Come On Back Home - Sonny Boy Williamson II
60's
Timeless Chicago blues
The kind of rhythm that makes the room feel cooler the second it starts.
Just Sonny Boy doing what he does best. Don't scroll past the gold.

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Come On Back Home - Sonny Boy Williamson II
60's
Timeless Chicago blues
The kind of rhythm that makes the room feel cooler the second it starts.
Just Sonny Boy doing what he does best. Don't scroll past the gold.
The King Brothers - "'Bout to Lose My Mind" To the Blues Song released in 1994. Compilation released in 1997. Blues / Harmonica Blues
Mid-90s barroom blues from an underrated pair of Los Angeles-based brothers
Ultimately, “’Bout to Lose My Mind” is a timeless example of a smoldering blues ballad for the smoky and sparsely lit barroom, and really, the person most responsible for making it sound so satisfyingly good is Lee King. Here, he takes up lead singing duties with an authentically rugged and passionate voice that has some light gravel on it, and then accompanying him on harmonica is none other than John “Juke” Logan, whose style and tone you might recognize from such iconic blues works as the theme songs to both Home Improvement and Roseanne! And the other King Brother, Sam, is on the drums.
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The Billy Gibson Band – Live At Rum Boogie Cafe - On Historic Beale Street (2005)
“Bring It On Home”
Sonny Boy Williamson II, aka Aleck “Rice” Miller
Harmonica Blues – Slim Harpo Cover [with Tab]
Lazy Lester - I Hear You Knockin’
No name blues sanatçıların dışında bilinen en eski blues mızıkacısıda ölmüş. :(
My Babe - Dakota Staton
1960
Smoky jazz-blues with bite and swing
Dakota Staton keeps the blues rough around the edges while the band swings it smooth.
The song first surfaced with Little Walter in
1955
The Boogie Disease - Doctor Ross
1954
Feverish juke-joint energy
A relentless one-man-band boogie from the Mississippi hills.