It Serves You Right to Suffer

Released

A blues icon on a jazz label — with jazz sidemen, no less? And it’s John Lee Hooker’s one-chord-playing ass? How would that even work? Spectacularly. It’s Hooker’s voice and his guitar and his songs (mostly — though he absolutely yokes “Money (That’s What I Want),” too), so it’s his show, and the jazzbos fall in line because that’s the sort of force-of-nature power we’re dealing with here. Hooker’s momentum-over-everything musicality and the booming, conversational expressiveness of his Delta-gone-city voice does not let up in the least in this session — he doesn’t soften himself just because he’s on Impulse, and every facet of his expression from good-natured libidinous glee (the heated churn of “Shake It Baby”) to agonized, broken-spirited resentment (the desolate intensity of the title-cut closer) is captured at its best. While blues aficionados might find other, more “authentic” versions of the John Lee Hooker approach on his releases for more genre-appropriate labels like Chess and Vee-Jay, it’s no less thrilling to hear him stroll into Bob Thiele’s turf and bend everyone around him to his charismatic musical will.

Nate Patrin

Suggestions
Electric Mud cover

Electric Mud

Muddy Waters
Freedom Flight cover

Freedom Flight

Shuggie Otis
Hawk Squat cover

Hawk Squat

Sunnyland Slim, J.B. Hutto
Ain't That a Bitch cover

Ain't That a Bitch

Johnny "Guitar" Watson
I Am the Blues cover

I Am the Blues

Willie Dixon
A Hard Road cover

A Hard Road

The Bluesbreakers, John Mayall