Perkins – Pinetop’s Boogie Woogie 9. Big Bill Hill – Introduction 10. Luther Allison And The Blue Nebulae – Everybody Must Suffer/Stone Crazy 11. Clifton Chenier – Tu M’as Promise L’amour (You Promised Me Love) 12. The Original Howlin’ Wolf And His Orchestra – Hard Luck 13. Otis Rush - So Many Roads, So Many Trains * * Recorded April 12, 1970 at Hill Auditorium, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor ANN ARBOR BLUES FESTIVAL 1969 LP Vol. 2 1. Muddy Waters - Long Distance Call 2. Charlie Musselwhite – Movin’ And Groovin’ 3. Magic Sam - I Feel So Good (I Wanna Boogie) 4. Shirley Griffith – Jelly Jelly Blues 5. Big Mojo Elem – Mojo Boogie 6. T-Bone Walker – Call It Stormy Monday (But Tuesday Is Just As Bad) 7. Big Bill Hill - Announcements 8. Big Mama Thornton And The Hound Doggers – Ball And Chain 9. Big Joe Williams – Juanita 10. Sam Lay - Key To The Highway 11. Lightnin’ Hopkins - Mojo Hand 12. James Cotton Blues Band – Off The Wall 13. Son House – Death Letter Blues
Price: 95.95 USD
Location: Norristown, Pennsylvania
End Time: 2024-03-03T15:33:51.000Z
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Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: Various Artists, LP
Style: Blues
Inlay Condition: Mint (M)
Record Grading: Mint (M)
Material: Vinyl
Record Size: 12"
Format: Record
Type: Box Set
Features: 180-220 gram, Colored Vinyl
Release Title: Ann Arbor Blues Festival 1969
Record Label: Third Man Records
Color: Red
Release Year: 1969
Edition: Box Set, Deluxe Edition, Limited Edition
Genre: Blues
Sleeve Grading: Near Mint (NM or M-)