Showing posts with label Charley Patton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charley Patton. Show all posts

Monday, July 31, 2017

VA - Rough Guide To Ragtime Blues

Size: 170,8 MB
Time: 72:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Ragtime Blues, Country Blues
Art: Front & Back

01 Blind Willie McTell - Southern Can Is Mine (3:08)
02 Willie Walker - South Carolina Rag (Take 2) (3:06)
03 Blind Boy Fuller - Piccolo Rag (2:48)
04 Luke Jordan - Cocaine Blues (3:14)
05 Robert Wilkins - Old Jim Canan's (2:56)
06 Blind Blake - Blind Arthur's Breakdown (2:59)
07 Papa Charlie Jackson - Drop That Sack (2:28)
08 Bo Carter - Your Biscuits Are Big Enough For Me (2:06)
09 Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe - Guitar Rag (3:06)
10 Dick Justice - Old Black Dog (2:55)
11 Beale Street Sheiks - Mr. Crump Don't Like It (2:38)
12 William Moore - Ragtime Millionaire (3:07)
13 Pillie Bolling - Shake Me Like A Dog (3:01)
14 Charlie McCoy - I've Been Blue Ever Since You Went Away (3:14)
15 Allen Brothers - Salty Dog Blues (3:05)
16 Blind Lemon Jefferson - Beggin' Back (2:49)
17 Big Bill Broonzy - Guitar Rag (2:52)
18 The Two Charlies - Pork Chop Blues (3:02)
19 Mississippi John Hurt - Got The Blues Can't Be Satisfied (2:49)
20 Charley Patton - Shake It And Break It (But Don't Let It Fall Mama) (3:04)
21 Troy Ferguson - You Better Keep It At Home (3:02)
22 Reverend Gary Davis - Have More Faith In Jesus (2:59)
23 Buddy Boy Hawkins - Raggin' The Blues (2:26)
24 Geeshie Wiley & Elvie Thomas - Pick Poor Robin Clean (3:09)
25 Cannon's Jug Stompers - Money Never Runs Out (2:44)

Ragtime had a profound influence on many early blues performers who strived to reproduce its complicated piano sounds on the guitar. With its faster rhythm and good-time feel, this danceable style was performed with mesmerizing skill by blues greats such as Blind Blake, Reverend Gary Davis and Blind Boy Fuller.

Made famous by the legendary Scott Joplin, ragtime developed in African-American communities throughout the southern part of the Midwest during the last decade of the nineteenth century and had a profound influence on many early blues performers. Combining the structure of marches with African-American songs and dances such as the cakewalk, ragtime’s syncopated or ‘ragged’ rhythm was initially performed as dance music for the seedier side of society in areas where bars, dancehalls and brothels were located. Many blues guitarists attempted to reproduce the complicated piano sounds, as its faster rhythm created a more upbeat and lively feel, far removed from the typical intensity of early country blues. So, when ragtime went out of favour as jazz claimed the public's imagination, it had already entered the folk consciousness through the playing of blues greats such as Blind Blake, Reverend Gary Davis and Blind Boy Fuller.

Blind Blake was the first commercially successful performer of this style, whose intricate fingerstyle technique and diverse repertoire ranging from upbeat rags and hokum tunes to slow blues numbers influenced all who followed, including the likes of Blind Boy Fuller and Reverend Gary Davis, and modern-day guitarists Ry Cooder, John Fahey and Jorma Kaukonen.

Many of the featured artists hailed from the Eastern States where the influence of ragtime was instrumental in creating the unique and much loved ‘Piedmont’ guitar style. Typically, the Piedmont guitarist would create an alternating rhythmic bass accompaniment by moving the thumb of the picking hand between the different bass strings of the guitar, whilst one or more fingers of the same hand would pick out the melody on the higher strings. Essentially this approach gives the impression that the guitar is being played like a piano.

Little is known about many of these artists, none more so than Willie Walker who only ever recorded two sides in 1930, with ‘South Carolina Rag’ being one of the absolute masterpieces of ragtime guitar playing. Other highlights to listen out for include ‘Ragtime Millionaire’ by the barbershop owner William Moore which harks back to the glory years of ragtime as well as the cakewalk inspired ‘Money Never Runs Out’ by Gus Cannon’s Jug Stompers.

Rough Guide To Ragtime Blues

Monday, May 30, 2016

VA - Rough Guide To Gospel Blues

Size: 174,6 MB
Time: 74:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Blues Gospel
Art: Front

01 Rev. Gary Davis - I Am The Light (2:59)
02 Blind Willie Johnson - I Know His Blood Can Make Me Whole (3:00)
03 Mississippi John Hurt - Praying On The Old Camp Ground (2:34)
04 Bukka White - The Promise True And Grand (3:02)
05 Rev. Edward W. Clayborn - (Your Enemy Cannot Harm You (2:54)
06 Blind Roosevelt Graves - I'll Be Rested (When The Roll Is Called) (2:26)
07 Blind Boy Fuller - Twelve Gates To The City (2:40)
08 Blind Joe Taggart - Scandalous And A Shame (2:53)
09 Mother McCollum - Jesus Is My Air-O-Plane (3:17)
10 Tallahassee Tight - Got Heaven In My View (3:03)
11 Skip James - Be Ready When He Comes (2:52)
12 Julius Daniels - Slippin' And Slidin' Up The Golden Street (3:09)
13 Blind Mamie Forehand - Wouldn't Mind Dying If Dying Was All (3:24)
14 Lil' McClintock - Mother Called Her Child To Her Dying Bed (3:08)
15 Bo Weavil Jackson - I'm On My Way To The Kingdom Land (2:58)
16 Memphis Minnie - Let Me Ride (2:56)
17 Blind Gussie Nesbit - I'll Just Stand And Wring My Hands And Cry (3:13)
18 Blind Willie McTell - Georgia Rag (3:09)
19 Blind Willie Davis - I've Got A Key To The Kingdom (3:10)
20 Henry Thomas - Jonah In The Wilderness (2:52)
21 Barbecue Bob - When The Saints Go Marching In (3:05)
22 Bessie Smith - On Revival Day (A Rhythmic Spiritual) (2:53)
23 Charley Patton - Jesue Is A Dying-Bed Maker (2:50)
24 Sam Collins - Lead Me All The Way (2:39)
25 Blind Lemon Jefferson - All I Want Is That Pure Religion (3:10)

The huge musical influence of the church has meant that gospel music and the blues have long been intertwined. From the true guitar evangelists such as Blind Willie Johnson and Reverend Gary Davis to blues legends Charley Patton and Skip James, these recordings illustrate how the line separating the Lord's song and 'the devil's music' was very thin.

Rough Guide To Gospel Blues

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Various - Bill Wyman's Blues Odyssey (2-Disc Set)

Former Rolling Stones bass player Bill Wyman wants to enlighten people about the great blues of America's musical past. Drawing on his stash of 1,300 albums, the two-CD set Bill Wyman's Blues Odyssey makes a strong case for the lasting eloquence of the African American blues music recorded in the oppressive South during the Depression and on till 1951. (Wyman has also co-authored a history of the American blues called Bill Wyman's Blues Odyssey: A Journey to Music's Heart & Soul.) Blues novitiates and devotees alike will be served well by Wyman's knowing selection of songs, 46 in all, covering an array of styles. Among his heroes are the famous (Bessie Smith, Robert Johnson) and semi-famous (Lonnie Johnson and Memphis Slim, to name two), as well as the unjustly forgotten (several pianists and cross-dressing singer Frankie "Half-Pint" Jaxon). ~Frank-John Hadley

Album: Bill Wyman's Blues Odyssey (Disc 1)
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 68:07
Size: 156.0 MB
Styles: Assorted blues
Year: 2005

[2:59] 1. Bessie Smith - Goin' Crazy With The Blues
[2:56] 2. Papa Charlie Jackson - Lock And Key
[2:38] 3. Blind Lemon Jefferson - All I Want Is A Spoonful
[2:58] 4. Luke Jordan - Matchbox Blues
[3:14] 5. Blind Blake - Church Bell Blues
[2:50] 6. Frank Stokes - Southern Rag
[2:57] 7. Mississippi John Hurt - What's The Matter Blues
[2:54] 8. Pinetop Smith - Stack O'lee Blues
[3:19] 9. Montana Taylor - Pine Top's Boogie Woogie
[3:25] 10. Tampa Red & Georgia Tom - Indiana Avenue Stomp
[2:52] 11. Charley Patton - The Duck Yas-Yas-Yas
[3:03] 12. Frankie Half-Pint Jaxon - Shake It And Break It (But Don't Let It Fall Mama)
[2:47] 13. Jesse Babyface Thomas - Come On Mama, Do That Dance
[2:33] 14. Speckled Red - Blue Goose Blues
[2:58] 15. Blind Willie Walker - The Dirty Dozen
[3:06] 16. Bo Carter - South Carolina Rag
[2:51] 17. Blind Willie Mctell - Pussy Cat Blues
[3:06] 18. Joe Pullum - Searching The Desert For The Blues
[2:45] 19. Rob Cooper - Cows, See That Train Comin'
[2:58] 20. Bumble Bee Slim - West Dallas Rag
[2:47] 21. Casey Bill Weldon - Ramblin' With That Woman
[3:13] 22. Meade Lux Lewis - W.P.A. Blues
[2:47] 23. Robert Johnson - Honky Tonk Train Blues

Bill Wyman's Blues Odyssey (Disc 1) mc
Bill Wyman's Blues Odyssey (Disc 1) zippy

Album: Bill Wyman's Blues Odyssey (Disc 2)
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 63:31
Size: 145.4 MB
Styles: Assorted blues
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[2:59] 1. Walter 'cowboy' Washington - Terraplane Blues
[2:53] 2. Black Boy Shine - Ice Pick Mama
[2:23] 3. Peetie Wheatstraw - Gamblin' Jinx Blues
[2:34] 4. Big Bill Broonzy - Peetie Wheatstraw Stomp
[2:47] 5. Georgia White - Good Boy
[2:31] 6. Blind Boy Fuller - Alley Boogie
[2:41] 7. Cow Cow' Davenport - Meat Shakin' Woman
[2:40] 8. Mamie Smith - Railroad Blues
[2:52] 9. Sleepy John Estes - Special Agent (Railroad Police Blues)
[2:47] 10. Big Joe Turner - Roll 'em Pete
[2:56] 11. Lonnie Johnson - Jersey Belle Blues
[2:42] 12. Tommy Mcclennan - Brown Skin Girl
[3:19] 13. Memphis Slim - Beer Drinking Woman
[2:47] 14. Memphis Minnie - Me And My Chauffeur Blues
[2:45] 15. Big Joe Williams - Baby, Please Don't Go
[2:55] 16. Pete Johnson - Dive Bomber
[3:04] 17. Sonny Terry - Carolina Blues
[2:31] 18. Big Maceo - Kid Man Blues
[2:33] 19. John Lee Hooker - Boogie Chillen'
[2:33] 20. Muddy Waters - You're Gonna Miss Me (When I'm Dead And Gone)
[2:29] 21. Melvin Lil' Son Jackson - Rockin' And Rollin'
[2:58] 22. B.B. King - 3 O'clock Blues
[2:43] 23. Elmore James - Dust My Broom

Bill Wyman's Blues Odyssey (Disc 2) mc
Bill Wyman's Blues Odyssey (Disc 2) zippy