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The Chess Box

The Chess Box

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Artist: Bo Diddley
Label: Universal Japan
Category: Music

Buy New: $62.98

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Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 11 reviews
Sales Rank: 471639

Format: Box Set, Limited Edition, Import
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

EAN: 4988005525192
ASIN: B001BLSE7I

Release Date: September 3, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  Disc 1
  • Bo Diddley
  • I'm a Man - Bo Diddley, Diddley, Bo
  • You Don't Love Me (You Don't Care)
  • Diddley Daddy - Bo Diddley, Diddley, Bo
  • Pretty Thing - Bo Diddley, Dixon, Willie
  • Bring It to Jerome - Bo Diddley, Green, Jerome
  • Bring It to Jerome - Bo Diddley, Green, Jerome
  • Diddy Wah Diddy - Bo Diddley, Diddley, Bo
  • I'm Looking for a Woman
  • Who Do You Love?
  • Down Home Special
  • Hey! Bo Diddley
  • Mona
  • Say Boss Man
  • Before You Accuse Me
  • Say Man - Bo Diddley, Diddley, Bo
  • Hush Your Mouth
  • The Clock Strikes Twelve
  • Dearest Darling - Bo Diddley, Diddley, Bo
  • Crackin' Up - Bo Diddley, Diddley, Bo
  • Don't Let It Go (Hold on to What You Got)
  • I'm Sorry
  • Mumblin' Guitar - Bo Diddley, Diddley, Bo
  • The Story of Bo Diddley

  Disc 2
  • She's Alright
  • Say Man
  • Roadrunner - Bo Diddley, Diddley, Bo
  • Spend My Life With You
  • Cadillac - Bo Diddley, Diddley, Bo
  • Signifying Blues
  • Deed and Deed I Do
  • You Know I Love You
  • Look at My Baby
  • Ride on Josephine - Bo Diddley, Diddley, Bo
  • Aztec
  • Back Home
  • Pills - Bo Diddley, Diddley, Bo
  • I Can Tell - Bo Diddley, Smith, Samuel
  • You Can't Judge a Book by Its Cover - Bo Diddley, Dixon, Willie
  • Who May Your Lover Be
  • The Greatest Lover in the World - Bo Diddley, Vail, Terry
  • 500% More Man
  • Ooh Baby
  • Bo Diddley 1969

Similar Items:

  • The Chess Box :Chuck Berry
  • Howlin Wolf: The Chess Box
  • The Chess Box :Muddy Waters
  • The Chess Box
  • His Best :(Little Walter)The Chess 50th Anniversary Collection

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
He's celebrated for the syncopated beat bearing his name that has spanned rock & roll's entire history. Unfortunately, his namesake also gets him mislabeled as a one-trick pony. This two-disc set does much to remedy the situation, tracking 1955 through 1968 and featuring all the hits. However, The Chess Box also displays Diddley's rock and blues versatility, from the reggae-ish (before there was reggae) "Crackin' Up" and the Who's onstage hard-rock anthem "Roadrunner" to the wonderful formerly U.K.-only "Greatest Lover in the World" and rock's first song about a junkie ("Pills," later revived by the New York Dolls). Most surprising is Diddley's beautiful yet previously unreleased doo-wop classic, "You Know I Love You." The excellent liner notes by MCA's primo compiler, Andy McKaie (with Diddley himself), and the late Robert Palmer add extra value to the package. --Bill Holdship

Album Description
Japanese only SHM-CD (Super High Material CD - playable on all CD players) pressing. Universal. 2008.


Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Jungle Music 101: Essential Reading   December 26, 2008
J P Ryan (Waltham, Massachusetts United States)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Bo Diddley's 1990 "Chess Box" was a revelation to me when I first bought it 18 years ago. A longtime fan of great popular music, I'd loved the Stones, The Clash, Muddy Waters, Yardbirds, New York Dolls and Billy Stewart, to name just a handful of greats whose work was profoundly shaped by Mr Diddley. After forming his superb group during 1948 - 50, Bo & Co. (Jerome Green, Clifton James, Billy Boy Arnold) honed their chops and identity in Chicago clubs, and by 1954 were shopping demos to the likes of Edward Abnak at Vee Jay, who dismissed them. Undaunted, Bo soon visited the Chess brothers, who signed him to the label's Checker imprint. Checker issued Bo's first single early in 1955, when the artist was 26, and armed with one of rock 'n' roll's greatest singles, 'Bo Diddley'/'I'm A Man', the label had a smash on its hands. Bo's recording debut came out shortly before Chuck Berry's 'Maybelline' and nearly a year before Elvis made 'Jeartbreak Hotel' for RCA. Bo was no sex symbol, and he was not white, so unlike Elvis he never exuded the raw sexuality that had girls shrieking every time Presley hip-shaked, attaining near instant status as rock n' roll's first true icon and cultural lightning rod. More classic Bo Diddley singles were released later in 1955, with less dramatic success, setting a hit-and-miss pattern that continued for more than a decade. Yet Bo Diddley's influence exceeded his star power; he would never be the subject of a lavish reissue campaign, not even when Bo turned 60, 75, or passed the 50th anniversery of his recoding debut. Unlike bown-eyed-handsome-Chuck Berry Bo has never been considered marketable enough to warrant a terrific Hollywood tribute film shaped by a (in 1988) big-name director, Taylor Hackford along with music director Keith Richards. Keith was as deeply steeped in Bo as he was Berry - the Stones' first British theatre tour, in 1963, after they had after conquered the London clubs placed them on a bill opening for Bo Diddley (who would become a life-long ally and friend) as well as The Everlys. Chuck Berry conciously wrote verbally and musically literate, accessable hits both white teenagers and black kids could relate or at least dance to. Try as he often did to repeat his initial success, writing Berryesque car songs ('Cadillac') or roaring through the latest - or more likely, his own self invented - dance craze ('Craw Dad'), Bo was too original, too unlike his intended audience of Bandstand kids, to ever come across as other than his own utterly exotic, raw, sometimes goofy, invariably singular self. You might love 'Crackin' Up', 'Cookie Headed Diddley' or 'Spanish Guitar', but even if kids felt the power of the music one could hardly expect a widespread audience to relate to these and other classics. ('Spanish Guitar' was one of many dazzling instrumentals that define another aspect of Diddley: the innovator, the guitarist who used his instrument to create watery soundscapes, ambience, pure rhythmic drive, almost subliminal placement of his and the other instruments in the total picture - not to mention pure sonic filth of the highest order, with an orchestral sense that to these ears make him the Hendrix of his generation). The songs are too exotic, too unhinged in terms of sensibility, never quite fitting into blues, rock 'n' roll, soul, funk, or any category other than "Bo Diddley" to cross over on a regular basis. Thus Bo couldn't aspire to the unlikely status of household name another unrepentant original, Little Richard, achieved, with that unlikely yet super-sized persona comprised of part flamboyant-gay-black-man (in the 1950s!), part sheer ego driving a need to not just fit in but be THE epicenter through sheer energy personified, and of course part rock 'n' roll genius. Yet Bo Diddley was much more than a rhythm that's been appropriated by nearly every rocker from the Who, Stooges, Velvets (whose great drummer, Maureen Tucker, idolized Diddley), Roxy Music, and countless others. Even after his death this year at 79, which inspired some, but too little serious appreciation, the artist is vastly underrated. Only one (!), of more than a dozen classic Checker albums issued during 1957 - 1966 was remastered for CD and as of this writing remains in print, 1960's "Gunslinger". Bo created a remarkable, prolific, and astonishingly varied and experimental body of work during his fat years at Chess (roughly 1955 - 67, with occasional high points such as 1995's "A Man Amongst Men" appearing later), exploring a variety of genres from doo-wop to proto-grunge to funk, yet rooted always in the culture and sounds of Bo's 1930's-'40s childhood and adolesence, most obviously the blues from the Mississippi Delta, as well as the eclectic Carribean/French/African gumbo out of New Orleans, as well as childhood nursery rhymes and games all absorbed and integrated in his work. His stated goal was to create "Jungle Music" (recall how subversive the phrase, with its not-so-veiled racism and sexual hysteria, was in the 1960s), and for certain he succeeded. Bo was less smooth than Chuck, lacking Berry's poetic gifts, but his music was more physical, primal, predating and equal to the sheer impact of the early Stones, Iggy's Stooges, The Velvets' 'Sister Ray', or James Brown. Never a blues purist (Bo was 13 and 18 years younger than his Chess labelmates Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf, respectively), he was steeped in music early, and studied classical violin for several years as a child. He began making his own guitars while in Foster vocational school.
As for the box under discussion, one has caveats: one might opt for one of the recently issued, excellent sounding single disc (2007) and double disc (2008) retrospectives, compilations that may not delve deep but offer many of Diddley's better known classics and recreate the impact of Bo's music in a way not possible in 1990, as "The Chess Box's" sound is typically thin, early digital. There is a nice balance of classics and rare or unissued gems from the vaults, but hopefully most of this material will continue to be issued as Hip-O's ongoing series of collected Chess studio recordings. But this box is worthy of investigation despite these limitations, which also, I should not, include relative (only 2 CDs, each barely over an hour) brevity of what is after all, and certainly looks like, a serious career-spanning "boxed set".
So get "The Definitive" (2007) or "Gold" (2008) if you're reticent or strapped for cash. But, if you can afford to invest, I strongly recommend Hip-O label's essential and comprehensive restoration of Bo's "Complete Chess Studio Masters", released in easily digestable, and hopefully affordable 2-CD sets that are meticulously annotated (correcting earlier mistakes about dates, musicians, etc) and prepared. A godsend for serious fans long frustrated at the shabby treatment of the catalog, I have reviewed the first volume released a year ago, "I'm A Man", which covers the seminal 1955 - 58 period, collecting every classic, obscure single, unissued track or alternate version worth hearing. Sadly, these sets are innued in a limited edition and the first volume is already out of print! This explains why you'll see it priced at nearly $100. However, the second volume, "Roadrunner: Chess Studio Masters" has just been released. "Roadrunner" collects material recorded during one amazing year, 1958 - 59. Bo began a period of experimentation and home recording that makes this volume both more astonishing and slightly uneven (after all not all experiments succeed). Also, Bo had hired Peggy Jones, one of several women guitarists he has worked with (another singular accomplishment!) by 1958, and the two share a remarkable, telepathic rapport.
Finally, what makes 1990's "The Chess Box" worthy, especially if discounted or, perhaps, in a new Japanese-mastered edition, is the book included within the box. Compiler Andy McKaie interviewed Bo for a biographical piece, which is fascinating. Yet even more essential is the revelatory essay by the late, and greatly missed musician/filmmaker/writer Robert Palmer (author of, among other works, the classic "Deep Blues", a superb 1984 biography of The Rolling Stones, and catalyst behind the great film "You See Me Laughin'", profiling the Fat Possum label and Delta greats R.L. Burnside, Jr Kimbrough, and others - though less than a decade old it captures artists who have since died and a culture quickly vanishing). Palmer's essay shows how deeply and passionately he listened and felt the music, and his formidable intellect and analytic grasp vividly make the case that Bo's music is hardly 'primitive' or limited in style or idiom; rather the body of work is shown to be utterly original, personal, yet deeply rooted in complex cultural intersection and history, as well as the artist's life and times - as part of the great Southern black migration to northern industrial cities like Chicago, Bo was a surprisingly young. And Palmer details just how ingenious and flexible Bo's re-conception of rhythmic organization, for example, remains. From his debut, Bo emphasized polyryhthmic arrangements that favor, say, tom-tom's over snare and kick-drum, and of course the sizzle of rock 'n' roll's only famous maracas player, Jerome Green, is always up front in the mix; elswher Diddley integrated wood blocks or claves in his music which often evokes African rhythmic organization, minimizing melody in such a way that presages funk and hip-hop. Then there is the role of Bo's unparalleled guitar - hear it moan like a train whistle ('Down Home Special'), evoke a speeding aeromobile ('Roadrunner'), and marvel at the arsenal of effects, devices, and roles Bo invented for the instrument. Yes, he "utterly reconceptualized rhythmic organization" but the essence of Bo Diddley's music is the undeniable pleasures one derives from this happily undated music.
OK, so I'm recommending the "Chess Box" as essential reading, since the glare and sense of lifelessness in the typically premature digital transfer hardly does the music justice. Finally, if you're still not impressed consider this: by the end of the 1950s Bo had left Chicago, where Chess Studios were located, and had begun recording on a three track Presto at his D.C. home. Thus Bo Diddley totally produced and controlled his own work, sending the tapes off to Chess. Such independence was unheard of in black OR white rock 'n' roll or popular music, at least until the emergence of the Stones/Dylan/Beatles 'modernist' era the '60s. It's the end of 2008 as I write this, and the time is right to discover, or rediscover the late Bo Diddley: his 80th birthday is this weekend, and I can't think of a better excuse.



5 out of 5 stars Discover what the radio program manager kept from you.   January 30, 2006
R. Hogan
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I listened to both CD's twice in one weekend. Not a bad cut to be found. I always knew in my gut there must be more to Bo Diddley than what I heard on the airwaves, and this set double confirms it! I regret I waited so long to enjoy much more of what Bo has given us.


5 out of 5 stars If You Don't Know Diddley, You Don't Know Rock   November 18, 2005
El Lagarto (Ambler, PA)
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

If you're unfamiliar with the great Bo Diddley, this is not the place to start. However, if you know some of his classics, and you want to dig deeper into the trademark groove, you couldn't do any better. The packaging, booklet, and selection are all fantastic and it's a solid value. Because Bo Diddley is one of rock's Founding Fathers, people forget that he's great fun, possesses a sly and irreverent wit, and has diverse musical interests. He also doesn't get enough credit for being a terrific singer. All the essential tracks are here, and plenty of great surprises. Too many standouts to mention except for one, I Can Tell - it sneaks up on you and just won't let go. Anyone who wears a cobra snake for a necktie is all right with me. Go for it.


5 out of 5 stars Primal, powerful blues and rock n' roll   January 18, 2004
Docendo Discimus (Vita scholae)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Bo Diddley's thumping shave-and-a-haircut-six-bit rhythm may not sound all that daring today, but half a century ago Diddley was a supremely innovative musician, hammering out rough blocks of chords on his square-shaped guitar, and shouting his tough-guy lyrics at the top of his powerful voice.

Diddley's trademark vibrating, fuzzy guitar tone did much to expand the electric guitar's power and range, and he was almost as influential as label mate Chuck Berry in shaping the sound and the attitude of rock n' roll, writing clever, wisecracking lyrics and macho boasts to rival Berry's, and inspiring numerous young white artists along the way with his music and his galvanizing stage persona.

This double-disc compilation is the most comprehensive one available, including all the classics, and adding several lesser-known songs, a few alternates, and some previously unreleased recordings.
Disc 1 opens with Diddley's first single, the double-sided monster "Bo Diddley / I'm A Man", and also includes the tough, grinding rockers "You Don't Love Me", "Mona", "Crackin' Up", and "Who Do You Love", the magnificent bluesy "Before You Accuse Me" and "I'm Looking For A Woman", and an updated take on the prewar classic "Diddy Wah Diddy". The surprisingly sweet and sincere "Dearest Darling" is here as well, as is the instrumental "The Clock Strikes Twelve" which features a solo violin, and the doo-wop ballad (!) "I'm Sorry".

On disc 2 you'll find "Road Runner" (beep beep!), a swinging, swaggering "Spend My Life With You", the supremely catchy "Pills", and the bump-and-grind of the sax-driven "Cadillac" and the classic "I Can Tell".
"You Know I Love You" is another uncharacteristic but well-crafted doo-wop ballad, a previously unreleased one at that. The irresistable, piano-driven "Look At My Baby" and the funky "The Greatest Lover In The World" are both pure, joyous, bluesy rock n' roll, and the Willie Dixon-penned "You Can't Judge A Book By It's Cover" is one of Bo Diddley's most memorable singles. "The Greatest Lover" is yet another track which was released for the first time on this compilation, by the way.
"Bo Diddley 1969" is excactly what is sounds like, a remake of the 1955 single with different lyrics and a tagged-on chorus, but it's good fun, and the production is better and cleaner.
And there's a little oddity here as well, the instrumental "Atzec", which was actually written and performed by Diddley's lead guitarist Peggy "Lady Bo" Jones, but mistakenly credited to Bo Diddley himself.

Ellas McDaniels' powerfully rhythmic, almost hypnotic mid-50s music is neither blues, R&B or rock n' roll, but somewhere in between, stretching back as far as Africa, and foreseeing rap and blues-rock. MCA/Chess' single-disc "His Best" remains the best purchase for novices, but "The Chess Box" is by far the best collection of Bo Diddley's unique blues, R&B, and piledriving proto-rock n' roll.
Highly recommended.


5 out of 5 stars Bo KNOWS how to rock!   June 14, 2001
Andre M. (Mt. Pleasant, SC United States)
3 out of 6 found this review helpful

This set should be a perscription for whatever ails ya. Listen to "Don't Let Go," "Dearest Darling," and the "Story of Bo Diddley" and call me in the morning! Check out the Untitled Instrumental on side 2, you won't be able to have just one listen. It is a shame and a disgrace that Mr. Ellas Bates (Bo's given name), with all the happiness he's brought and records he has sold, has recently said in Jet magazine that he could not afford to send his children to college! Buy this set and do something about that!

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The Chess Box (Category: Music )
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The Chess Box [Box] - James, Etta (CD 2000) At Last!
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Wille Dixon, The Chess Box - 36 Songs on 2 CDs, Sealed
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The Chess Box [Box] - Diddley, Bo (CD 1990)
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BO DIDDLEY-THE CHESS BOX-3LP/Booklet-STILL SEALED!
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WILLIE DIXON: THE CHESS BOX - 2-CD boxset/ Chess Blues
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MUDDY Waters 'The CHESS Box' 11LPs Japan box NM
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WILLIE DIXON - THE CHESS BOX [BOX] - CD BOXSET NEW
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CHUCK BERRY - THE CHESS BOX [BOX] - CD BOXSET NEW
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HOWLIN' WOLF - THE CHESS BOX [BOX] - CD BOXSET NEW
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