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Robert Johnson King Of The Delta Blues Singers Vinyl LP 2025

Original price £15.99 - Original price £15.99
Original price
£15.99
£15.99 - £15.99
Current price £15.99
Cat no. 291037
Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 10th October, 2025

1. Cross Road Blues [aka Crossroads] - Johnson, Robert
2. Terraplane Blues - Johnson, Robert
3. Come On In My Kitchen - Johnson, Robert
4. Walkin' Blues - Johnson, Robert
5. Last Fair Deal Gone Down - Johnson, Robert
6. 32-20 Blues - Johnson, Robert
7. Kind Hearted Woman Blues - Johnson, Robert
8. If I Had Possession Over Judgement Day - Johnson, Robert
9. I Believe I'll Dust My Broom - Johnson, Robert
10. Preachin' Blues (Up Jumped The Devil)
11. When You Got A Good Friend
12. Rambling On My Mind
13. Stones In My Passway
14. Travelin' Riverside Blues
15. Milkcow's Calf Blues
16. Me And The Devil Blues
17. Hellhound On My Trail
18. Love In Vain Blues
19. Sweet Home Chicago

Almost as much has been written about Robert Johnson’s death (whose circumstances are still so mysterious he has three gravesites) and about his supposed pact with the Devil at a crossroads, as about his music. Short careers in music tend to attract a particular morbid attention. Johnson’s recording career lasted little over half a year and yet he left a legacy of blues that elevated the form into art and helped to shape almost everything that happened in popular music since. As with a lot of legends, the work tends to disappear behind the aura. Returning to this astonishing body of work afresh is always an enlightening experience. Johnson’s rivals may have preferred to think his gift was diabolic (and may have killed him out of jealousy), but in truth Robert Johnson gave his soul to music, and to us.

Reading about the power inherent in Robert Johnson's music is one thing, but actually experiencing it is another matter entirely. The official 1998 edition of the original 1961 album was certainly worth the wait, remastered off the best quality original 78s available, of far superior quality to any of the source materials used on even the 1991 box set. Johnson's guitar takes on a fullness never heard on previous reissues, and except for a nagging hiss in spots on "Terraplane Blues" (the equalization on this disc is extreme, to even sport some minute turntable rumble in the low end), this really brings his music alive. If there is such a thing as a greatest-hits package available on Johnson, this landmark album, which jump-started the whole '60s blues revival, would certainly be the one. The majority of Johnson's best-known tunes, the ones that made the legend, are all aboard: "Crossroads", "Me & the Devil Blues", "Come On In My Kitchen" and the apocalyptic visions contained in "Hellhound On My Trail" are the blues at its finest, the lyrics sheer poetry. And making its first appearance anywhere is a newly discovered (in 1998) alternate take of "Traveling Riverside Blues" that's appended to the original 16-track lineup.