Showing posts with label John Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Jackson. Show all posts

Thursday, December 21, 2017

Various - Back Porch Americana Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:37
Size: 157.1 MB
Styles: Assorted styles
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[3:20] 1. Marcia Ball - Married Life
[2:47] 2. Cephas & Wiggins - All I've Got Is Them Blues
[3:37] 3. Corey Harris - Bound To Miss Me
[3:31] 4. Ann Rabson - Serial Love
[3:36] 5. Saffire-The Uppity Blues Women - Too Much Butt
[4:04] 6. Tinsley Ellis - The Sun Is Shining
[4:28] 7. Buddy Guy & Junior Wells - Diggin' My Potatoes
[4:42] 8. The Siegel-Schwall Band - Afraid Of Love
[2:00] 9. Kenny Neal - Bad Luck Card
[3:19] 10. Little Charlie & The Nightcats - Steady Rollin' Man
[3:44] 11. Charlie Musselwhite - Make My Getaway
[2:58] 12. John Jackson - She's So Sweet
[3:22] 13. Bob Margolin - Big Tree Blues
[3:55] 14. Buckwheat Zydeco - Throw Me Something, Mister
[5:54] 15. Billy Boy Arnold - Young And Evil
[5:48] 16. Lonnie Brooks - Two Trains Running
[3:42] 17. The Holmes Brothers - Close The Door
[3:41] 18. Koko Taylor - I Got What It Takes

Back Porch Americana Blues mc
Back Porch Americana Blues zippy

Thursday, April 6, 2017

Various - Classic African-American Ballads From Smithsonian Folkways

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:49
Size: 153.0 MB
Styles: Folk, Blues, Old Time
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[3:44] 1. Warner Williams With Jay Summerour - Mouse On The Hill
[1:22] 2. K.C. Douglas - Casey Jones
[2:42] 3. Lead Belly - John Hardy
[3:33] 4. John Jackson - Railroad Bill
[3:32] 5. Memphis Slim And Willie Dixon - Stewball
[4:02] 6. Sonny Terry And Brownie Mcghee - John Henry
[2:22] 7. Snooks Eaglin - St. James Infirmary
[5:02] 8. John Cephas And Phil Wiggins - Staggerlee (Stackolee)
[4:53] 9. Convict Group, Ramsey And Retrieve State Farms - Lost John
[3:44] 10. Josh White - Betty And Dupree
[1:57] 11. Lead Belly - Old Riley
[2:26] 12. Jazz Gillum, Memphis Slim, And Arbee Stidham - The Race Of The Jim Lee And Katy Adam
[2:49] 13. Pink Anderson - The Titanic
[2:10] 14. Big Bill Broonzy - Frankie And Johnny
[1:58] 15. Earl Taylor And The Stony Mountain Boys - White House Blues
[3:17] 16. John Jackson - Louis Collins
[2:13] 17. Woody Guthrie - Bad Lee Brown
[2:24] 18. Bhorace Sprott - Luke And Mullen
[2:59] 19. Dave Van Ronk - Duncan And Brady
[2:44] 20. Lead Belly - Gallis Pole
[3:03] 21. Pink Anderson - Boll Weevil
[3:42] 22. Josh White Jr. - Delia's Gone

Classic African-American Ballads is a sampling of an important, historic, and engaging slice of America's Black music heritage. The heyday of the Black ballad tradition (1890-1920) left a lasting strain of creativity and a monument to African American life of the time. Ranging from songs created from the heritage of the English ballad, to social commentary vilifying abusive white authority figures, to "blues ballads," this album reminds us of the enormity and constant evolution of African American musical tradition.

Classic African-American Ballads From Smithsonian Folkways mc
Classic African-American Ballads From Smithsonian Folkways zippy

Sunday, January 24, 2016

John Jackson - Country Blues & Ditties

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 1999
Styles: Blues
Time: 70:21
Size: 162,4 MB
Covers: Full

(2:45) 1. Diddy Wa Diddy
(3:00) 2. Match Box Blues
(2:01) 3. Roll on Buddy
(2:20) 4. T.B. Blues
(2:30) 5. Guitar Rag
(2:38) 6. Railroad Bill
(3:05) 7. Waiting for a Train
(2:10) 8. Cindy
(2:56) 9. Steamboat Whistle Blues
(2:40) 10. I'll Step Aside
(3:11) 11. John's Guitar Boogie
(3:27) 12. Brown Skin Mama
(2:04) 13. Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning
(2:40) 14. Screaming and Crying
(3:52) 15. He's in the Jailhouse Now
(3:09) 16. Red Sea Blues
(2:37) 17. Kneel at the Cross
(2:03) 18. Going Up North
(3:04) 19. Lay Down My Old Guitar
(2:49) 20. Too Tight
(3:45) 21. Just a Closer Walk with Thee
(3:04) 22. Deep in the Bottom Blues
(3:31) 23. That'll Never Happen No More
(3:06) 24. I'm a Bad, Bad Man
(1:41) 25. Why I Quit Playing Guitar (Story)

These 25 songs were recorded by Chris Strachwitz in April 1965, December 1967, and the fall of 1969, when Jackson was in his early to mid-forties. His music represents a fascinating blend of rural songs and dance tunes he heard well over half a century ago growing up as a young African American farm hand in the isolated Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. Presented here is a collection of blues, breakdowns, rags and country songs - simple, raw and played straight from the heart. It's a pleasant set including interpretations of well-known classics like "Diddy Wah Diddy," "Matchbox Blues," "Just a Closer Walk with Thee," and "He's in the Jailhouse Now." He goes for more unexpected tunes with "I'll Step Aside," an Ernest Tubb hit, and "Lay Down My Old Guitar," probably learned from the Delmore Brothers; this is one of many examples of how Black and White rural music isn't as far apart as some have proclaimed. Without meaning any disrespect at all to the performer, this isn't the kind of recording to get you jumping up and down in excitement; it's relaxed acoustic blues, the kind you'd be happy to hear played at picnics or at a neighbor's home. Jackson's guitar picking is very good, and shown to best effect on the instrumental "John's Guitar Boogie."

Country Blues & Ditties
Country Blues & Ditties artwork

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Various - Texas Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:04
Size: 165.0 MB
Styles: Texas blues
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:22] 1. Guitar Shorty - Texas Women
[2:42] 2. John Jackson - Red River Blues
[3:32] 3. John Jackson - West Texas Blues
[4:53] 4. W.C. Clark - My Texas Home
[2:57] 5. Long John Hunter - El Paso Rock
[6:55] 6. Long John Hunter - West Texas Homecoming
[1:49] 7. Tinsley Ellis - Texas Stomp
[4:07] 8. Long John Hunter - Lone Star Shootout
[3:21] 9. Odetta - Midnight Special
[2:54] 10. Ramblin' Jack Elliott - Diamond Joe
[4:25] 11. Pee Wee Crayton - Long Tall Texan
[4:13] 12. Johnny Winter - Route 90
[3:19] 13. Roomful Of Blues - 2 Point 8
[4:18] 14. Fenton Robinson - Texas Flood
[3:42] 15. Fenton Robinson - Going West
[2:40] 16. Johnny Otis - Drinkin' Wine, Spo-Dee-O-Dee
[3:47] 17. Anders Osborne - Acapulco
[3:38] 18. Charlie Musselwhite - Brownsville Blues
[4:22] 19. Delbert McClinton - B Movie Boxcar Blues

Despite what legend and lore may tell you, the blues did not originate in the Delta. It grew out of the African American experience in the early 20th Century, wherever musically inventive people faced oppression and adversity. And that was happening in plenty of places besides northwest Mississippi. The blues was a product of its times, and so developed in parallel in many areas of the southern U.S. Each region produced its own dialect of the blues, though the Mississippi Delta and the Piedmont of the Southeast were certainly major centers. But of all the regions where blues flourished, Texas—being practically its own country in terms of culture, population, and size, and being home to hotspots such as Austin, Houston, and Dallas—had a profound impact on blues. The Lone Star state still remains a major influence on modern music styles, including and especially the blues.

Texas Blues mc
Texas Blues zippy

Saturday, May 16, 2015

VA - Acoustic Blues Nuggets

Size: 174,4 MB
Time: 74:08
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Acoustic Blues
Art: Front

01 Anders Osborne - Call On Me (2:56)
02 Ann Rabson - Serial Love (3:32)
03 Corey Harris - She Moves Me (2:09)
04 Kenny Neal - Morning After (3:04)
05 Lonnie Mack - Oreo Cookie Blues (4:51)
06 Sonny Terry - So Tough With Me (4:11)
07 Little Charlie & The Nightcats - Too Close Together (3:07)
08 Saffire - The Uppity Blues Women/Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby (2:33)
09 Big Walter Horton - Trouble In Mind (4:37)
10 Charlie Musselwhite - Newport News Blues (3:58)
11 Buddy Guy & Junior Wells - Catfish Blues (3:33)
12 Johnny Jones - Early In The Morning (2:34)
13 Bob Margolin - Worried Life Blues (5:17)
14 Gaye Adegbalola - Let Go, Let God (4:29)
15 Johnny Winter - Bad Girl Blues (4:32)
16 Shemekia Copeland - Beat Up Guitar (4:26)
17 The Holmes Brothers - Close The Door (3:42)
18 Cephas & Wiggins - Hard Liquor (4:13)
19 John Jackson - She's So Sweet (2:58)
20 Carey & Lurrie Bell - Short Dress Woman (3:17)

Acoustic Blues Nuggets

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Various - Blues: Live From Mountain Stage

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 58:35
Size: 134.1 MB
Styles: Blues-Country-Folk-R&B
Year: 1995
Art: Front

[2:42] 1. The Nighthawks - Leave My Woman Alone
[4:24] 2. Tracy Nelson - It Hurts Me Too
[3:40] 3. Paul Geremia - Slidell Blues
[2:57] 4. Snooky Pryor - That's The Way To Do It
[3:22] 5. John Hammond Jr. - My Daddy Was A Jockey
[5:13] 6. Charlie Musselwhite - Blues Why Do You Worry Me
[4:21] 7. Chris Smither - The Devil's Real
[5:05] 8. Cephas - Black Cat On The Line
[4:04] 9. William Clarke - Lonesome Bedroom Blues
[2:25] 10. John Jackson - Louisiana Blues
[3:55] 11. Legendary Blues Band - Got Love If You Want It
[5:22] 12. Johnnie Johnson - That'll Work
[5:09] 13. Charles Brown - Quicksand Blues
[5:51] 14. Duke Robillard - Gee I Wish

The Blues Live from Mountain Stage series continues documenting contemporary roots music's finest performers with this fine collection of blues performances, featuring artists including Charles Brown ("Quicksand Blues"), Charlie Musselwhite ("Blues Why Do You Worry Me?"), and Tracy Nelson ("It Hurts Me Too").

Blues: Live From Mountain Stage mc
Blues: Live From Mountain Stage zippy

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

John Jackson - Don't Let Your Deal Go Down

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 72:11
Size: 172 MB
Styles: Country Blues, Piedmont Blues, East Coast Blues
Year: 1992
Art: Front

[2:34] 1. Going Down In Georgia On A Horn
[2:13] 2. Black Snake Moan
[3:56] 3. John Henry
[2:03] 4. If Hattie Wants To Lu, Let Her Lu Like A Man
[3:02] 5. Nobody's Business But Mine
[2:35] 6. John's Rag
[3:31] 7. Boats Up The River
[2:30] 8. Rattlesnakin' Daddy
[3:05] 9. Flat Foot & Bug Dance
[2:42] 10. Bear Cat Blues
[1:51] 11. Reuben
[3:17] 12. Rocks And Gravel
[3:50] 13. Going Down The Road Feelin' Bad
[3:28] 14. Police Dog Blues
[2:07] 15. Don't Let Your Deal Go Down
[3:29] 16. Muleskinner Blues
[2:15] 17. I Bring My Money
[1:55] 18. John's Ragtime
[3:05] 19. Red River Blues
[2:14] 20. Knife Blues
[3:09] 21. Trucking Little Baby
[2:26] 22. Blind Blake's Rag
[2:01] 23. Goodbye Booze
[2:51] 24. Graveyard Blues
[3:42] 25. Early Morning Blues
[1:56] 26. You Aint No Woman

Banjo, Vocals – John Jackson (4) (tracks: 4); Guitar, Vocals – John Jackson (4) (tracks: 1 to 3, 5 to 26).

Twenty-six tracks running over 70 minutes, recorded by John Jackson between 1965 and 1969 and featuring the rural blues legend at the very top of his form on vocals, guitar, and even banjo on one instrumental ("If Hattie Wants to Lu, Let Her Lu Like a Man"). Jackson's repertory here includes standards like "John Henry" (in one of the most exciting versions ever done, with some killer slide) and "Muleskinner Blues," established parts of other bluesmen's repertories (Blind Boy Fuller's "Rattlesnakin' Daddy," Blind Arthur Blake's "Police Dog Blues" and "Early Morning Blues"), as well as originals, such as the dazzling acoustic pyrotechnic displays on "John's Rag," "Graveyard Blues," and "Knife Blues" (the latter a slide guitar showcase worth the price of the disc by itself), and adaptations of popular songs ("Blind Blake's Rag," which borrows at one point from "Has Anybody Seen My Gal"). Good as his playing is, Jackson's singing is also to be admired, as his baritone voice surges with a quiet power and forcefulness, and a rich tone -- "Boats Up the River," a children's song adapted from various traditional sources, is probably the vocal standout on this collection. The fidelity is excellent, these being modern recordings, and overall this CD is the best single overview of John Jackson's music, its value enhanced by the presence of detailed notes that have been updated to the 1990s. It's records like this that humble lots of young white bluesmen. ~Bruce Eder

Don't Let Your Deal Go Down