Luther Allison

Profile

Luther Allison

Movies

Luther Allison: Songs from the Road
Himself - Lead Guitar & Vocals
Four days prior to being diagnosed with a malignant lung tumor, Luther Allison played a blistering show in Montreal; it was filmed for later airplay on Canadian television, and most of the show is captured on this DVD. The bitter irony is obvious here -- Allison is at the peak of his powers, and yet at the same time, it could be said that he's playing like a man with only weeks to live. Performers include: Luther Allison: lead guitar, vocals; James Solberg: rhythm & lead guitar; Mike Vlahakis: keyboards; Ken Faltinson: bass; Robb Stupka: drums; and Memphis Horns (Wayne Jackson, Andrew Love).
Otis Rush & Friends - Live At Montreux 1986
Himself
With four incredible performances at the legendary Montreux Music Festival to his name to date, legendary bluesman Otis Rush offers a memorable look at just how it all began in this release of the 1986 performance that started it all. In addition to memorable appearances by Eric Clapton and Luther Allison, Rush and company offer thirteen rousing blues hits including "Gambler's Blues", "Lonely Man", "Mean Old World", and "Right Place, Wrong Time". Tracklist: Tops [6:22] I Wonder Why (Will My Man Be Home Tonight) [7:15] Lonely Man [4:48] Gambler's Blues [9:40] Natural Ball [5:33] Right Place, Wrong Time [6:35] Mean Old World [5:52] You Don't Love Me [3:52] Crosscut Saw [8:25] Double Trouble [5:32] All Your Love (I Miss Loving) [7:53] Every Day I Have the Blues [10:00] If I Had Any Sense, I'd Go Back Home [6:51] INFO: DVD 9 ENG PAL Region 0 4:3 Screen Format DTS + Dolby Surround 5.1 + PCM Stereo
Luther Allison - Live in Paradise
Recorded live in April 1997 at Theatre St. Gilles on La Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean, Luther Allison Live in Paradise captures the legendary guitarist in the final months ofa career that spanned five decades.
Lord Thing
Music
Produced at the height of the black power movement in the early ‘70s, Lord Thing is an insider history into the genesis and transformation of the Conservative Vice Lords gang, one of Chicago's oldest street gangs. Partially shaped and told by by CVL members who also appear in the film, Lord Thing is a unique and powerful tool that expresses an effort in self-transformation during a volatile and violent time in US race history. Gritty and rhythmic, this unusual film reflects an under-told chapter in gang history as members from the West Side neighborhood of North Lawndale try to become viable and political agents in their community. (Chicago Film Archives)