Showing posts with label Ralph Willis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ralph Willis. Show all posts

Thursday, November 16, 2023

Ralph Willis - Rural Stylist

Size: 247 MB
Time: 67:41
File: Flac
Released:
Styles:Slow-Folk Blues
Art: Front

1. Christmas Blues (2:38)
2. Boar Hog Blues (2:39)
3. Eloise (2:56)
4. Church Bells (2:56)
5. Amen Blues (2:47)
6. Neighbourhood Blues (3:01)
7. Trouble Don't Last (2:52)
8. That Gal's No Good (2:51)
9. Goin' to Virginia (2:24)
10. New Goin' Down Slow (2:59)
11. So Many Days (2:10)
12. I'm Gonna Rock (2:23)
13. Goin' to Chattanooga (2:51)
14. Shake That Thing (2:34)
15. Sportin' Life (2:34)
16. Comb Your Kitty Kat (2:41)
17. Steel Mill Blues (2:34)
18. Worried Blues (2:16)
19. Everyday I Weep and Moan (3:00)
20. I Will Never Love Again (2:37)
21. Somebody's Got to Go (2:43)
22. I've Been a Fool (2:47)
23. Mama, Mama Blues (2:47)
24. Just a Note (2:59)
25. Cool That Thing (2:30)

Sources suggest that Willis was born either near Birmingham, Alabama, or at Irvin, Wilkes County, Georgia. In the late 1930s, he moved to North Carolina and started to play with musicians who were familiar with Blind Boy Fuller. Willis made his first recordings in 1944 and continued recording until 1953, issuing fifty tracks on several labels, including Savoy, Signature, 20th Century, Abbey, Jubilee, Prestige, Par, and King. Like Gabriel Brown, Alec Seward and Brownie McGhee, Willis relocated to New York City. At first he was recorded on his own, but eventually his record companies frequently paired him with accompanists. Judson Coleman joined Willis on his 20th Century recordings, and McGhee was employed in 1949. McGhee and Sonny Terry contributed to Willis's later recordings. Willis played in various musical styles, from slow blues to up-tempo country dance tracks. However, he spurned the growing popularity of folk blues and R&B. He was musically conscious of Blind Lemon Jefferson and Luke Jordan, but in his later recordings his guitar style leaned towards the booming resonance of Lightnin' Hopkins. Willis died in New York City in June 1957, a week before his 48th birthday.

Rural Stylist FLAC

Monday, October 5, 2015

Stick McGhee & His Spo-Dee-O-Dee Buddies - New York Blues

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Source: LL (from CD)
Released: 1994
Styles: Blues
Time: 51:43
Size: 120,4 MB
Covers: Full

(3:03) 1. Big Tom Collins - Real Good Feeling
(2:41) 2. Big Tom Collins - Heartache Blues
(2:45) 3. Big Tom Collins - Heart Breaking Woman
(2:35) 4. Big Tom Collins - Watchin' My Stuff
(2:22) 5. Ralph Willis - Gonna Hop on Down the Line
(2:25) 6. Ralph Willis - Do Right
(2:32) 7. Ralph Willis - Why'd You Do It
(2:31) 8. Ralph Willis - Door Bell Blues
(2:33) 9. Stick McGhee - I'm Doin' All This Time (And You Put Me Down)
(2:17) 10. Stick McGhee - The Wiggle Waggle Woo
(2:41) 11. Stick McGhee - Dealin' from the Bottom
(2:37) 12. Stick McGhee - Whiskey, Women and Loaded Dice
(2:39) 13. Stick McGhee - Little Things We Used to Do
(2:15) 14. Stick McGhee - Blues in My Heart & Tears in My Eyes
(2:24) 15. Stick McGhee - Head Happy With Wine
(2:23) 16. Stick McGhee - Jungle Juice
(2:53) 17. Stick McGhee - Sad Bad Glad
(2:33) 18. Stick McGhee - Six to Eight
(2:43) 19. Stick McGhee - Get Your Mind Out of the Gutter
(2:40) 20. Stick McGhee - Double Crossin' Liqour

The British Ace label has done Brownie's little brother proud, collecting his dozen 1953-1955 jump blues sides for the King logo, many of them detailing the effects of booze. Also aboard are four country blues-styled numbers by Ralph Willis, and four more by the pseudonymous Big Tom Collins (two of them feature Brownie McGhee's vocals, the other pair Champion Jack Dupree!). -- Allmusic.

Granville "Stick/Sticks" McGhee made hustling his life's work. He was a cab driver, streetsinger, a pool-player, a dancer and a gambler, but when he had time, he made records which fuelled and invigorated both blues and R&B. His R&B classic "Drinkin' Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee" has inspired artists as diverse as Charlie Daniels and Pere Ubu. Emaciated and down on his luck, McGhee died in 1961 before the folk-blues revical could diminish his music or change his hapless fortunes. Ralph Willis moved to New York in the 30s. He played in a downhome Carolina country blues style and he enjoyed a profilic recording career (for Regis, Signature, 20th Century, Savoy, Abbey, Jubilee, Prestige and King Reocrds) which spanned 10 years.

New York Blues
New York Blues artwork