In the latter period of
Muddy Waters' long tenure with Chess Records, perhaps the single most important postwar blues artist in the world found himself the subject of a number of experiments in how to sell his work to the larger rock audience, ranging from the dignified (
Fathers and Sons) to the absurd (
Electric Mud), and few of which presented
Muddy at his best. In 1977,
Muddy was regarded by many as a spent force when, after the final collapse of Chess left him without a record label, the legendary bluesman was signed to the Blue Sky label (which, thanks to the imprint's CBS distribution, marked Muddy's first deal with a major label). Blue Sky had the good sense to hire
Johnny Winter to produce
Muddy's first album for the label (of all the major blues-rock acts to emerge in the 1960s and '70s,
Winter had the greatest affinity for the music at its most raw and immediate), and rather than hooking
Muddy up with a slick studio crew or a team of well-known but overly flashy sycophants,
Winter backed him with members of his road band (including
Bob Margolin and
Willie "Big Eyes" Smith) and a few veteran
Waters sidemen (most notably
James Cotton and
Pinetop Perkins).
Winter encouraged
Muddy and his band to get loose and loud, and recorded the sessions live, with minimal overdubs and a big, roomy sound; the result,
Hard Again, was a late career triumph for
Muddy, in which the sixty-year-old singer roared like a man half his age, and the musicians wailed with potent force behind him. The album was titled
Hard Again after
Muddy joked to
Winter that the music felt so good it gave him an erection, and listening to the songs, you might think he wasn't exaggerating -- combining the musical maturity that came after more than thirty years in the business with the passion that came from playing the music fast and loose,
Hard Again left no one doubting that
Muddy Waters was still a mighty powerhouse of the blues.
Winter teamed up with
Muddy for two more albums in the same manner as
Hard Again, and if 1979's
I'm Ready and 1981's
King Bee don't pack quite the same amount of firepower, they both feature the star in great form, and confirm that his mojo continued to work overtime. All three of the
Winter-produced
Muddy Waters albums are featured in
Collection: Hard Again/I'm Ready/King Bee, which simply packages the remastered CD versions of these albums (each with bonus tracks) in a special long box, with the jewel-box booklets for all three titles thrown in but no additional material added for this set. All three albums are available separately, and
Hard Again is obviously the one to get if you're only getting one. But if you're a
Muddy Waters fan interested in upgrading your aging vinyl copies of these three great albums, this is a fine way to go, and it's great listening for anyone with even a passing interest in the blues. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide