| Muddy's "unplugged" album was cut in September of 1963 and 
        still sounds fresh and vital today. It was Muddy simply returning to his 
        original style on a plain acoustic guitar in a well-tuned room with Willie 
        Dixon on string bass, Clifton James on drums, and Buddy Guy on second 
        acoustic guitar. The nine tracks are divvied up between full rhythm section 
        treatments with Buddy and Muddy as a duo and the final track, "Feel 
        Like Going Home," which Waters approaches solo. What makes this version 
        of the album a worthwhile buy is the inclusion of five bonus tracks from 
        his next two sessions: An April 1964 session brings us Willie Dixon's 
        "The Same Thing" and Muddy's "You Can't Lose What You Never 
        Had," while the October 1964 session features J.T. Brown on sax and 
        clarinet on "Short Dress Woman" and "My John the Conqueror 
        Root," as well as "Put Me in Your Lay Away," another strong 
        side. Folk Singer offers both sides of Muddy from the early '60s. (by 
        Cub Koda, AMG)  | 
  
    | Worried that the folk-music fad was luring listeners away 
      from the blues, Chess Records directed Waters to record with acoustic instruments. 
      These sessions -- by Waters, Willie Dixon and a young Buddy Guy -- went 
      astonishingly well, and this pioneering "unplugged" set is beloved 
      by blues and folk fans alike. Total album sales: Under 500,000 (Rolling Stone) |