Paul Butterfield Blues Band - I Got A Mind To Give Up Living free for downloading

  • Artist: Paul Butterfield Blues Band
  • Song: I Got A Mind To Give Up Living
  • Music Genre: Blues
  • Length: 04:59
  • Filesize: 11.7MB
  • Kbps: 320Kbps
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Download Paul Butterfield Blues Band - I Got A Mind To Give Up Living

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Comments

Gi Ayuru

2022-01-05 13:06:13 | Profile
If I could name the guitarist that Mike Bloomfield owes the biggest debt to, I'd have to call him Otis Rush.

cosborn67 Gaming

2021-08-04 18:26:47 | Profile
This was my first blues albums, 8-track back in 1966, been doing blues since, oh by the way, I still have that 8-track and it still works, yes I have an 8-track player.

Anubis Drakh

2021-08-02 23:48:40 | Profile
This is the song that inspired me to play guitar. It is still my favorite song and guitar solo of all time. Not only because of Michael's distinctive phrasing but because the band works together. Music is about feeling, not speed or technical ability. Bloomfield was the complete player.

stufferstuffing

2021-03-12 06:32:46 | Profile
this song is heaven

executionerofgod

2021-03-07 13:41:56 | Profile
if this one don't get you you have a hole in your soul ....

Nicole Slighting

2020-09-20 00:35:06 | Profile
One of the best albums ever made. Maestros all.

Charles Koné

2020-08-11 08:52:15 | Profile
What would a person like me say? Thank you Michael, thank you Paul, thank you Sammy, thank you Jerome, and thank you Mark. And thank you Mr. Poobah, wherever you may be.

MrSasyB

2020-07-08 02:50:22 | Profile
what a beauty - and please senor bloomfield - let me worship guiterplaying

Andriitc Kleins

2020-06-24 08:03:02 | Profile
One of the best examples of Bloomfield doing his thing like no other. After all these decades he still sounds unique. His phrasing is haunting. He manages to play outside the usual blue notes and still sound blue. Live at Filmore West isn't too bad either. 8-)

liebekaese

2020-06-23 02:25:42 | Profile
One of the top ten album !

ZENAT Mutapayi

2020-06-23 02:07:19 | Profile
Mike Bloomfield at his best right here. I had this LP when it came out back in the 1960s but I never really heard this song. I mean I played it and listened to it, but I never really heard it. Mike's work on this guitar is so deep and emotional, it went right over my head. His hands are barely playing, lightly touching the strings. It is all driven by his heart. Blows me away that someone can express so much emotion through a simple instrument .

I_DoStufff

2020-06-20 22:16:31 | Profile
Even tho I have been listening to this song since it was released, its still the must gut wrenching song ever, and baby, you can bet on that

Sebastian Crabill

2020-06-20 18:23:49 | Profile
The greatest version of the greatest blues song of all time.

Jade Willcox

2020-06-09 14:13:14 | Profile
one of the most exciting blues albums of the sixties !!!

Валя Ткач

2020-06-09 06:23:33 | Profile
A timeless example of guitar - voice trade off in a classic blues piece.  One of the finest albums ever made.

HENDO

2020-06-07 12:19:37 | Profile
This is the equal of anything Bloomfield ever did and for sheer emotional power, it just can't be bested. I love the way Bloomfield bookends this song - he closes the tune with the same 3 notes he opens with (though in a different register). Looking at the comments here, i can see that I'm not alone in my ardor for this song and for Mike Bloomfield, perennially among the most underrated guitarists of the last fifty years. You can say he never fulfilled his promise, but this song alone shows otherwise. Gone far too soon, however. I have been listening to this song for over 50 years now and it still gives me goosebumps. Bloomfield just does everything right in this piece of music.

Sven Boettjer

2020-06-04 10:37:39 | Profile
Haunting. Bloomfield was one of the greats, that's for sure!

Rodney Rehm

2020-05-28 15:42:41 | Profile
This is my pick for the most innovative, creative and overwhelmingly emotive blues solo ever put on record. To those who cite Peter Green's performance, all I can say is I love the Brits too, and PG really tears it up, but this shows a whole other dimension to the construction of a blues solo, using minor modalities to build tension and resolve it in perfect symmetry. Bloomer learned from everybody (especially Otis Rush and B.B.), but he brought his own genius.  Sadly, his addictions kept him from growing musically from this point, and it was generally downhill from here.  B.B's version is fantastic both for his playing and singing...really one of his best, imo.

jahiddle

2020-05-27 02:48:58 | Profile
I bought this album 50+ years ago as a teen, used to get high, eat acid, and listen to the title track all the time. Good times.