If you’re looking for the definitive bridge between the old-school Delta roots and the electrified energy of the 80s Chicago scene, this is your soundtrack. The Players
By 1981, the blues world was shifting. Synthesizers were creeping into everything, and the "raw" sound was being cleaned up for radio. But when Littlejohn and Bell teamed up for their Japanese tour—where this material was captured—they ignored the trends.
If you haven't spun this lately, go find it. Your speakers will thank you (even if your neighbors don't). John Littlejohn & Carey Bell (1981)
A protege of Little Walter and Big Walter Horton, Bell brought a "chromatic" flair to the harp. He didn't just play notes; he bent the air around them. Why This 1981 Pairing Matters
The chemistry here is conversational. On tracks like "Dream" or their blistering takes on Elmore James classics, they don't step on each other's toes. Instead, they push each other. Littlejohn sets the house on fire with a sliding riff, and Bell arrives like the siren on a fire truck to wail over the top. The Verdict If you’re looking for the definitive bridge between
A disciple of Elmore James, Littlejohn was one of the few who could make a slide guitar scream with aggression while maintaining a haunting, melodic soul. His technique was precise, but his delivery was pure grit.
This isn't just a "collector's item" for blues nerds. It’s a masterclass in tension and release. It’s an album for late nights, long drives, or whenever you need a reminder of what music sounds like when it’s played by people who have nothing to prove and everything to feel. But when Littlejohn and Bell teamed up for
They stuck to the fundamentals: Standout Vibes