Champagne & Reefer
Muddy Waters
SONGWRITER: Muddy Waters
COUNTRY: U.S.A.
ALBUM: KING BEE
LABEL: BLUE SKY
GENRE: BLUES
YEAR: 1981

McKinley Morganfield (April 4, 1913 — April 30, 1983), known by his stage name Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician who is often cited as the "father of modern Chicago blues". Muddy Waters grew up on Stovall Plantation, near Clarksdale, Mississippi, and by age 17 was playing the guitar and the harmonica, emulating local blues artists Son House and Robert Johnson. He was recorded in Mississippi by Alan Lomax for the Library of Congress in 1941.
In 1943, he moved to Chicago to become a full-time, professional musician. In 1946, Muddy Waters eventually recorded his first record for Columbia Records and then for Aristocrat Records, a newly formed label run by the brothers Leonard and Phil Chess.
In the early 1950s, Muddy Waters and his band—Little Walter Jacobs on harmonica, Jimmy Rogers on guitar, Elgin Evans on drums and Otis Spann on piano—recorded several blues classics, some with bassist and songwriter Willie Dixon. These songs included "Hoochie Coochie Man", "I Just Want to Make Love to You" and "I'm Ready". In 1958, he traveled to England, laying the foundations of the subsequent blues boom there. His performance at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1960 was recorded and released as his first live album, At Newport 1960.
King Bee is the fourteenth and final studio album by blues singer and guitarist Muddy Waters. Released in 1981, it is third in a series of records done for the label Blue Sky Records under producer/guitarist Johnny Winter. Recorded in three days (and in the wake of Muddy's failing health) some of the band members, namely Winter and guitarist Bob Margolin, were not happy with the result. As his health deteriorated, Muddy was forced to cancel an increasing number of shows. He died of a heart attack on April 30, 1983.
The album was recorded in May 1980. A salary dispute between the band and Muddy Waters's manager, Scott Cameron, halted the session. Eventually the album was completed by using a couple of outtakes from 1977's Hard Again.
Yeah bring me champagne when I'm thirsty.
Bring me reefer when I want to get high.
Yeah bring me champagne when I'm thirsty.
Bring me reefer when I want to get high.
Well you know when I'm lonely
Bring my woman set her right down here by my side.

Well you know there should be no law
On people that want to smoke a little dope.
Well you know there should be no law
On people that want to smoke a little dope.
Well you know it's good for your head
And it relax your body don't you know.

Everytime I get high
I lay my head down on my baby's breast.
Well you know I lay down be quiet
Tryin' to take my rest.
Well you know she done hug and kiss me
Says Muddy your one man that I love the best.

I'm gonna get high
Gonna get high just as sure as you know my name.
Y'know I'm gonna get so high this morning
It's going to be a cryin' shame.
Well you know I'm gonna stick with my reefer
Ain't gonna be messin' round with no cocaine.
IF YOU SHOULD LOVE ME
TEN YEARS AFTER
SONGWRITER: ALVIN LEE
COUNTRY: U.K.
ALBUM: SSSSH
LABEL: DERAM
GENRE: BLUES-ROCK
YEAR: 1969

Ssssh is the third studio album by blues rock band Ten Years After, released in 1969. The album charted #20 on the Billboard 200 and #4 on the UK charts.
Ten Years After are an English blues rock band, most popular in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Between 1968 and 1973, Ten Years After scored eight Top 40 albums on the UK Albums Chart. In addition they had twelve albums enter the US Billboard 200, and are best known for tracks such as "I'm Going Home", "Hear Me Calling", "I'd Love to Change the World" and "Love Like a Man". Their musical style consisted of blues rock, and hard rock.





If you should love me
Then I cannot be to blame
For loving you the way I do
If you should want me
Then you cannot really say
You cannot say it to me, baby
Mmmm... won't you love me true
'Cause you got your way and, baby, I got mine
Darling, I love you
The only way I know
You know I know that It's gonna be good loving
For ever and a day
The way you want my love
You know you're gonna be my baby
And I'm feeling all
I'm feeling all right
Baby, love the way you walk
I love it when you're talking to me, darling
Yeah, won't you call my name
Now now now now
I wanna show you how to love
And loving should be good
'Cause darling, we got it made
Made by you and me
Now now now now
I wanna be your loving man
Wanna love you all I can
I wanna show you, baby, baby, baby...
How to love you right
Baby, make you feel so good tonight
Baby, make you feel, feel so right
I know I really would if I could
If you should love me
Love me every day
Love me all the way
Baby, I love you
Love you all the time
I love you it's only right
If I love you every night
Then, I'll buy a diamond ring
Buy a diamond ring for your finger
Yeah, yeah, now, now, now
Everybody's telling me
That I must be mad to think it's very bad
'Cause I love you and I know that you love me
Yeah, yeah, yeah, now
Yeah, love is really good to me
Loving really sets me free
Baby, I'm feeling, I'm feeling
I'm feeling all night
Now yeah, loving is really good and fine
Loving really frees your mind
Darling, darling, I'm feeing all right
Yeah, yeah, now now......

Come on, come on, yeah, yeah..........
OOH BABY
BO DIDDLEY
SONGWRITER: ELLAS MCDANIEL 
COUNTRY: U.S.A.
ALBUM: HIS BEST
LABEL: GEFFEN RECORDS
GENRE: ROCK AND ROLL
YEAR: 1997

His Best is a 1997 greatest hits compilation album by American rock and roll icon Bo Diddley released by Chess and MCA Records on April 8, 1997 (see 1997 in music). The album was re-released by Geffen Records on April 17, 2007 as The Definitive Collection with a different album cover. The Definitive Collection reached #2 on Billboard magazine's Blues Albums chart on June 21, 2008, which was the week that the album debuted on the charts.





(Whoa-ooh baby, I love you)
Ooh baby I love you, yeah
(Whoa-ooh baby, I love you)
Ooh baby I love you
(Spoken:)
Wait a minute!
You know my woman told me, she said,
"Bo Diddley, I love you, but I'm leavin'"
I said, "What?"
She said, "I love you but I'm leavin' you"
And I said, "Baby?"
And she kept sayin', "Whoa baby, I love you"
What you say, girl?
(Whoa-ooh baby, I love you)
Ooh, I love you
Ooow! Somethin' wrong here someplace
(Whoa-oh baby, I love you)
Wait a minute!
She said, "Here's the key to all of your locks,
take my name off of your mailbox
Here's the key to your Cadillac,
I got my own parked right out back"
I said, "What?"
There somethin' wrong here
And she kept talkin' 'bout
I love you
(Whoa-ooh baby, I love you)
Fellas, let me tell you somethin'
Ha, ha, ha
Wow! Woo, somethin' wrong
(Whoa-oh baby, I love (need) you
Wait a minute!
Let me tell you what else she told me
She said, "You know one thing, Diddley
I got all my bags packed,
in the middle of the dining room floor
I'm all packed and ready to go"
I said, "But baby, whoa baby
Baby, baby"
And then she told me
she said, "Got my own place,
with some brand new lock
I'm gonna tell the mailman,
I got a brand new box"
I said
(Whoa-oh baby, I love you)
"Woo you ain't
jivin'
are you?"
There's somethin' wrong some place
She kept talkin' 'bout
"Ooh baby, (I want you, I love you)
(I need you)
(I love you) I love you

(I love you)
EVIL IS GOING ON
LUTHER ALISSON
SONGWRITER: WILLIE DIXON
COUNTRY: U.S.A.
ALBUM: BAD NEWS IS COMING
LABEL: GORDY
GENRE: BLUES
YEAR: 1972

"Evil", sometimes listed as "Evil (Is Going On)", is a Chicago blues standard written by Willie Dixon. Howlin' Wolf recorded the song for Chess Records in 1954. It was included on the 1959 compilation album Moanin' in the Moonlight. When he re-recorded it for The Howlin' Wolf Album in 1969, "Evil" became Wolf's last charting single (#43 Billboard R&B chart).
The 1954 song features sidemen Hubert Sumlin and Jody Williams (guitars), Otis Spann (piano), Willie Dixon (double-bass), and Earl Phillips (drums). Wolf achieves a coarse, emotional performance with his strained singing, lapsing into falsetto. The song, a twelve-bar blues, is punctuated with a syncopated backbeat, brief instrumental improvisations, upper-end piano figures, and intermittent blues harp provided by Wolf. The lyrics caution about the "evil" that takes place in a man's home when he is away, concluding with "you better watch your happy home".
Luther Allison (August 17, 1939 – August 12, 1997) was an American blues guitarist. He was born in Widener, Arkansas, and moved with his family to Chicago in 1951. He taught himself guitar and began listening to blues extensively. Three years later he began hanging around outside blues nightclubs with the hopes of being invited to perform. He played with Howlin' Wolf's band and backed James Cotton.





You're a long way from home and you can't sleep at night
Grab your telephone now somethin' ain't right
And that's evil, evil

Going home baby, yeah
I said I'm warnin' you brothers
You'd better watch your happy home, yeah, yeah

Long way from home and you can't sleep at night
Feels like another mule's kickin' in my stall
And that's evil, evil

Going out baby, yeah
I said I'm warnin' you brothers
You'd better watch your happy home
Watch your happy, watch your happy, happy home, yeah

You're a long way from home and you can't sleep at night
Feels like another mule's kickin' in my stall
And that's evil, evil

Going home baby, yeah
I said I'm warnin' you brothers
You'd better watch your happy home
Watch your happy, watch your happy, happy home

Evil yeah, evil right
Evil yeah, evil now
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah


You're a long way from home and you can't sleep at night