Featuring: George Harrison

Songwriter: Alvin Lee

I couldn't wait to see you - waiting by the door
There's no one there to meet me - and your clothes are on the floor
Sorry if I hurt you - and I made you cry
Couldn't stand to see you - with another guy
It's the bluest blues - and it cuts me like a knife
It's the bluest blues - since you walked out of my life

Couldn't really tell you - how you hurt my pride
Something broke within me - down inside
I never knew I loved you - til you went away
Now the loneliness surrounds me - everyday
It's the bluest blues - since you walked out of the door
It's the bluest blues - cause I won't see you no more

I'm sorry if I failed you - if somehow I'm to blame
It's the bluest blues I'm feeling - it's a cryin' shame
I just can't live without you - face another day
It's the bluest blues I'm feeling, and it's here to stay
It's the bluest blues, and it cuts me to the bone
It's the bluest blues, when you can't find your way home

Alvin Lee

Alvin Lee is most famous for his time in Ten Years After, a band enjoying moderate success as a blues-rock band and happy with pop obscurity until his mind-blowing style was captured on film in a legendary Woodstock performance. Fortunately for the rest of the band, but to Lee’s horror, they quickly became superstars, a status capped by Columbia pushing them into a more pop-oriented album and the instant classic with I’d Love to Change the World. The resulting fame drove Lee from the band, so he could produce more artistic, pleasantly highest-common-denominator work. But he did keep returning to the band, off and on, for the next thirty years.

Lee was called “the world’s fastest guitarist” in the 60s and 70s. But it was more of a compliment than when applied to the “rain of notes” players of the eighties and nineties. He didn’t just spew scales and riffs at high velocity, he played lightning-fast melodies, creating a song from his guitar work itself…when he chose to play fast. In a callback to Chicago style, he would vary between shredding speed and sculpting notes in a slow and powerful way, forming Blues-rock masterpieces like evolution.

Lee was a beloved collaborator in the rock world, working alongside so many greats that compiling them here would wear out the Genius server. A subset George Harrison (The Beatles), John Mayall, Steve Winwood, Mick Taylor and Ronnie Wood (of The Rolling Stones), Mick Fleetwood (Fleetwood Mac), Albert Lee, Peter Frampton…well, you get the idea.