TracksCatfish Blues - Bobo Thomas, I Want a Bowlegged Woman - Bull Moose Jackson, Hard Lead Pencil - the Honeydripper, Litle Red Dress (Drawers) - Jimmie Gordon, Love Operation - Barrel House Annie, Blue Bloomer Blues - Alex Moore, Let Me Squeeze Your Lemon - Charlie Pickett, Doodle Hole Blues - Charlie Lincoln, One More Greasing - Georgia Pine Boy, Kitchen Man - Bessie Smith, You Got to Give Me Some of It - Buddy Moss, Dressed with the Drawers - Carl Rafferty, Ain't Got Nobody to Grind My Coffee - Clara Smith, Lemon Man - Dan Pickett, Bed Spring Poker - Mississippi Sheiks, Show Me What You've Got - Kansas City Kitty and Georgia Tom, I Want My Hands on It - Big Bill Broonzy, I'm a Rattlesnakin Daddy - Blind Boy Fuller, I Think You Need a Shot - Champion Jack Dupree, Bumble Bee - Memphis Minnie, The Best Jockey in Town - Lonnie Johnson, Don't Like the Way You Do - Blind Squire Turner, My Daddy Was a Jockey - John Lee Hooker, Pig Meat Papa - Leadbelly, Sweet Honey Hole - Blind Boy Fuller, Banana in Your Fruitbasket - Bo Carter, Mouses Ear Blues - Cliff Carlisle, I Want Plenty of Grease in My Frying Pan - Margaret Carter, Let Me Play with Your Poodle - Lightnin Hopkins, I Let My Daddy Do That - Hattie Hart, She Want to Sell My Monkey - Tampa Red, I'm a Mighty Tight Woman - Sippie Wallace, Phonograph Blues - Robert Johnson, She Shook Her Gin - Barbecue Bobb, How You Want It Done - Big Bill Broonzy, Bed Springs Blues - Jimmie Gordon, Fish House Blues - Kansas City Kitty and Georgia Tom, I Want My Fanny Brown - Wynonie Harris, I've Got Ford Movements in My Hips - Cleo Gibson, Mother Fuyer - Dirty Red, Good Cabbage - Victoria Spivey, It Ain't the Meat - the Swallows, My Babys Playground - Roosevelt Sykes, Dirty Butter - Minnie Wallace, Wipe It Off - Lonnie Johnson, My Man O War - Lizzie Miles, She's Got Good Dry Goods - Little Buddy Doyle, Don't Give My Land Away - James Stump Johnson, Cigarette Blues - Bo Carter
NotesRude, Rude Blues, Expletives, Innuendo And Just Plain Rude - When naughty Chuck Berry slipped 'My Ding a Ling' into the charts in 1972 he exposed a musical phenomenon that had a long, long history. People have been singing about sex since the dawn of popular music - and since the roots of rock are black one's, it+¡s no surprise the '40s onwards saw the blues community employing as many imaginative terms to describe 'the act' as there were ways of doing it! Rock 'n' Roll of course, is just one. This hugely popular double CD collection isn't so much X-rated as exhilarating, offering rib tickling rump shakers - each with their own nudge-nudge, wink wink meaning. The politically correct among US should check their pulse rate and stick to Abba. But if PC to you means the boys in blue or your home computer, you're old enough - and broad minded enough - to enjoy this feast of fleshy delights.