John Lee Hooker - Chill Out 1. Chill Out (Things Gonna Change) 2. Deep Blue Sea 3. Kiddio 4. Serves Me Right To Suffer / Syndicator 5. One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer 6. Tupelo 7. Woman On My Mind 8. Annie Mae 9. Too Young 10. Talkin' The Blues 11. If You've Never Been In Love 12. We'll Meet Again Personnel: John Lee Hooker (vocals, guitar, steel guitar); Danny Caron, Rich Kirch, Billy Johnson, Bruce Kaphan (guitar); John Sanders (piano); Chester Thompson (keyboards); Deacon Jones (organ); Ruth Davies, Benny Rietveld, Max Cridlin, Jim Guyett (bass); Scott Mathews, Gaylord Birch, Bowen Brown (drums); Raul Rekow (congas); Karl Perazzo (timbales). Producers: Carlos Santana, Roy Rogers, John Lee Hooker. Engineers: Arne Frager, Samuel Lehmer, Bruce Kaphan. Recorded at Russian Hill Recording, San Francisco, California; The Plant, Sausalito, California; Dragon Studio, Redwood City, California. CHILL OUT won a 1996 Grammy Award for Best Traditional Blues Album. One of a series of superb Hooker albums recorded in the '90s, CHILL OUT clearly shows that John Lee remains at the top of his game. The opening (and title) track features guitar god and long time Hooker fan Carlos Santana (with his band). Although quite slick sounding, Santana's Latin funk grooves and typically blistering solo fit suprisingly well with John Lee's gutbucket vocals--a testament to the aging blues man's incredible versatility. Roy Rogers (the blues guy, not the cowboy fast food mogul) reveals himself as an adept and sensitive producer and also adds some very tasty slide guitar on four tunes. CHILL OUT includes several Hooker solo guitar and vocal pieces, some of which are among the best of his career. “Too Young,“ in particular, is chilling in it's sparseness and intensity. Hooker's voice is in great shape and, for a man known for his “talking“ style, he can sing incredibly sweetly and melodically when he wants to. On “Kiddio,“ which features some truly funky piano from the great Charles Brown, John Lee positively croons. Whether with a full band or all alone, John Lee Hooker's talent burns brightly throughout CHILL OUT.
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