Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1959


Steppin' Out (instrumental)

Buy Steppin' Out (instrumental) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




"'Steppin' Out'" (or sometimes "'Stepping Out'") is a blues-instrumental composition recorded by American blues musician Memphis Slim in 1959. It was released by Vee-Jay Records as a single and on Slim's 'At the Gate of the Horn' album. Although both releases list L. C. Frazier (another of Memphis Slim/Peter Chatman's pseudonyms) as the writer, Vee-Jay owner James Bracken is often credited on versions by other performers.

Memphis Slim's piano provides the opening harmony part, followed by a tenor sax solo and guitar solo by long-time Slim guitarist Matt Murphy. AllMusic critic Bill Dahl calls Murphy's album contribution as "nothing short of spectacular throughout".

A live version recorded in 1986 appears on the 'Steppin' Out: Live At Ronnie Scott's, London' album and video.

Eric Clapton renditions



Eric Clapton recorded several versions of "Steppin' Out" during his early career. In 1966, he recorded the song with three different bands: with Eric Clapton and the Powerhouse, recorded in March for the Elektra Records sampler 'What's Shakin';Credited to Memphis Slim. with John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers in April for the album 'Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton';Credited to L. C. Frazier. and with Cream in a live performance for broadcast on BBC Radio in November, eventually released on the 'BBC Sessions' compilation in 2003.Credited to James Bracken. Cream recorded a second live performance of the song for BBC Radio in January 1968, which was also included on 'BBC Sessions' though it was first released on Clapton's 'Crossroads' box set in 1988.

Clapton's early versions were relatively brief ranging from under two minutes to little over three but in live performances with Cream, "Steppin" Out" became an extended improvisational piece often lasting thirteen minutes or more. On occasion, the group's bassist Jack Bruce would drop out of the song after several minutes, leaving Clapton and drummer Ginger Baker to take the song in entirely new, less blues-oriented directions. An example of such can be heard on a live recording from the San Francisco Winterland Ballroom in March 1968, first released on the album 'Live Cream Volume II' in 1972 and later on the Cream box set 'Those Were the Days' in 1997.

Jesse Gress, writing for 'Guitar Player' magazine, noted that Ritchie Blackmore's "bluesy head to 'Lazy' (from Deep Purple's 'Machine Head') fondly paraphrases Slowhands [Clapton's] Bluesbreaker-era showcase 'Steppin Out,' right down to the same style of third-position swing-sixteenth G blues riffing".



Notes



References





Category:1959 songs

Category:Memphis Slim songs

Category:Blues songs

Category:1950s instrumentals

Category:Eric Clapton songs

Category:Cream (band) songs

Category:James Bracken songs

Buy Steppin' Out (instrumental) now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1959



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=998905809.