tmidgett wrote:sparky wrote:vockins wrote:sparky wrote:Bump, following Brett Eugene Ralph's mention of Berry on the Elvis thread. This is a selfish bump: which records should a novice start with?
"The Great Twenty Eight" is a singles collection that's excellent.
I've seen the Chess Box 6xLP for $20 used all over the place. Deal and a half.
The "Chuck Berry Is On Top" LP and "St. Louis to Liverpool" LP are serious rippers, too. Anything LP from 1958 to 1964 is solid, except for the live one.
Avoid "The London Chuck Berry Sessions" unless you become rabid about the dude, or you love The Faces.
Thank you very much. I'm hoping and expecting to post my own Not Crap on listening.
The music on The Great Twenty Eight is incredible, but I don't really like the mastering job.
The Chess box sounds great and is great, and I also agree with the rest. I love the Faces and still have no use for TLCBS.
Great at everything he did. Musically.
Not crap.
I should have replied to this a year and a half ago: The Great Twenty Eight is brilliant. Thank you vockins.
There's a lot more variety on this record than I would have previously given Berry credit for; I was also surprised by the number of songs that I recognised on it. The mastering has not bothered me, I have to admit, but this is probably due to the crappy speakers I've been subjecting music to far too often over the past while. (I'll kid myself that this gives an authentic listening-in-an-open-top-cadillac-experience.) I'm listening to it now, in fact, feeling silly for not having listened to it more often. As the others have said, the lyrics are superb.
"Havana Moon" is on. This song is damn weird.
Not crap.