West Coast House Party

West Coast House Party is an album by the American musician Kid Ramos, released in 2000. It was nominated for a W. C. Handy Award for best contemporary blues album. Ramos's third solo album, West Coast House Party was released through Evidence Music. Ramos supported it with a North American tour.

Production
The album was recorded over two days in February 2000. Junior Watson, Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, Duke Robillard, and Charlie Baty were among the many guest musicians who contributed to the recording sessions. Stephen Hodges played drums. Janiva Magness contributed backing vocals; her husband wrote "Happy Hour". Kim Wilson sang and played harmonica on "Real Gone Lover". "Love Don't Love Nobody" is a cover of the Roy Brown song. "House Party" was written by Amos Milburn. Ramos included a short history of jump blues in the album liner notes.

Critical reception
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette praised the "swinging, danceable tracks that infuse new life into a classic blues style." The Austin Chronicle concluded that "everyone seems to be having a good time, playing and singing enthusiastically, and they're technically competent artists, but only the 76-year-old Brown is an original stylist." The Fort Worth Star-Telegram labeled the songs "danceable delights," and advised to "forget the new Brian Setzer and buy this instead." The Philadelphia Inquirer deemed the album "a delicious slab of greasy, horn-drenched jump-blues and R&B." The Times noted the return to "jump blues and boogies." The Virginian-Pilot said, "although no virtuoso, the Kid is adept at all styles, playing throughout the session with taste, economy and verve."

AllMusic called the album "a consistently exciting and joyously well-performed disc of upbeat jump blues, played with a one-take intensity that's contagious."