Few rock & roll or R&B guitarists of the '50s and '60s have a more consistently frantic body of work than the great
Mickey Baker, though his name isn't nearly as well-known as
Chuck Berry,
Bo Diddley, or
Ike Turner.
Baker did most of his work as a sideman, and his best-known recordings as a headliner found him playing second fiddle to
Sylvia Robinson as half of
Mickey & Sylvia (whose "Love Is Strange" remains a puzzling delight 50 years after it was recorded), but folks who know and love first-era rock & roll are aware of
Baker's greatness, and this collection is a superb overview of his work, both as a bandleader and as a hired gun. Containing a hefty 31 tracks recorded between 1952 and 1956,
In the '50s: Hit, Git & Split runs the gamut from the low-key acoustic blues of
Baker's "Love Me Baby" to the wailing electric dread of
Larry Dale's "Midnight Hours," the uptempo rockabilly of
Joe Clay's "Did You Mean Jelly-Bean," the easy-swinging jump blues of
Sam Price's "Rib Joint," a double-time rewrite of
Chuck Berry's "Maybellene" on
Brownie McGhee's "Anna Mae," and a rockin' re-recording by
Louis Jordan of "Caldonia" with
Baker's guitar answering the hearty peals of the horn section and
Jordan's vocals. The word "Wild" tended to pop up in the titles of
Mickey Baker's solo albums, and one spin of this disc will show you why -- the man's rough-and-tumble style screamed and hollered the blues whenever he hit the strings, and
Baker's solos are death-defying hoodoo magic no matter what cut you cue up.
Hit, Git & Split is a thoroughly enjoyable set of vintage R&B that's good and greasy throughout, and a peerless introduction to one of the great unsung heroes of rock & roll.
–
Mark Deming, Rovi