The Blues Brothers - Made in America
Facts
| Artist(s) | The Blues Brothers |
| Studio | Atlantic / Wea |
| Release Date | August 29, 1995 |
| UPC Code | 075678278921 |
| Buy this item | $7.99 at Amazon.com As of Jan 3 4:25 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Live, Original recording remastered Or 14 new from $6.04, 7 used from $4.68 |
Tracks
- Soul Finger/Funky Broadway - The Blues Brothers, Jones, Phalon
- Who's Making Love? - The Blues Brothers, Banks, Homer
- Do You Love Me/Mother Popcorn (You Got to Have a Mother for Me) - The Blues Brothers, Gordy, Berry Jr.
- Guilty - The Blues Brothers, Newman, Randy
- Perry Mason Theme - The Blues Brothers, Steiner, Fred
- Riot in Cell Block #9 - The Blues Brothers, Stoller, Mike
- Green Onions - The Blues Brothers, Cropper, Steve
- I Ain't Got You - The Blues Brothers, Carter, Calvin
- From the Bottom - The Blues Brothers, Williamson, Sonny B
- Going Back to Miami - The Blues Brothers, Cochran, Wayne
Similar CDs
| Briefcase Full of Blues | The Blues Brothers: Original Soundtrack Recording | Blues Brothers 2000: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | The Blues Brothers | Best of The Blues Brothers |
User Reviews
Average user review:| I Know It's Only Rock-n-Roll |
Recorded at the Universal Amphitheatre in Los Angeles, California, and released in December 1980, the 10 cuts - which clock in slightly over 30 minutes - is a high-energy tribute to the music which is the backbone of rock-n-roll.
The commercial success was fleeting, as Made in America peaked at number 49 on the Billboard album chart, while the only single, Who's Makin' Love, stalled in the 39th slot in Billboard's Top 40. But it remains an excellent representation of Joliet Jake and Elwood Blues educating the audience, as much as having fun.
March 9, 2008
| blues brothers are the kings of the blues. |
October 2, 2007
| "Got some whiskey from a barman..." |
"Made in America" was recorded two years after the triumphant, joyous "Briefcase Full of Blues". John Belushi, one of the most beloved comic performers of his generation, was two years closer to death. So was everyone else in the world, of course. But for John, death was just two years away.
John/Jake sounds older, sadder, more tired on this album. He reportedly suffered vocal problems during the tour on which it was recorded, and parts of the album had to be rerecorded in the studio. Is this why it was the lowest-selling of the three main Blues Brothers albums released in his lifetime? Or had the act's peak popularity simply passed?
I think another factor may have been the choice of songs for this album. Although enjoyable, many of them are not as immediately engaging as the songs on "Briefcase" and the movie soundtrack. "Do You Love Me" in particular may have been a tactically unwise choice. Most of the other songs the Blues Brothers recorded were probably previously unfamiliar to listeners who were being introduced to the blues by John/Jake's advocacy. But the majority of listeners in 1980 would have heard "Do You Love Me" performed by other artists with more conventionally powerful and attractive voices than John's.
For Belushi fans the main event on this album is Jake's rendition of "Guilty", which gave John the opportunity to make an oblique musical comment on his own life. This track contains what for me is an utterly horrifying moment. When John softly sings the word "cocaine" with a tragically appropriate mixture of awe and fear, the imbecilic crowd **cheers**. Far better for them to have gasped, or maintained a sorrowful, painful silence. August 15, 2007
| turn it up! |
| Great CD for Blues Brothers' fans |
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