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Chicken Heads: A 50-Year History of Bobby Rush - Bobby Rush
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Track Listing
  1. Someday
  2. Let Me Love You
  3. Sock Boo Ga Loo
  4. Much Too Much
  5. Gotta Have Money
Show All Tracks
  1. Someday
  2. Let Me Love You
  3. Sock Boo Ga Loo
  4. Much Too Much
  5. Gotta Have Money
  6. Camel Walk
  7. Wake Up
  8. The Things That I Used to Do
  9. Let It All Hang Out
  10. Just Be Yourself
  11. Done Got Good to Me, Pt. 1
  12. Chicken Heads
  13. Mary Jane
  14. Gotta Be Funky
  15. Gotta Find You Girl
  16. Bowlegged Woman, Knock-Kneed Man, Pt. 1
  17. Niki Hoeky
  18. She?s a Good 'Un
  19. Get Out of Here, Pt. 1
  20. I'm Still Waiting
  21. She Put the Whammy on Me
  22. I Wanna Do the Do
  23. Hey Western Union Man
  24. Let's Do It Together
  25. Be Still
  26. Talk to Your Daughter
  27. Sue
  28. Making a Decision
  29. Bertha Jean
  30. What's Good for the Goose Is Good for the Gander
  31. Dr. Funk
  32. Never Would Have Thought It
  33. A Man Can Give It (But He Can't Take It)
  34. Nine Below Zero
  35. I Ain't Studdin' You
  36. You, You, You (Know What to Do)
  37. Time to Hit the Road Again
  38. I'm Gone
  39. Handy Man
  40. One Monkey Don't Stop No Show
  41. Hen Pecked
  42. She's So Fine
  43. Buttermilk Bottom
  44. Big Fat Woman
  45. Booga Bear
  46. Hoochie Man
  47. Scootchin'
  48. He Got My Attention
  49. Always on My Mind
  50. Wet Match
  51. Undercover Lover
  52. Tough Titty
  53. When She Loves Ya
  54. Evil
  55. Ride in My Automobile
  56. River's Invitation
  57. Feeling Good, Pt. 1
  58. Night Fishin'
  59. Take Me to the River
  60. Help Me
  61. Howlin' Wolf
  62. Uncle Esau
  63. What's Goin' On
  64. I Got 3 Problems
  65. Blind Snake
  66. Show You a Good Time
  67. Down in Louisiana
  68. You Just Like a Dresser
  69. Swing Low
  70. Another Murder in New Orleans
  71. Sittin' Here Waitin'
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Bobby Rush scored just one hit single -- "Chicken Heads," which went to 34 on the R&B charts in 1971 -- but, then again, his career coincided with the slow sunset of blues being a charting concern. He started recording on his own in 1967, just as soul-blues -- a grooving, horn-spiked hybrid popularized by B.B. King and Bobby "Blue" Bland -- started to rise but he also spent some time up in Chicago, playing a bit with Muddy Waters and Jimmy Reed, urban connections that rarely surfaced in his music of the '70s, '80s, and ...

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