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"Sugar Mama" or "Sugar Mama Blues" is a blues standard. [1] Called a "tautly powerful slow blues" by music journalist Charles Shaar Murray , [ 2 ] it has been recorded by numerous artists, including early Chicago bluesmen Tampa Red , Sonny Boy Williamson I , and Tommy McClennan .
Not real fast, just pretty basic. A lot of it's really vocal-y. Really beautiful and really harmonic, but it's real piledriving… Weird chord changes underneath real traditional vocal lines. So I think it'll be somewhere between these last two records. Also, I'm really starting to hate guitar solos, so I'm trying to avoid them.
James "Sugar Boy" Crawford, Jr. (October 12, 1934 – September 15, 2012) was an American R&B musician based in New Orleans. He was the author of "Jock-A-Mo" (1954), which was later rerecorded as " Iko Iko " [ 1 ] by the Dixie Cups , and became a huge hit .
The Dixie Cups' version was later included on the soundtrack to the 1987 film The Big Easy. This same version was also used on the soundtrack of the 2005 film The Skeleton Key . In 2009, a version based on the Dixie Cups' was used in an ad for Lipton Rainforest Alliance Iced Tea.
Sugar is an album by jazz tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine, his first recorded for the CTI Records label following his long association with Blue Note, featuring performances by Turrentine with trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, guitarist George Benson, bassist Ron Carter and drummer Billy Kaye.
Sugar", also known as "That Sugar Baby o' Mine", is a popular song by Maceo Pinkard, his wife Edna Alexander and Sidney D. Mitchell. Recorded by Ethel Waters on February 20, 1926, [ 1 ] it soon achieved chart success.
"Sugar Moon" is a Western swing love song written by Bob Wills and Cindy Walker. [ 1 ] The song was first recorded by Bob Wills and The Texas Playboys in 1947 (Columbia 37313), where it reached number one, staying on the charts six weeks.
French language version by Keller/Goffin/Roblin; BMI credits Goffin-Keller, Songwriters Hall of Fame credits Goffin-King; Unreleased; record label for Arena Twins lists songwriting credit as "B. Mann - N. Sherman" the "wild gypsy brass band version" of "One Way Ticket (To The Blues)" Brazilian, translation by Fred Jorge