Soul's Edge

Soul's Edge
Studio album by
Released1995
RecordedNovember 1994
StudioUltrasonic, New Orleans
GenreBlues
Length68:08
LabelBlack Top
ProducerHammond Scott[1]
Snooks Eaglin chronology
Teasin' You
(1992)
Soul's Edge
(1995)
Soul Train from Nawlins
(1996)

Soul's Edge is an album by the American blues guitarist and singer Snooks Eaglin, released in 1995 on Black Top Records.[2][3]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[4]
Edmonton Journal[5]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[6]

In his review for AllMusic, Bill Dahl wrote: "Give this New Orleans master enough studio time, and he'll redo the entire history of postwar R&B his own way."[4] The Chicago Reader wrote that "the core blues feel remains, but Eaglin's remarkable flexibility allows him to inhabit nearly any situation with grace, from the furious key-changing blues of bassist George Porter Jr.'s instrumental 'Aw' Some Funk', a real showcase for the guitarist, to the heart-wrenching lament his playing expresses on 'Nine Pound Steel'."[7] The Times-Colonist wrote that "Eaglin drives the band with majestic blues string bending and grace."[8]

Track listing

  1. "Josephine" (Fats Domino, Dave Bartholomew) – 6:05
  2. "Show Me the Way Back Home" (Willie Tee) – 4:13
  3. "Ling Ting Tong" (Mabel Godwin) – 4:00
  4. "Aw' Some Funk" (George Porter, Jr.) – 4:55
  5. "I'm Not Ashamed" (Don Robey) – 3:40
  6. "Nine Pound Steel" (Dan Penn, W. Thompson) – 5:32
  7. "Answer Now" (Porter, Eaglin) – 6:01
  8. "Skinny Minnie" (Bill Haley, Milt Gabler, Rusty Keefer, Catherine Cafra) – 4:14
  9. "Thrill on the Hill" (Hank Ballard) – 2:51
  10. "You and Me" (Porter, Eaglin) – 6:13
  11. "I Went to the Mardi Gras" (Eaglin, Ridgely, Scott) – 4:44
  12. "Talk to Me" (Joe Seneca) – 5:23
  13. "Mama and Papa" (Earl King) – 4:00
  14. "God Will Take Care" (Traditional) – 4:17

Personnel

References

  1. ^ Berry, Jason (August 1995). "Next stop, Black Top". New Orleans Magazine. Vol. 29, no. 11. p. 47.
  2. ^ "Snooks Eaglin Biography & History". AllMusic.
  3. ^ Dahl, Bill. "No Request Too Obsure for 'Human Jukebox'". Chicago Tribune.
  4. ^ a b Dahl, Bill. Snooks Eaglin – Soul's Edge: Review at AllMusic. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  5. ^ Levesque, Roger (September 16, 1995). "Blues". Edmonton Journal. p. D2.
  6. ^ Larkin, Colin (2006). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Vol. 3. MUZE. p. 190.
  7. ^ Margasak, Peter. "Soul Survivor". Chicago Reader.
  8. ^ Blake, Joseph (June 15, 1995). "Soul's Edge Snooks Eaglin (Black Top)". Times-Colonist. p. 1.