Ride On: The Chess Masters, Vol. 3 - 1960-1961

RELEASE
July 21, 2009
LABEL
Universal AB
GENRES
Pop/Rock, Rock & Roll, Contemporary Pop/Rock, Electric Chicago Blues, Regional Blues

Album Review

One of the great things about Bo Diddley, something that often goes unmentioned, is that he was a home-recording pioneer, building his own studio years before any other rocker. The full fruits of this labor can be heard on Ride On: The Chess Masters, Vol. 3 -- 1960-1961, Hip-O Select's third installment in their complete Bo Chess/Checker masters and easily the weirdest set yet. All 54 songs here were recorded over the course of 13 months: a whopping 17 them have never been released (an additional seven have never seen release in the U.S.), every one of them was cut in his home studio in Washington DC, and not a one reached the charts. That lack of commercial success should in no way be seen as an indication that the music on Ride On is subpar -- odd and messy, yes, but the music here is fueled by a mad genius that could only have flourished in a hothouse setting like a personal home studio. Bo wound up succumbing to every studio habit that would eventually become cliché: he messed around with tempos, tinkered around endlessly with the same theme, left instrumental backing tracks without vocals, sped up his own voice to create an alter ego (Frankie Jive, who jousted with Bo on the "Say Man" rewrites "Funny Talk" and "Bring Them Back Alive"), kept sloppy notation so records by other musicians were called his (Peggy Jones claims to have recorded everything on the instrumental "Aztec"). On top of this, Diddley wrote a clutch of cheap, infectious dance-rock cash-ins, appropriated old folk tunes as his own, wrote plenty of self-mythologizing tunes ("[Bo Diddley's A] Gunslinger," "Bo Diddley Is an Outlaw," "Bo Diddley Is a Lover," "Bo's Vacation"), and tossed off some killer-diller jokes and a few classic rockers like "Ride on Josephine," which gives this collection its name. Much of this music was heard on the classic LPs Bo Diddley Is a Gunslinger and Bo Diddley Is a Lover, but in many ways the way to hear it is on this wild, woolly complete compilation, where all the flights of fancy sit next to the big, booming rockers, where the variety proves Bo to be the visionary he is.
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. My White Horse [Take 4][#]
  2. Live My Life
  3. Scuttle Bug
  4. Love Me
  5. Walkin' and Talkin' [Unedited]
  6. Mule Train [Lead Vocal][#]
  7. Travelin' West [Instrumental Version of Mule Train]
  8. Mule Train [Group Vocal][#]
  9. Mule Train [Alternate Group Vocal]
  10. Merengue (Limbo) [#]
  11. Say You Will [#]
  12. Say You Will [Alternate Take][#]
  13. Craw-Dad
  14. Ride on Josephine
  15. No More Lovin'
  16. No More Lovin' [Alternate Take]
  17. Do What I Say
  18. Doing the Craw-Daddy
  19. Whoa, Mule (Shine)
  20. Cheyenne
  21. Sixteen Tons
  22. Googlia Moo
  23. Working Man
  24. (Bo Diddley's A) Gunslinger
  25. Somewhere
  26. Hey, Hey (What Are You Going to Do?) [Fast Version]
  27. Hey, Hey (What Are You Going to Do?) [Slow Version]
  28. Can You Shimmy?
  29. I'm Hungry
  30. Hey Pretty Baby [Slow Version][#]
  31. Hey Pretty Baby [Fast Version][#]
  32. Oh Yeah aka Oh Yes
  33. Huckleberry Bush (Hully Hully Gully)
  34. Come on Baby aka the Soup Maker
  35. All Together
  36. Watusi Bounce
  37. Mess Around
  38. Doodlin' [#]
  39. Bo Diddley Is an Outlaw [Fast Version][#]
  40. Bo Diddley Is an Outlaw [Slow Version][#]
  41. Aloha [#]
  42. Funny Talk [#]
  43. Instrumental [#]
  44. Bring Them Back Alive (Funny Talk) [#]
  45. When the Saints Go Marching In [#]
  46. Shank
  47. The Twister
  48. Bo Diddley Is a Lover
  49. Love Is a Secret
  50. Bo Diddley Is Loose
  51. Congo
  52. Aztec
  53. Call Me (Bo's Blues)
  54. Bo's Vacation