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Side-A
1. 96 Tears
2. Love Is A Hurtin’ Thing
3. Turn The World Around The Other Way
4. Mama (He Treats Your Daughter Mean)
5. Keep That Man
6. Don’T Pass Me By
Side-B
1. Careless Love
2. It’S Been Raining
3. I Can’T Wait Any Longer
4. Quittin’ Time
5. Heaven Will Welcome You Dr. King
6. Old Love Never Dies
Record 2
Side A
1. No Better For You
2. Big Sweet Daddy
3. Blame It On Your Love
4. Why Was I Born
5. The Masquerade Is Over
Side B
1. Maybelle Sings The Blues
2. It’S A Man’S Man’S World
3. That’S Life
4. How It Lies
5. Cold Cold Heart
6. I Am Lost
It had been a full decade since mountainous blues belter Big Maybelle had found her way onto the R&B hit parade when Jack Taylor’s
Harlem-based Rojac Records restored her to national prominence in 1966. It hadn’t been an easy decade for Maybelle, but little about
her life resembled a cakewalk. She’d waged a long struggle with heroin addiction and suered from diabetes. But those physical
maladies failed to silence her fabulous pipes.
You could always tell it was Maybelle singing, four bars or less into any of her classic platters. She had a curious burr in her voice and a
touching vulnerability. It was particularly acute on the smoky after-hours blues ballads that were her specialty from the early 1950s
on. Maybelle could rock the house, make no mistake, she cut “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” long before a cocky young piano
pounder from Ferriday, Louisiana latched onto it and made it his eternal signature theme. But she could absolutely tear your heart
out on the slower stu. The woman clearly knew what pain was all about.
Rojac was the last label Maybelle recorded for. In search of that elusive hit that would relaunch her career, Taylor gave her some of the
most challenging material she ever tackled, stu miles outside her wheelhouse.
That she actually squeaked onto the pop charts in early 1967 with a soulful rendering of ? & the Mysterians’ garage rock anthem “96 Tears,” even as the original was falling o that very same hit parade, was a truly remarkable achievement, testifying to her uncommon resiliency.
Big Maybelle ultimately lost her battle with diabetes in 1972 in Cleveland, Ohio. She’d bravely kept on singing until she couldn’t anymore.