Chess / Acoustic Sounds
Little Milton - We're Gonna Make It (Chess 75 / Acoustic Sounds Series) (Vinyl LP) PRE-ORDER
Little Milton - We're Gonna Make It (Chess 75 / Acoustic Sounds Series) (Vinyl LP) PRE-ORDER
Couldn't load pickup availability
Expected Release Date: 21-August-2026 - This Pre-order will be shipped on or just before this date. Release dates are subject to alteration.
Compared to labelmates such as Muddy Waters and Bo Diddley, Little Milton was a late signee to the Chess family, not joining until the early ‘60s. But he'd already had quite a career as a singer and guitarist in the preceding decade — and his blues-soul style, often compared to that of B.B. King, brought a new wave of commercial success to the label.
James Milton Campbell was born in 1934 in Mississippi, raised on blues music by his father, a farmer who also played music in his spare time. When he was 12, Milton scraped together some money from odd jobs and purchased his first guitar, which he'd perform for money on local street corners and eventually nearby clubs. He'd sit in with anyone who'd have him — future Chess legend Sonny Boy Williamson II had him in his backing band at least once — and his devotion to the craft got people noticing.
Chess offered Milton a distribution deal and Milton would begin to record for their Checker imprint starting in 1961. "So Mean to Me," his second single for the label released that same year, became his first chart hit anywhere, reaching No. 14 on the R&B charts. As his sound began to evolve, audiences began to take notice, and in 1965, "We're Gonna Make It" — a stirring song utilized as a metaphor for the growing civil rights movement in America — not only topped the R&B chart but crossed over into the pop survey, reaching No. 25 on the Billboard Hot 100. More hits followed on Checker through the ‘60s and even into the early ‘70s, including "Who's Cheating Who?" (1965), "Feel So Bad" (1966), "Grits Ain't Groceries" (1968), "If Walls Could Talk" (1969) and 1970's "Baby, I Love You," made famous several years earlier by Aretha Franklin.
Little Milton would depart Checker not long after Chess was sold, signing to Stax Records for a time and appearing at the label's historic Wattstax benefit concert in Los Angeles. He remained a living legend of the blues for the next few decades: he was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame and earned a W.C. Handey Award for Blues Entertainer of the Year in 1988, and was still actively recording when he died in 2005.
All-analog mastering by Matthew Lutthans at The Mastering Lab
180-gram vinyl pressed at Quality Record Pressings
Side A
1. We're Gonna Make It
2. You're Welcome To The Club
3. I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town
4. Blues In The Night
5. Country Style
6. Who's Cheating Who
Side B
1. Blind Man
2. Can't Hold Back The Tears
3. Believe In Me
4. Stand By Me
5. Life Is Like That
6. Ain't No Big Deal On You
SKU:5750253
Delivery and Returns
Delivery and Returns
Delivery
Records:
Orders over £60 are free for UK delivery - Royal Mail 2nd Class Tracked
Orders under £60 are £4.50 for UK delivery - Royal Mail Tracked 48
We now ship to Europe! Please add the items to your cart to see the shipping costs for the country you require.
CDs:
Free UK delivery on all CDs - Royal Mail 2nd Class
Returns Policy
The Jazz Vault Ltd accepts returns within 14 days if products are not used, changed, washed or otherwise manipulated. Products need to be returned in original packaging.
No products may be returned to The Jazz Vault without the prior written consent of The Jazz Vault and are subject to a return charge.
