I do get a kick out of the little s like this Blake freak, too stupid to figure what I like to do.
translation
Avante, you amaze me.
Give me what I'd need to listen to to get them old prewar blues.
Cool~~~
You'd need a blend of Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, St.Louis, Georgia, Mississippi, Memphis and the Piedmont sounds. We need females, jug bands, hillbillies, piano players, guitar pickers, religious freaks, harmonica players.
The 30ish that best tell the story, talking 1920 and Mamie Smith to 1941 and Muddy Waters Plantation Recordings.
Those two.
Robert Johnson
Papa Charley Jackson
Blind Willie Johnson
Sonny Boy Williamson
Jimmie Rodgers
Peetie Wheatstraw
The Carter Family
Ma Rainey
Big Bill Broonzy
Roosevelt Sykes
Frank Hutchison
Leroy Carr
Charley Patton....has to be heard to be believed
Bessie Smith
Emmett Miller...performed in black face
Lonnie Johnson
The Memphis Jug Band
Charlie Poole
Blind Lemon Jefferson
Little Brother Montgomery
Memphis Minnie
Dock Boggs
Mississippi Sheiks
B.F.Sheldon
Victoria Spivey
Tampa Red
Son House
Blind Blake
Jimmie Davis
Clarence Ashley
Blind Wilie McTell...Bob Dylan's fav
Big Joe Williams
Lucille Bogan...her "Shave Um Dry"....hahaha~~~
Sleepy John Estes
Bukka White
Gus Cannon Jug Stompers
Justice
The thing about them old blues is all the shadowy, obscure cats like....Freezone, Lane Hardin, Bo Jones, Rube Lacy, Henry Spaulding, etc etc who recorded only one record then.....POOF~~~~~~ Freezone only recorded one side and here it is.
Last edited by Avante; 12-15-2017 at 12:03 AM.
I do get a kick out of the little s like this Blake freak, too stupid to figure what I like to do.
translation
I wish I could do that, wow~~~~
Avante, give me your top 8 USA 100m sprinters, ok?
Ok.
lane
1.Bob Hayes FAMU
2.Tyson Gay Arkansas
3.Mo Greene KCCC
4.Justin Gatlin Tenn
5.Carl Lewis Houston
6.Bobby Morrow ACU
7.Jim Hines TSU
8.Leroy Burrell Houston
Where is Jesse Owens? He really wasn;t all that dominate as a sprinter, his best event was the long jump. If Temples Eulace Pea (beat Owens many times) hadn't been injured in Berlin in 1936..................
Add these seven CD's to my monstrous collection.
CASH....yep, you guessed it.
The Capture of Sound...dj drez
Relish...Joan Osborne
Nocturama....Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds
Steppenwolf 7
Tapestry...Carole King (what took so long)
Burn to Snine....Ben Harper
So you're limited, right?
You'd want to mix that with this.
Gillian Welch
Lucinda Williams
Rory Block
Bonnie Raitt
Laney Jones
Shifting gears
Once ya return from that trip it's grab a beer time as ya chill with....
You'd want to mix
early David Alan Coe
Steve Earle
Michael Mandella
Haskil Adkins
Older Ramblin' Jack Elliott
Jerry Jeff Walker
Last edited by Avante; 12-17-2017 at 03:47 AM.
I own some stuff recorded right there in the church/prison or out on the chain gang, talking pre 1940, talk about a cool trip, there it is.
I have one recording where Mississippi Delta legend Son House and a harmonica player Leroy Williams are playing right outside a bar (1942) when a train comes along, how cool is that?
This was recorded on the same trip, this time it was in a church in Clarksdale. This is considered a ..gem...treasure....by guys like myself, simply a masterpiece.
Without question the greatest discovery when it comes to recording convicts. The one and only....Lead Belly.
The first song Elvis recorded at those famous 1954 Sun Records sessions in Memphis. I do like Elvis but, he couldn't match this....
Elvis also covered Midnight Train a tune by fellow Sun recording artist Junior Parker and Tomorrow Night by legendary guitarist Lonnie Johnson. He failed to really capture the black in those songs, but not bad.
In 1941 Alan Lomax ****(Library of Congress) pulled into The Stovall Plantation looking for McKinley Morganfield. Thinking thiese white guys in the big car were there because of his illegal monshine biz Morganfield ran and hid.
Anyway.....
It finally got sorted out and right there on his front porch we heard the very first recordings by the great....Muddy Waters.....yep, I own that CD. I love "important" music.
**** he was the guy who first recorded Lead Belly at the infamous Angola Prison.
Last edited by Avante; 12-17-2017 at 04:55 AM.
Pete Seegar wrote this, I can't relate to strikes/scabs but she really sells the feel.
Some of the most haunting, eerie sounds we have came from those Appalachian hicks. Names like....Dock Boggs, Hazel ens, Roscoe Holcomb. B.F.Shelton recorded 4 songs three are about killing three different women.
The picture is Dock Boggs, not B.F.Shelton.
This is in my opnion as good as white blues gets, the great Frank Hutchison, he worked those West Virginia coal mines.
I get some get stuck on rap, metal, punk, hip hop, funk, soul. country. jazz, whatever, but to ignore that HUGE world of music out there....why? I want it all so I have it all.
Last edited by Avante; 12-17-2017 at 05:18 AM.
Dude, you really this ed up?
What's ed up about saying you're boring? You talk about yourself and post lists that no one talks about and are irrelevant. It's boring.
Avante is making me start to hate the blues.
you, Avante, you boring sick .
Dude, this is my thread, right? Why are you in it, well? If talking about my interests doesn't interest you then post in threads you do find interesting, make sense?
Dude, when ya have tape decks in your vehicles, guess what stupid? And...I had 5000 mixed tapes made before there were CD's, so..........
Dude, you're like.....I hate liver everytime I eat it. Well then....................DON'T EAT IT.....ok ya stupid ? Get out of my thread...ok?
so lol old man mix tapes.
Really found a gem today.
The 1949 Paul Robeson Moscow concert recordings, yep.....wow~~~~~~~~
If ya know the Paul Robeson story..cool...if not you really need to Google Paul Robeson.
Nothing..old man..about it moron.
That doesn't even make sense you sick pedo.
You're an old man.
Talking about making mix tapes.
lol old man mix tapes
It's so simple and obvious and, thus, bulletproof.
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