Showing posts with label Gus Cannon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gus Cannon. Show all posts

Friday, February 15, 2019

Gus Cannon - Jug Band Blues Essentials

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 77:46
Size: 178.0 MB
Released: 2010
Styles: Jug Band, Pre-War Blues
Art: front

1. Wolf River Blues (2:38)
2. Ripley Blues (3:02)
3. Hollywood Rag (3:04)
4. Minglewood Blues (3:45)
5. Cairo Rag (2:58)
6. Mule Gets Up In The Alley (2:49)
7. Tired Chicken Blues (2:55)
8. Prison Wall Blues (2:37)
9. Heart Breakin' Blues (3:04)
10. Pig Ankle Strut (3:03)
11. Bugle Call Rag (3:01)
12. Noah's Blues (2:52)
13. Pretty Mama Blues (2:40)
14. Big Railroad Blues (3:18)
15. Viola Lee Blues (3:05)
16. Feather Bed (3:12)
17. Going To Germany (2:33)
18. Walk Right In (2:57)
19. Riley's Waggon (2:57)
20. Jonestown Blues (2:50)
21. Money Never Runs Out (2:49)
22. Madison Street Rag (3:14)
23. Springdale Blues (3:06)
24. Bring It With You When Come (2:45)
25. The Rooster's Crowing Blues (3:01)
26. Last Chane Blues (3:16)

A remarkable musician (he could play five-string banjo and jug simultaneously), Gus Cannon bridged the gap between early blues and the minstrel and folk styles that preceded it. His band of the '20s and '30s, Cannon's Jug Stompers, represents the apogee of the jug band style. Songs they recorded, notably the raggy "Walk Right In," were staples of the folk repertoire decades later, and Cannon himself continued to record and perform into the 1970s.
Self-taught on an instrument made from a frying pan and a raccoon skin, he learned early repertoire in the 1890s from older musicians, notably Mississippian Alec Lee. The early 1900s found him playing around Memphis with songster Jim Jackson and forming a partnership with Noah Lewis, whose harmonica wizardry would be basic to the Jug Stompers' sound. In 1914, Cannon began work with a succession of medicine shows that would continue into the 1940s, and where he further developed his style and repertoire.
His recording career began with Paramount sessions in 1927. He continued to record into the '30s as a soloist and with his incredible trio, which included Noah Lewis along with guitarists Hosea Woods or Ashley Thompson. (Side projects included duets with Blind Blake and the first ever recordings of slide banjo.) Often obliged to find employment in other fields than music, Cannon continued to play anyway, mostly around Memphis. He resumed his stalled recording efforts in 1956 with sessions for Folkways. Subsequent sessions paired him with other Memphis survivors like Furry Lewis. Advancing age curtailed his activities in the '70s, but he still played the occasional cameo, sometimes from a wheelchair, until shortly before his death. ~ AMG

Jug Band Blues Essentials

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Various Artists - Memphis Jug Band with Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers

This is a wonderful four-disc set which amounts to a street corner jug band party in a box, containing nearly every side recorded in the '20s and '30s by America's two best-ever jug bands, Will Shade's Memphis Jug Band and Gus Cannon & His Jug Stompers, including one-off sides by Memphis Jug Band members Shade, Hattie Hart, Minnie Wallace, Will Weldon and Vol Stevens. It's a whole lot of fun, and actually more varied than one might think. Among the highlights are the iconic "Sun Brimmer's Blues," the kazoo-led "Mississippi River Waltz," the hardly subtle "She Stabbed Me with an Ice-Pick," and the accomplished and haunting "Fourth Street Mess" by the Memphis Jug Band, and three classic sides from the Jug Stompers, "Minglewood Blues," the bubbly "Feather Bed," and "Viola Lee Blues." More kazoos, jugs and banjos than you can shake a stick at, with great vocals and solid songs. -- Allmusic.

Memphis' Beale Street was tolerant after a fashion. Music helped and most popular were the jug bands. The most famous was Will Shade's Memphis Jug Band. Shade was a native Memphian, born in 1894. He was taught basic music by his mother and guitar by a man named Hucklebones. Will came across an old man who blew across the neck of a bottle. He was playin' an ole whiskey bottle you pick up anywhere, he said, So we said, 'Let's get a gallon jug.' So after we got a gallon jug we commenced to play it and . . . I played harmonica, guitar and also a can. Some people call it a garbage can but I calls it streamline bass. Around 1925, the Memphis Jug Band was formed. Two years later, Victor's Ralph Peer arrived on a recording trip. On February 24,1927, the MJB was in front of the mic. The four titles recorded, Sun Brimmer's Blues, Stingy Woman Blues, Memphis Jug Blues and Newport News Blues revelled in their exuberance. Vocals were shared evenly between Weldon and Shade and both were lifted by the vivacity of Shade's harmonica. All the while, Ben Ramey's kazoo must have had early listeners rolling up newspapers. The Victor engineers' rudimentary portable equipment barely caught Charlie Polk's jug. Shade's vocals introduced further elements in the band's synthesis. Memphis Jug is notable for its crooner-like ensemble singing, while Newport News hints at the guitar rhythms of northern Mississippi. So successful was the band's first release that Peer called the MJB to Chicago for a second session. Polk's jug posed no problem for the engineers this time; his rich emissions dominate all four tracks. Also featured here are Cannon's Jug Stompers - a band nearly as exuberant as the MJB. When Cannon died at 96 it had been a long haul. From his homemade first banjo, through medicine shows, a short recording career and a movie appearance up to his third marriage at the age of 75, and his involvement in the folk boom of the 1960s he seemed to get the most out of life. -- Amazon.

Album: Memphis Jug Band Disc A
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 2005
Styles: Pre-War Blues
Time: 76:13
Size: 176,1 MB
Covers: Full

(3:26) 1. Sun Brimmers Blues
(3:11) 2. Stingy Woman Blues
(3:09) 3. Memphis Jug Blues
(3:12) 4. Newport News Blues
(3:07) 5. Sometimes I Think I Love You
(2:42) 6. Sunshine Blues
(2:58) 7. Memphis Boy Blues
(2:48) 8. I'm Looking for the Bully of the Town
(3:15) 9. I Packed My Suitcase, Started to the Train
(3:20) 10. State of Tennessee Blues
(3:12) 11. Bob Lee Junior Blues
(2:55) 12. Kansas City Blues
(3:05) 13. Beale Street Mess Around
(3:08) 14. I'll See You in the Spring, When the Birds Beging to Sing
(3:25) 15. Turpentine Blues
(3:07) 16. Hitch Me to Your Buggy, And Drive Me Like a Mule
(3:20) 17. Vol Stevens Blues
(2:55) 18. Bbay Got the Rickets (Mama's Got the Mobile Blues)
(3:23) 19. Snitchin' Gambler Blues
(3:24) 20. Evergreen Money Blues
(3:33) 21. Coal Oil Blues
(3:12) 22. Papa Long Blues
(3:07) 23. Peaches in the Springtime
(3:06) 24. She Stays Out All Night Long

Memphis Jug Band Disc A
Memphis Jug Band Disc A artwork

Album: Memphis Jug Band Disc B
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 2005
Styles: Pre-War Blues
Time: 67:51
Size: 156,8 MB
Covers: Full

(2:51) 1. Lindberg Hop
(2:45) 2. Sugar Pudding
(2:50) 3. A Black Woman Is Like a Black Snake
(2:50) 4. On the Road Again
(2:45) 5. Whitehouse Station Blues
(2:58) 6. Stealin', Stealin'
(2:53) 7. Jug Band Waltz
(2:53) 8. Mississippi River Waltz
(3:26) 9. Better Leave That Stuff Alone
(3:23) 10. She Stabbed Me With an Ice-Pick
(2:30) 11. I Can't Stand It
(2:54) 12. What's the Matter?
(3:02) 13. Dirty Butter
(2:45) 14. The Old Folks Started It
(3:22) 15. Won't You Be Kind to Me?
(3:18) 16. You Wouldn't, Would You Papa?
(2:54) 17. Feed Your Friend With a Long Handled Spoon
(2:55) 18. I Can Beat You Plenty
(3:14) 19. Taking Your Place
(2:42) 20. Tired of You Driving Me
(2:53) 21. Memphis Yo Yo Blues
(2:34) 22. K.C. Moan
(3:02) 23. I Whipped My Woman With a Single Tree

Memphis Jug Band Disc B
Memphis Jug Band Disc B artwork

Album: Memphis Jug Band Disc C
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 2005
Styles: Pre-War Blues
Time: 75:20
Size: 174,0 MB
Covers: Full

(3:10) 1. Everybody's Talking About Sadie Green
(2:43) 2. Oh Ambulance Man
(2:50) 3. Cocaine Habit Blues
(3:20) 4. Jim Strainer Blues
(3:08) 5. Cave Man Blues
(3:18) 6. Fourth Street Mess
(2:33) 7. It Won't Act Right
(2:55) 8. Bumble Bee Blues
(3:13) 9. Meningitis Blues
(3:08) 10. Aunt Caroline Dyer Blues
(3:28) 11. Stonewall Blues
(3:07) 12. Spider's Nest Blues
(2:31) 13. Papa's Got Your Water On
(2:27) 14. Going Back to Memphis
(3:13) 15. He's in the Jailhouse Now
(3:01) 16. Got a Letter from My Darlin'
(3:04) 17. Round and Round
(3:06) 18. You May Leave, but This Will Bring You Back
(3:09) 19. Move That Thing
(2:32) 20. You Got Me Rollin'
(3:12) 21. Son Brimmer's Blues
(3:17) 22. Stingy Woman Blues
(3:11) 23. Newport News Blues
(3:13) 24. Snitchin' Gambler Blues
(2:19) 25. Lindberg Hop

Memphis Jug Band Disc C
Memphis Jug Band Disc C artwork

Album: Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers Disc D
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 2005
Styles: Pre-War Blues
Time: 78:13
Size: 180,8 MB
Covers: Full

(3:47) 1. Minglewood Blues
(3:19) 2. Big Railroad Blues
(3:15) 3. Madison Street Rag
(3:08) 4. Springdale Blues
(3:03) 5. Ripley Blues
(3:04) 6. Pig Ankle Strut
(2:54) 7. Noah's Blues
(3:04) 8. Hollywood Rag
(3:06) 9. Heart Breakin' Blues
(3:13) 10. Feather Bed
(2:59) 11. Cairo Rag
(3:03) 12. Bugle Call Rag
(3:07) 13. Viola Lee Blues
(2:58) 14. Riley's Wagon
(3:17) 15. Last Chance Blues
(2:55) 16. Tired Chicken Blues
(2:34) 17. Going to Germany
(2:58) 18. Walk Right In
(2:49) 19. Mule Get Up in the Alley
(3:02) 20. The Rooster's Crowing Blues
(2:50) 21. Jonestown Blues
(2:42) 22. Pretty Mama Blues
(2:47) 23. Bring It with You When You Come
(2:39) 24. Wolf River Blues
(2:50) 25. Money Never Runs Out
(2:37) 26. Prison Wall Blues

Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers Disc D
Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers Disc D artwork

Friday, June 5, 2015

Furry Lewis with Bukka White & Gus Cannon - On the Road Again

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Recorded: 1969
Released: 1999
Styles: Blues
Time: 44:16
Size: 102,3 MB
Covers: Full

(5:15) 1. Furry Lewis - On the Road Again
(4:43) 2. Bukka White - My Wife Is Getting Old
(5:58) 3. Furry Lewis - Why Don't You Come Home Blues
(1:35) 4. Gus Cannon - Lela
(3:16) 5. Furry Lewis - Oh Babe
(5:05) 6. Furry Lewis - I've Got a Bird to Whistle
(3:44) 7. Bukka White - Give Me an Old Lady
(6:50) 8. Furry Lewis - Furry's Worried Blues
(5:03) 9. Bukka White - Gibson Hill
(2:41) 10. Gus Cannon - Goin' Back (To Memphis, TN)

This 1969 recording captures a relaxed blues session of Furry Lewis, Bukka White, and Gus Cannon that is full of warmth and gentle humor. These unwound acoustic tunes are sung and played neither for dancing to nor for damning you, but instead capture a mood akin to early-evening song swapping among these old-time gentlemen of country/folk blues. The elder of the group, Cannon (of Cannon's Jug Stompers), sings two tunes here -- "Lela," and "Goin' Back (to Memphis, TN)" -- while his uniquely tuned banjo accompanies him on a few more. White's playing is Mississippi Delta slide all over his National guitar, and his voice is a gruff box that straightens just a little for the kind teasing in "Give Me an Old Lady." The majority of the tracks come from Lewis, whose fuzz-edged voice delivers in a close, familiar manner that comes off as an unassuming performance for a couple of friends. On the Road Again is an endearing bit of kicking-back by some seminal bluesmen. -- Allmusic

On the Road Again