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Artist: The Legendary Pink Dots
Title: The Tower
Year Of Release: 2004
Label: Alligator Records
Genre: Blues, Electric Chicago Blues
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:09:32
Total Size: 217/543 Mb (scans)


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Tracklist:
01. Wild About You, Baby
02. Sen-Sa-Shun
03. She's Gone
04. It Hurts Me Too
05. What'd I Say
06. One More Time
07. Sadie
08. Dog Meets The Wolf
09. Walking The Ceiling
10. Sitting at Home Alone
11. Phillips Screwsdriver
12. Gonna Send You Back to Georgia
13. Things Don't Work Out Right
14. See Me In The Evening / It's Alright
15. Hound Dog Talks Again (Hidden Track)

As the debut act on the fledgling Alligator label, Hound Dog Taylor obviously holds a hallowed place in owner Bruce Iglauer's heart. That has resulted in more posthumous albums (three) from the raw boogie-blues man than "official" ones (two) released in his lifetime. And that's not including the Alligator tribute disc. Iglauer has returned to raid what must be some pretty threadbare vaults by now, to cobble together this 70-minute collection of live tracks, outtakes, and general leftovers. Fortunately, this barrel-scraping has turned up some real gems, although they are far rougher than what is already in Taylor's gritty, gutbucket rocking catalog. Certainly existing fans won't mind. The rawer than raw -- but still far better than bootleg -- quality tapes are only for those already in Hound Dog's house. Versions of "Sadie" and a wild, half-drunken ten-plus minute romp through a slow and bluesy "Things Don't Work Out Right," complete with a rambling soliloquy, guitar buzz, and feedback in all the right places, have to be heard to be appreciated. Experiencing Hound Dog at his loosest is a fly-on-the-wall proposition as he seems unaware tapes were rolling for many of these tracks. That makes for some wonderfully open and uninhibited music from the bassless Taylor trio, playing with the usual reckless abandon. The music teeters on the brink of unraveling, but never does, adding a tightrope-walking edge to this already precariously loose sound. In other words, this may not be the place to start for the uninitiated, but for existing fans this is nowhere close to a money-cashing ripoff. It is a justifiably crude closing to the catalog of one of Chicago's most enigmatic and legendary figures.

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