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Pee Wee Ellis - Blues Mission

Pee Wee Ellis - Blues Mission

Musician: Pee Wee Ellis
Album title: Blues Mission
Released: 1993
Country: US
Size MP3 version: 1548 mb
Size APE version: 1376 mb
Size WMA version: 1828 mb
Rating ✫: 4.5
Votes: 424
Format: ADX MOD VOC DMF VQF AIFF MMF
Genre: Jazz / Funk / Soul

Pee Wee Ellis - Blues Mission


Tracklist

1 Zig Zag 3:47
2 Gotcha! 3:23
3 Cold Sweat/Mother Popcorn 5:36
4 Yellin' Blue 3:11
5 One Mint Julep 4:10
6 Texas Sweet 6:23
7 Ham 4:15
8 Fort Apache 4:40
9 Blues Mission 3:20

Companies, etc.

  • Distributed By – Rhino Records – R2 79486

Credits

  • Drums – Clyde Stubblefield
  • Guitar – Jean-Paul Bourelly
  • Organ – Masabumi Kikuchi
  • Producer – Jim Payne, Kenny Inaoka*
  • Tenor Saxophone – Pee Wee Ellis
  • Trombone – Tyrone Jefferson
  • Trumpet – Jack Walrath

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 0 8122-79486-2 7

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
TDCN-5039 Pee Wee Ellis Blues Mission ‎(CD, Album) TDK Records TDCN-5039 Japan 1993



Link:

Ynye
Nick DeRiso “Blues Mission” was the first bonafide solo release by Maceo Parker’s running buddy Alfred “Pee Wee” Ellis — one of the funkiest homo sapiens anywhere.Happily included are updated versions of his seminal pieces with James Brown — the immortal, groundbreaking “Cold Sweat,” a sort of emancipation for jazz in the form of a soul-funk voting card. This song is perhaps the apex of his late-1960s stint in the Brown band — a period that included Ellis-arranged hits like “In the Middle,” “Popcorn” and “Soul Pride” — but that’s not the end of the line for our man Pee Wee.Ten years after leaving the Brown band, Ellis came on as bandleader and arranger for Van Morrison, a pairing that lasted until 1986. Since, Ellis has been regrouped with Parker and Fred Wesley from the old band, and appearing on sideman projects.This studio album seemed to point up one inalieable fact: We need guys like Pee Wee moving and grooving.From the smooth soul of “Yellin’ Blue” all the way until the monster title track, Ellis remains hip and healthily cool. Most pleasingly, early stints with jazzers like Ron Carter, Chuck Mangione and Sonny Rollins also emerge.Stir in liberally with the swimming funk of Brown and the high emotion of Morrison, and you have a mission of your own: Go get this thing. The band is wah-wah wow … including drummer Clyde Stubblefield, who sat in with Ellis on Brown’s “Mother Popcorn.”Will it make you sweat? Yeah.