I'm Going Where The Water Drinks...
I'm Going Where The Water Drinks...
CD
CD (Compact Disc)
Herkömmliche CD, die mit allen CD-Playern und Computerlaufwerken, aber auch mit den meisten SACD- oder Multiplayern abspielbar ist.
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- Label: Sub Rosa
- Erscheinungstermin: 28.5.2010
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* 18 Unsung Bluesmen Rarities
Produktinfo:
Diese Ausgare der FUNDAMENTAL Kollektion ist den seltenen oder verlorenen Aufnahmen der unbekannte Bluessänger der 20er bis 60er gewidmet.
There's been Robert Johnson, Charley Patton, and Blind Lemon Jefferson, there's been Bukka White, Sleepy John Estes, Skip James, They became legendary in their lifetime or the white counterculture saved them in extremis from oblivion in the '60s. The musicians I would like to highlight here, as I similarly did with Run into me but don't hurt me, our CD on women's blues, are the ones that didn't become major figures, either constructed by Myth or defined by History. These musicians didn't meet their destiny at a crossroad; no folk or blues label rediscovered them. They never got a second chance. They had to accept lowly jobs unrelated to their art. They survived. Most of them came from Mississippi, Memphis, St. Louis. They were all highly unique, and they recorded at a young age - a very young age in some cases - in the '20s. They would walk into a hotel, guitar in hand, for a recording session or two. For some, we don't even know their names, since they cut a few 78rpm sides and left for who knows where. Their traces get lost in the Great Depression. May their voices resound once more and keep the flame of our belief burning a little more, our belief in the beauty of the struggle and the complaint.
Diese Ausgare der FUNDAMENTAL Kollektion ist den seltenen oder verlorenen Aufnahmen der unbekannte Bluessänger der 20er bis 60er gewidmet.
There's been Robert Johnson, Charley Patton, and Blind Lemon Jefferson, there's been Bukka White, Sleepy John Estes, Skip James, They became legendary in their lifetime or the white counterculture saved them in extremis from oblivion in the '60s. The musicians I would like to highlight here, as I similarly did with Run into me but don't hurt me, our CD on women's blues, are the ones that didn't become major figures, either constructed by Myth or defined by History. These musicians didn't meet their destiny at a crossroad; no folk or blues label rediscovered them. They never got a second chance. They had to accept lowly jobs unrelated to their art. They survived. Most of them came from Mississippi, Memphis, St. Louis. They were all highly unique, and they recorded at a young age - a very young age in some cases - in the '20s. They would walk into a hotel, guitar in hand, for a recording session or two. For some, we don't even know their names, since they cut a few 78rpm sides and left for who knows where. Their traces get lost in the Great Depression. May their voices resound once more and keep the flame of our belief burning a little more, our belief in the beauty of the struggle and the complaint.
- Tracklisting
- Mitwirkende
Disk 1 von 1 (CD)
- 1 Sylvester Weaver: Guitar Blues
- 2 Bo Weavil Jackson: Why Do You Moan?
- 3 Richard "Rabbit" Brown: James Alley blues
- 4 Andrew Baxter: K.C. Railroad blues
- 5 Luke Jordan: Travelling Coon
- 6 Luke Jordan: Pick poor Robin clean
- 7 Buddy "Boy" Hawkins: Workin' On The Railroad
- 8 Buddy "Boy" Hawkins: Yellow Woman Blues
- 9 Ishman Bracey: The Fore Day Blues
- 10 Willard "Ramblin'" Thomas: No Job Blues
- 11 Arthur Petties: Down South Blues
- 12 Arthur Petties: Out On Santa-Fe Blues
- 13 Rube Lacey: Mississippi Jailhouse Groan
- 14 Rube Lacey: Ham Hound Crave
- 15 Tom Dickson: Labour Blues
- 16 Freddie Spruell: Low down Mississippi bottom man
- 17 Jesse "Babyface" Thomas: Blue goose blues
- 18 Willie Baker: Bad luck moan
- 19 Willie Baker: Sweet Patunia Blues
- 20 Kid Bailey: Mississippi bottom blues
- 21 Kid Bailey: Rowdy blues
- 22 Blind Joe Reynolds (Willie): Nehi blues
- 23 Henry Townsend: Poor man blues
- 24 Noah Lewis: Devil in the Wood Pile