Album Reviews

Various Artists: Confessin’ The Blues

Various Artists
Confessinโ€™ The Blues
(BMG/Universal)
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

The subtitle of this umpteenth collection of (mostly) classic blues reads, โ€œBlues masterpieces hand-picked and curated in collaboration with the Rolling Stones.โ€ That high-profile reference alone should guarantee a few more dollars in the bank account of Willie Dixonโ€™s Blues Heaven Foundation, the beneficiary of the profits from this set. Itโ€™s a well-established organization that โ€œpromotes, protects and preserves the blues for future generations.โ€ So far, so benevolent.

Things become slightly more problematic as you inspect the 42 tracks. Itโ€™s a no-brainer to start with Muddy Watersโ€™ โ€œRolling Stone,โ€ an obvious opener and one of four here from the legendary bluesman who the Stones, at least in their earliest incarnation, covered. Others only tentatively link to the blues. Chuck Berry (โ€œCarol,โ€ โ€œLittle Queenieโ€), Bo Diddley (โ€œMona,โ€ โ€œYou Canโ€™t Judge A Book by Its Coverโ€) and Dale Hawkins (โ€œSuzie Qโ€), while certainly influences on the Stones since they played those tunes and brought much needed attention to these artists before they were considered icons, could have been replaced with more definitively blues personalities.

Genuine, respected, American Delta and Chicago legends whose songs were overhauled by the Stones such as Robert Johnson (โ€œLove In Vain,โ€ โ€œStop Breaking Downโ€), Rev. Robert Wilkins (โ€œThe Prodigal Sonโ€), Slim Harpo (โ€œIโ€™m A King Beeโ€ but oddly no โ€œShake Your Hipsโ€), Howlinโ€™ Wolf (โ€œLittle Red Roosterโ€) and Mississippi Fred McDowell (โ€œYou Gotta Moveโ€) appear with the selections the band covered. That furthers the Stonesโ€™ connection with the acknowledged architects of the genre. Somewhat obscure folks such as Big Maceo Merriweather, Little Johnny Taylor, Jay McShann (who wrote and performs the title track), Amos Milburn and Boy Blue help make this more diverse than just another collection of familiar names.

If there was any question about the Stonesโ€™ continued affiliation to the blues after all these decades pounding away in the rock and roll trenches, it was answered resoundingly with 2016โ€™s surprisingly popular and critically acclaimed Blue And Lonesome. They follow with this excavation into their roots, meant to educate those who might have first been exposed to this most American of music on that release. Itโ€™s difficult to quibble with the inclusions the Stones chose, especially when they dig deeper to expose lesser heard gems such as Wolfโ€™s โ€œJust As I Treat Youโ€ and Little Walterโ€™s โ€œI Got To Go,โ€ neither a major hit.

Additionally, the cover painting by Ron Wood is cool, 48 pages of liner notes detail the acts and their contributions to the genre, and profits go to a good cause. Hardcore blues lovers are likely familiar with the majority of this music, but thatโ€™s not who Confessinโ€™ The Blues is geared towards. For anyone not already a blues buff, this is a love letter from the Stones to their forebears and a solid compilation that serves as a terrific on-ramp to some of Americaโ€™s finest and most storied artists.

Once again, these plucky Brits expose Americans to essential homegrown sounds they need to understand and appreciate, just like they did 50 years ago.