Showing posts with label Various Texas Blues. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Various Texas Blues. Show all posts

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

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Various - Texas Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:42
Size: 159.6 MB
Styles: Texas blues
Year: 1992
Art: Front

[2:54] 1. Melvin 'Lil' Son' Jackson - Gambling Blues
[3:05] 2. Melvin 'Lil' Son' Jackson - Homeless Blues
[2:46] 3. Melvin 'Lil' Son' Jackson - Cairo Blues
[2:47] 4. Melvin 'Lil' Son' Jackson - Evil Blues
[2:37] 5. Lee Hunter - Back To Santa Fe
[2:27] 6. L. C. Williams - Trying, Trying
[2:33] 7. L. C. Williams - You Never Miss The Water
[2:26] 8. Thunder Smith - Cruel Hearted Woman
[2:19] 9. Thunder Smith - Big Stars Are Falling
[2:43] 10. L. C. Williams - Hole In The Wall
[2:33] 11. L. C. Williams - Boogie All The Time
[2:54] 12. Leroy Ervin - Rock Island Blues
[2:45] 13. Leroy Ervin - Blue, Black, And Evil
[2:27] 14. Melvin 'Lil' Son' Jackson - Roberta Blues
[2:38] 15. Melvin 'Lil' Son' Jackson - Freedom Train Blues
[2:14] 16. Melvin 'Lil' Son' Jackson - Ground Hog Blues
[2:07] 17. Melvin 'Lil' Son' Jackson - Bad Whiskey, Bad Women
[2:11] 18. Thunder Smith - Santa Fe Blues
[2:33] 19. L. C. Williams - Black Woman
[2:31] 20. L. C. Williams - Strike Blues
[2:46] 21. L. C. Williams - You Can't Take It With You Baby
[2:24] 22. Buddy Chiles - Jet Black Woman
[2:41] 23. Melvin 'Lil' Son' Jackson - No Money, No Love
[2:43] 24. Melvin 'Lil' Son' Jackson - Gone With The Wind
[2:34] 25. L. C. Williams - I Won't Be Here Long
[2:36] 26. Andy Thomas - Angel Child
[2:14] 27. Perry Cain - All The Way From Texas

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