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  1. Nov 10, 2014 · Mose Allison –. Let Me See. 4-23. Mose Allison –. It Didn't Turn Out That Way. 4-24. Mose Allison –. The Song Is Ended. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2014 CD release of "The Mose Allison Collection 1956-62" on Discogs.

    • (3)
    • UK
    • 7
    • 4 x CD, Compilation
  2. Mose Allison - The Collection (Retro World / Evangeline) An excellent double disc collection which concentrates on Mose Allison's late `50s output, with disc 1 focusing on his songs, and incidentally providing much of the template for the British blues and pop boom of the mid-`60s, and the second disc drawing attention to his jazzier instrumental material.

    • (17)
  3. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2010 CD release of "The Collection" on Discogs.

    • 16
    • 2 x CD, Compilation
    • Europe
    • 2010
  4. Apr 6, 2015 · The tracks 3-23 and 3-24 previously not present in the original version, but only by repress The Mose Allison Trio - I Love The Life I Live. In the liner notes an incorrect catalog number (VJLP 3013) is indicated for the album "Takes To The Hills", related instead to The Young Lions (7) - The Young Lions .

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    • 1
  5. Mose Allison Sings (1963) The Word from Mose Allison (1964) Wild Man on the Loose (1965) I've Been Doin' Some Thinkin' (1968) Hello There, Universe (1969) Mose in Your Ear (1972) Your Mind Is on Vacation (1976) Middle Class White Boy (1982) Lessons in Living (1982)

    • (1)
  6. This 4-CD, 82-track set provides a comprehensive overview of the first six years of pianist Mose Allison’s prolific recording career. Presented in chronological order—beginning with S-H-I-N-E and concluding with The Song Is Ended—the material represents just about every notable session he recorded, interspersing his solo blues and jazz album projects with studio sessions, live ...

  7. Allison s second record, Local Color also on Prestige, contained his first recording of Parchman Farm , the song for which Mose Allison still remains best known. Although Allison had adapted the song from an original blues by Bukka White in 1938, he largely changed the original arrangement and added new lyrics, it is the Mose Allison version that numerous subsequent artists have covered.

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