Your Top Five Blues LPs, SQ-wise...


Wondering what the general consensus would be here.  What five Blues LPs would you pick to showcase your sound system’s strengths to another Blues lover?  Not so much interested in “historically important” discs here as much as Blues on vinyl that just sounds fantastic enough to prompt one to wear out an expensive cartridge/stylus on...
Thanks in advance.  Just getting into the genre myself via the various streaming radio feeds and never seem to catch the names of artists/titles so I don’t have a list of my own, but I’m drawn to great Blues guitar sounds and unforgettable lyrics which let the listener know, unmistakably, that the singer has, “walked the walk”...
lg1
@gosta,

Based upon a few of your posts, I assume you're a fan of Ten Years After? If you don't already own it, check out Ten Years After "S/T"  Sundazed/mono/2017.  It's fantastic!
Only one mentioned Buddy Guy/ Jr Wells, and for a different album:  My all time favorite -  Drinkin' TNT, Smokin' Dynamite
Koko Taylor - I Got What It Takes, or From the Heart of a Woman
Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee - Sing if you can find it) or Midnight Special (I have the compilation)
James Cotton, Cotton Mouth Man (With Joe Bonamassa and Greg Allman)
Albert Collins - "Master of the Telecaster"; "The Iceman":   Ice Pickin' or Cold Snap


Buddy Guy, Bring Em In and Blues Singer ( both on cd ). Smokin Joe Kubek Show ME the Money on CD.
Junior Wells’ “Hoodoo Man Blues”is one of the first real Blues albums and has very good if not reference SQ, but absolutely triumphs on music, which to me is important. 
I also agree with the votes for “Chicago/ The Blues Today” set. Very natural ambiance live sound. Especially the volume with James Cotton and Otis Rush. 
The studio tracks on Muddy Waters’ “Fathers And Sons” are fantastic musically and have crisp dynamic recorded sound. Check out “Can’t Lose What You Never Had”. 
A more recent disc I love is Branford Marsalis’ 1992 set featuring B. B. King on a track called “B. B.’s Blues”. Unbelievable guitar and vocal by the master, beautifully recorded in modern fidelity with a stellar jazz combo. B. B. definitely upped his game that day. 
Love the Blues!