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Steady Rollin' Man
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Performer Notes
  • Personnel includes: Robert Jr. Lockwood, Louis Myers, Dave Myers, Fred Below.
  • Contains 2 bonus tracks.
  • Personnel: Robert Lockwood, Jr. (vocals, guitar, background vocals); Robert Lockwood, Jr.; Dave Myers (bass guitar); Louis Myers (guitar); Fred Below (drums).
  • Recording information: P.S. Studios (08/12/1970-08/??/1970); PS Studio (08/12/1970-08/??/1970).
  • Photographer: John Gibbs Rockwood.
  • When it came to recording an album as a leader, Arkansas native turned Chicago session guitarist Robert Lockwood, Jr. was definitely a late bloomer. Lockwood was first recorded as a sideman in 1941, but not until he was 55 did he record his first album as a leader, with 1970s Steady Rollin' Man (although he had provided a few singles here and there in the '40s and '50s). So why the delay? It came down to the fact that Lockwood had been so busy as a sideman: names like Sonny Boy Williamson, Little Walter and Otis Spann look very good on a r‚sum‚ when you're a blues guitarist. But on Steady Rollin' Man, Lockwood is both a singer and a guitarist (Louis Myers helps with the guitar playing), and he sings on all of the tracks except for a few instrumentals. Steady Rollin' Man generally reflects Lockwood's many years of playing on electric Chicago blues sessions, and yet, his appreciation of Mississippi Delta blues icon Robert Johnson also comes through on this album (which ranges from Lockwood's own material to versions of Curtis Jones' "Blues and Trouble" and Joe Liggins' "Tanya"). This is a disc that, despite its electric orientation, is well aware of the subtlety of acoustic country-blues, and Lockwood's performances are fairly laid-back. Steady Rollin' Man (which Delmark reissued on CD in 2007) rocks, although it doesn't rock nearly as aggressively as the Chicago-style performances that Muddy Waters and Buddy Guy (just to give two examples) were offering in 1970. Nonetheless, Lockwood's emotional power comes through on an enjoyable outing that sounds like it was recorded in the big city but demonstrates that he never forgot about the blues of the rural South. ~ Alex Henderson
Professional Reviews
Dirty Linen (p.70) - "[T]he punch and rhythm of these carefully arranged songs show that he's making all the right moves."

Living Blues (p.68) - "Echoes of Delta tradition are strong and clear, but they're melded with more contemporary influences, often in sly and unexpected ways."
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