Show Me the Way Home, Honey

nedjelja, 29.06.2014.

Mamie Smith - Crazy Blues: The Best Of Mamie Smith

Size: 178,2 MB
Time: 75:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Pre-War Blues, Blues Jazz
Label: Columbia/Legacy
Art: Front

01. Crazy Blues 78rpm Version (With Her Jazz Hounds) (3:18)
02. It's Right Here For You (With Her Jazz Hounds) (2:50)
03. Don't Care Blues (With Her Jazz Hounds) (2:56)
04. Frankie Blues (With Her Jazz Hounds) (2:56)
05. 'U' Need Some Lovin' Blues (With Her Jazz Hounds) (2:54)
06. A-Wearin' Away The Blues (With Her Jazz Band) (3:07)
07. Down Home Blues (With Her Jazz Band) (3:01)
08. The Wang Wang Blues (With Her Jazz Band) (3:06)
09. Wabash Blues (With Her Jazz Hounds) (3:04)
10. Mean Daddy Blues (With Her Jazz Hounds) (2:54)
11. Dem Knock-Out Blues (With Her Jazz Hounds) (2:44)
12. Arkansas Blues (With Her Jazz Hounds) (3:05)
13. Mamie Smith Blues (With Her Jazz Hounds) (3:12)
14. That Da Da Strain (With Her Jazz Hounds) (2:48)
15. I Ain't Gonna Give Nobody None O' This Jelly Roll (With Her Jazz Hounds) (3:03)
16. Mean Man (With Her Jazz Hounds) (2:56)
17. The Darktown Flappers' Ball (With Her Jazz Hounds) (2:54)
18. Kansas City Man Blues 78rpm Version (With The Harlem Trio) (3:17)
19. Do It Mr. So-And-So (3:06)
20. The Lure Of The South (2:46)
21. Golfing Papa (2:43)
22. Miss Jenny's Ball (aka There'll Be No Freebies At Miss Jenny's Ball) (3:10)
23. My Sportin' Man (2:57)
24. Don't You Advertise Your Man (3:14)
25. Keep A Song In Your Soul (2:47)


Musicians: Mamie Smith (vocals), Johnny Dunn (cornet), Willie 'The Lion' Smith (piano), Dope Andrews (trombone), Ernest Elliott (clarinet, tenor sax), Leroy Parker (violin).

Simply put, this is the most extensive collection of Mamie Smith sides on one disc that is available in 2004. It goes much farther than the Classic Blues Essential disc. Between the years 1920-1931 when recording for OKeh, Mamie Smith & Her Jazz Hounds were kindred spirits to Louis Armstrong's Hot Five and Seven, though her sound is far more indicative of the music of the Harlem Renaissance than New Orleans. Sophisticated, hard-swinging, and full of the lilt of cabaret music as well as the down-home roughhouse blues, Mamie Smith had to be the first female blues superstar. This is elegant from top to bottom and offers new acquaintances a view of the blues far from its country origins and tightly woven with jazz. Amazing. ~Review by Thom Jurek


Crazy Blues


Posted by kamane

Oznake: Mamie Smith, Pre-War Blues, Blues Jazz

- 21:49 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

četvrtak, 13.03.2014.

Various Artists - Times Ain't Like They Used To Be Vol. 2 of 8

Styles: Country Blues, Pre-War Blues, Acoustic Blues, Delta Blues, Old-Timey, String Bands, Traditional Folk
Label: Yazoo
Released: 1997
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 159,6 MB
Time: 69:44
Art: full

1. Earl Johnson & His Dixie Entertainers - John Henry Blues - 3:13
2. Allen Shaw - Moanin' the Blues - 3:01
3. Ernest Stoneman & Kahle Brewer - Lonesome Road Blues - 3:00
4. Bobby Leecan & His Need More Band - Washboard Cut Out - 2:56
5. Henry Thomas - Bob McKinney - 2:57
6. Fiddling John Carson & His Virginia Reelers - Swanee River - 3:18
7. Richard 'Rabbit' Brown - James Alley Blues - 3:08
8. Uncle Dave Macon & His Fruit Jar Drinkers - Sail Away Ladies - 2:59
9. Cannon's Jug Stompers - The Rooster's Crowing Blues - 3:03
10. A.A. Grey & Seven Foot Dilly - Tallapoosa Bound - 3:13
11. The Shelor Family - Billy Grimes the Rover - 2:46
12. The Massey Family - Brown Skin Girl Down the Lane - 2:45
13. Joe McCoy - You Know You Done Me Wrong - 3:14
14. Sid Harkreader & Gradey Moore - Old Joe - 2:53
15. Blind Alfred Reed - Beware - 3:11
16. Wilmer Watts & The Lonely - Knocking Down Casey Jones - 3:12
17. Tommy Bradley - Four Day Blues - 3:13
18. Georgia Crackers - Riley the Furniture Man - 3:06
19. Emmett Lundy & Ernest Stoneman - Piney Woods Girl - 2:46
20. Louie Blue - State Street Rag - 2:49
21. Tweedy Brothers - Sugar In The Ground - 3:07
22. Southern Moonlight Entertainers - Then I'll Move To Town - 2:51
23. Rev. D.C. Rice - Lord Keep Me With A Mind - 2:51

Notes: Like volume one, this presents 23 examples of early American rural music, mastered from rare 78s of the 1920s and 1930s. And like volume one, the names here will challenge the expertise of all but the most fanatical collector; only Uncle Dave Macon, Cannon's Jug Stompers, Henry Thomas, and maybe Blind Alfred Reed will be familiar. It's a valuable sampler of non-urban sounds as captured in the early days of the recording industry, when primitive technology and marketing naivete ensured that the music was virtually unadulterated. Fiddles, banjos, and plaintive, spirited vocals abound. Bobby Leecan's jugband romp "Washboard Cut Out" is the most exuberant track; Rev. D.C. Rice's gospel number "Lord Keep Me with a Mind" starts off in a more somber mood, but soon evolves into a jubilant New Orleans-styled arrangement.
More info

Times Ain't Like They Used To Be Vol. 2



Various - Oh Brother, Best Of Southern Blues
Corey Harris & Henry Butler - Vü-Dü Menž



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Country Blues, Pre-War Blues, Acoustic Blues, Delta Blues, Old-Timey, String Bands, Traditional Folk, Various

- 22:56 - Comments (1) - Print - Link for this post

utorak, 18.02.2014.

Various - Rural Blues Vol.1, 1934-56

Styles: Pre-War Blues, Country Blues
Label: Document
Released: 1993
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 170,1 MB
Time: 74:19
Art: full

1. Up and Down Building K.C. Line - Willie Lane - 2:57
2. Prowlin' Ground Hog - 2:44
3. Too Many Women Blues - 2:26
4. Howlin' Wolf - 2:47
5. Black Cat Rag - 2:39
6. Black Cat Rag [Alternate Take] - 3:00
7. T.P. Railer - 2:44
8. Lonesome Blues - 2:32
9. All My Money Is Gone - 2:48
10. Move It on Over - 2:40
11. Go 'Way from My Door - 3:01
12. Locked in Jail Blues - 2:28
13. You've Gotta Lay Down Mama - 2:38
14. Baby Blues - 3:26
15. Baby Please Don't Go - 3:05
16. Down at the Depot - 3:06
17. Alabama Boogie - 2:46
18. Blind's Blues - 2:15
19. Mississippi Boogie - 3:10
20. One O'Clock Boogie - 3:00
21. If You See Me Lover - 3:06
22. I Want a Slice of Your Pudding - 3:03
23. Lonesome Old Jail - 3:00
24. Greyhound Blues - 2:37
25. My Baby Ooo - 3:06
26. I Need a Hundred Dollars - 3:01

Personnel:
Guitar & Vocals
Black Diamond (7-8)
D.A. Hunt (23-24)
Monroe Moe Jackson (10-11)
Johnny Beck (12-13)
Willie 'Little Brother' Lane (1-6)
John Lee (14-18)
One String Sam (25-26)
Guitar, Vocals & Kazoo
Julius King (19-22)
Piano & Vocals
Goldrush (9)

Notes: Document's Rural Blues, Vol. 1 is a delightful collection of the complete recorded works of Willie Lane, Black Diamond, Goldrush, Monroe Moe Jackson, Johnny Beck, John Lee, Julius King, D.A. Hunt, and One String Sam, none of them exactly household names, drawn from rare and obscure 78s recorded between 1934 and 1956. That no one sticks around for more than a few tunes gives this collection a refreshing feel of variety and vitality, and Willie Lane and John Lee in particular prove to be real finds, both of them strong guitar players and able vocalists. Lee's take on the oft-covered "Baby Please Don't Go" is a gem, featuring the entirely unexpected accompaniment of a cane flute or whistle that gives the song a bright, surreal tone. The two selections from white country blues singer Monroe Moe Jackson, "Move It on Over" and "Go 'Way from My Door," are also revelations, as Jackson's jagged, gravel-packed voice hits places that would make Tom Waits jealous. It is interesting to note that the most recent recordings presented here, "My Baby Ooo" and "I Need a Hundred Dollars" by One String Sam, tracked in 1956, are the ones that sound the most ancient, with Sam's one string diddley bow giving both pieces an eerie, spooky resonance. This is a wonderful archival collection, and the rarity of the tracks it presents only makes it more valuable.

Rural Blues Vol.1, 1934-56



Kokomo Arnold - Blues Classics Vol.1
Blind Willie McTell - Statesboro Blues



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Various, Pre-War Blues, Country Blues

- 23:33 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

subota, 08.02.2014.

Ramblin' Thomas - Hard Dallas

Size: 162,6 MB
Time: 67:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2001
Styles: Texas Blues, Pre-War Country Blues
Label: Carfish
Art: Front

01. So Lonesome (2:45)
02. Hard To Rule Woman Blues (3:03)
03. Lock And Key Blues (2:36)
04. Sawmill Moan (2:55)
05. No Baby Blues (2:49)
06. Ramblin' Mind Blues (2:50)
07. No Job Blues (3:11)
08. Back Knawing Blues (3:02)
09. Jig Head Blues (3:17)
10. Hard Dallas Blues (3:03)
11. Hard Dallas Blues (2:59)
12. Ramblin' Man (3:07)
13. Poor Boy Blues (2:28)
14. Good Times Blues (3:06)
15. New Way Of Living Blues (3:04)
16. Ground Hog Blues (2:54)
17. Shake It Gal (2:42)
18. Ground Hog Blues No. 2 (3:14)
19. Little Old Mama Blues (3:05)
20. Down In Texas Blues (3:09)
21. My Hearts Like A Rolling Stone
22. Blue Goose Blues (2:35)
23. No Good Woman Blues (2:55)


The rediscovery of bluesman Jesse "Babyface" Thomas in the '70s was the equivalent of a blues archivist's two-for-one sale. It turned out that the mysterious and up-til-then totally obscure '20s recording artist known as Rambling Thomas was the brother of Jesse Thomas, and the latter man was able to spill the beans on just who the rambling man with the fascinating guitar style really was. The Thomas clan, which also included the guitar picking older brother Joe L. Thomas, were sons of an old-time fiddler and were raised in Louisiana close to the Texas border. The boys got into playing guitar after looking with admiration at various models in a Sears catalog. Jesse Thomas has recalled that the mail-order guitar purchased by his brother, Willard "Rambling" Thomas, came equipped with a metal bar for playing slide; indicating the tremendous popularity of country blues at the time or the possibility that someone at Sears knew the guitar was headed into the arms of a Southern bluesman.

Thomas rambled, indeed he did. He was discovered by recording scouts playing in Dallas, but prior to that had performed in San Antonio and Oklahoma. His style also seemed influenced by the double threat of blues guitarist and pianist Lonnie Johnson, suggesting a possible St. Louis sojourn as well. Thomas played quite a bit in the key of E, making him harmonically quite a typical Delta bluesman. His picking style is curious, however, and even more interesting is his timing. His rhythmic variations suggest that his nickname might have been handed out by a musician attempting to accompany him, and not just relate to his geographical roaming. On some of his recordings for Paramount and Victor, such as "Ground Hog Blues," he plays it a little straighter, going for an imitation of then current hitmaker Tampa Red. The Document label is among several blues record companies that have released collections of Thomas' material, usually in the form of either a compilation or a collection of several artists; since Thomas was apparently too busy rambling to record a full album's worth of material. Thomas reportedly died of tuberculosis in Memphis, circa 1945.
~Biography by Eugene Chadbourne


Thanks to DrPeak.
Hard Dallas



Baby Tate - See What You Done Done
Blind Willie McTell - Statesboro Blues: Secret History Of Rock 'n' Roll

Oznake: Ramblin' Thomas, Country Blues, Texas Blues, Pre-War Blues

- 00:09 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

četvrtak, 06.02.2014.

Gus Cannon - Walk Right In [Stax]

Styles: Jug Band, Pre-War Blues, Minstrel, Folk-Blues, Acoustic Memphis Blues
Recorded: 1963
Released: 1999
Label: Stax
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 72,2 MB
Time: 31:31
Art: full

1. Narration - 2:58
2. Kill It - 2:10
3. Walk Right In - 2:29
4. Salty Dog - 2:22
5. Going Around The Mountain - 1:58
6. Ol' Hen - 2:33
7. Gonna Raise A Ruckus Tonight - 2:19
8. Ain't Gonna Rain No More - 2:50
9. Boll-Weevil - 2:42
10. Come On Down To My House - 1:24
11. Make Me A Pallet On The Floor - 3:07
12. Get Up In The Morning Soon - 2:06
13. Crawdad Hole - 2:26

Personnel:
Gus Cannon - Banjo, Vocals
Milton Roby - Washboard
Will Shade - Jug

Notes: In June of 1963, 79-year-old Gus Cannon went into the studio in Memphis to cut his first recording in close to seven years, all a result of the Rooftoop Singers having made his "Walk Right In" into a number one single. The producers didn't ask for too much out of Cannon, to judge from the results -- just that he sit there with his banjo and old friends Will Shade (jug) and Milton Roby (washboard) backing him, and do his favorite songs. He introduces a few of them in separately indexed spoken passages, and runs through them in leisurely if dedicated fashion: the title track (which is much bluesier than the hit in Cannon's hands), "Salty Dog" (the best track here), "Gonna Raise a Ruckus Tonight," "Make Me a Pallet on Your Floor," and "Crawdad Hole." The album is almost an audio documentary tour through different corners of Cannon's life and career that, ideally, might've run to several volumes. ~ Bruce Eder

Walk Right In [Stax]



Gus Cannon - Jug Band Blues Essentials
Various - Jugband Specials



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Folk-Blues, Gus Cannon, Jug Band, Memphis Blues, Minstrel, Pre-War Blues

- 22:04 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

srijeda, 22.01.2014.

Lonnie Johnson - Blues Roots, Vol. 8: Swingin' With Lonnie

Styles: Jazz Blues, Piedmont Blues, Pre-War Country Blues
Label: Storyville
Released: 1964
File: mp3 @320K/s (from vinyl)
Size: 89,6 MB
Time: 39:07
Art: full

1. Call Me Darling - 3:17
2. Clementine Blues - 6:10
3. Jelly Jelly - 3:27
4. Please Help Me - 3:32
5. Raining On The Cold Ground - 4:55
6. See See Rider - 3:00
7. Swingin' With Lonnie - 3:19
8. Tomorrow Night - 2:55
9. Too Late To Cry - 3:43
10. Why Do You Go - 4:44

Personnel:
Lonnie Johnson - guitar, vocals
Otis Spann - piano (all except on #1)

Notes: Backed by pianist Otis Spann, singer/guitarist Lonnie Johnson performs blues and ballads on this well-rounded set. Included are such numbers as his old hit "Tomorrow Night," "See See Rider," "Jelly, Jelly" and a lone instrumental, "Swingin' With Lonnie." An above-average outing by the veteran bluesman.

Blues Roots, Vol. 8: Swingin' With Lonnie



Carl Leyland & Kim Cusack - Stompin' Upstairs (With Beau Sample & Alex Hall)
Lonnie Johnson & Elmer Snowden - Blues And Ballads



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Lonnie Johnson, Blues Jazz, Piedmont Blues, Pre-War Blues

- 22:57 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

utorak, 21.01.2014.

Various - Living Country Blues USA: An Antology (3 Disc set)

Styles: Country Blues, Delta Blues, Piedmont Blues, Pre-War Country Blues
Label: Evidence Music
Released: 1999
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 170,5 MB
Time: 73:35
Art: full

Distilled from a 14 record anthology originally issued only in Germany during the early 80’s the story behind this reissue is almost as intriguing as the music contained on its three silver platters. On a fall day in 1980, two Germans hopped into an old battered station wagon crammed full of portable recording equipment and a few borrowed guitars. Heading south they embarked on an odyssey (echoing Alan Lomax) to record the startling number of blues and gospel musicians contained on this set wherever they could find them. Their travels took them from vacant fields to cramped clapboard shacks, from rickety back porches to ramshackle juke joints. The majority of tunes were taped on Mississippi soil, but artists from D.C., Maryland, Louisiana, North Carolina and Tennessee also make appearances. Best of all many of the musicians have direct lineal connections to the early giants of the pre-War blues era and aren’t shy about showing off the influences.
There are the requisite guitar pickers, but also fife and drum bands, field hollers and a fair share of oddities including Lonnie Pitchford master of the one-string amplified diddley bow (basically a wooden plank twisted with baling wire and plugged into a tiny guitar amp). He crafts an incredible trance-inducing version of Hooker’s “Boogie Chillun” on his primordial axe. Several other tunes feature the jangling lead guitar and throaty vocals of one James “Son” Thomas backed by the scraping bass lines of Cleveland “Broom Man” Jones on broom handle. Other obscure but equally brilliant stylists abound. There’s raucous street corner testifying from the likes Cora Fluker, a woman who erected a wooden church in her front yard solely for the purpose of spreading the Lord’s message, and from Flora Molton and Her Truth Band, a motley aggregate that delivers the down-home message of brotherly love via guitar, casaba, tambourine, and harmonica. The impressive array of string stylists that populate the majority of selections are rounded out by the kitchen knife wielding slide lunatic Cedell Davis and a cantankerous backwoods preacher who answers to the name Boyd Rivers.
Overall, the set is akin to a prodigious sideshow for the more arcane realms of the blues bizarre. Many of the tunes are familiar but under the passionate labors of these musician they are recast in weird and wonderful ways. These are raw and primitive renderings to be sure, but ones that are brimming with plenty of the bare veracity that make the blues so contagious in the first place. The liners are magnificent and paint the colorful lives of these performers with vividly descriptive prose. The three and a half hours and 60 tracks housed on these discs may sound like a generous helping, but the into this deep river of song for an enlightening (and sometimes harrowing) swim down the realization that there were hundreds of hours taped will leave you craving to hear more. I could go on gushing praise about these discs, but it’s just as easy to offer up this summary advice. Shell out the thirty or so bucks; shuck down to your skivvies and dive lesser traveled tributaries of the blues. By DEREK TAYLOR




Disc One

1.) Catfish Blues- James “Son” Thomas- vocal, guitar.
2.) Bye Bye Blues- Arzo Youngblood- vocal, guitar.
3.) Gonna Cut You Loose- Eddie Cusic- vocal, guitar.
4.) You Gonna Take Sick and Die- Boyd Rivers- vocal, guitar.
5.) Maggie Campbell Blues- Boogie Bill Webb- vocal, guitar.
6.) Sittin’ On Top of the World- Sam Chatmon- vocal, guitar.
7.) Move Daniel- Cora Fluker- vocal, guitar.
8.) My Babe- Othar Turner- vocal, cane fife.
9.) Boogie Chillun- Lonnie Pitchford- one-string electric guitar.
10.) Bull Cow Blues- James “Son” Thomas- vocal, guitar.
11.) Stop and Listen Blues- Sam Chatmon- vocal, guitar.
12.) Swing, Swing- Arzo Youngblood- vocal, guitar.
13.) Jazz Boogie Woogie- Stonewall Mays- vocal, guitar.
14.) Jesus on the Mainline- Boyd Rivers- vocal, guitar.
15.) Shake Your Money Maker- Lonnie Pitchford- vocal, guitar.
16.) Rock Me Mama- James “Son” Thomas- vocal, guitar, Cleveland “Broomman” Jones- broom bass.
17.) Big Road Blues- Boogie Bill Webb- vocal, guitar.
18.) My Daddy Was a Jockey- Sam Chatmon- vocal, guitar.
19.) That’s the Boogie- Napoleon Strickland- harmonica.
20.) Vicksburg Blues- Sam Chatmon- vocal, guitar.
21.) Mississippi Moan- Walter Brown- vocal.
22.) When I Lay My Burden Down- Othar Turner & the Rising Star Fife and Drum Band: Othar Turner: vocal, cane fife, Bernice Evans, Eddie Ware, R.L. Boyce- drums.

File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 170,5 MB
Time: 73:35

Cd 1, Mississippi Moan


Disc Two
1.) Lonesome Road Blues- Guitar Frank- vocal, guitar.
2.) Baby Please Give Me a Break- Archie Edwards- vocal, guitar.
3.) The Road is Rough and Rocky- Archie Edwards- vocal, metal resonating guitar.
4.) Come On in My Kitchen- Guitar Slim- vocal, guitar.
5.) Bye and Bye, I’m Going to See the King- Flora Molton and the Truth Band: Flora Molton- vocal, tamborine, Ed Morris- guitar, Larry Wise- harmonica.
6.) Chimney Hill Breakdown- Guitar Frank- vocal, guitar.
7.) Railroad Bill- Guitar Frank- vocal, guitar.
8.) Chicken Can’t Roost Too High For Me- John Cephas- guitar.
9.) Goin’ Down the Road Feelin’ Bad- John Cephas- guitar, Phil Wiggins- harmonica.
10.) Do Lord Remember Me- Archie Edwards- vocal, metal resonator guitar.
11.) Jelly Roll Baker- Guitar Frank- vocal, guitar.
12.) I’m Feelin’ Lonesome- Guitar Slim- vocal, guitar.
13.) My Old Schoolmates- Archie Edwards- vocal, guitar.
14.) Lonesome Home Blues- Guitar Slim- vocal, guitar.
15.) T For Texas- Archie Edwards- vocal, ukulele.
16.) Diggin’ My Potatoes- Guitar Frank- vocal, guitar.
17.) Vacation in Heaven- Flora Molton and the Truth Band: Flora Molton- vocal, cabasa, Ed Morris- guitar, Phillip McTerry-guitar, Phil Wiggins- harmonica.

File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 176,7 MB
Time: 74:23

Cd 2, Lonesome Road Blues


Disc Three
1.) Granny Will Your Dog Bite- Othar Turner and the Rising Star Fife and Drum Band: Othar Turner- vocal, cane fife, Bernice Evans, Eddie Ware, R.L. Boyce- drums.
2.) I Laid and I Wondered- James “Son” Thomas.
3.) I Can’t Stand It- Flora Molton and the Truth Band: Flora Molton- vocal, tamborine, Ed Morris- guitar, Phil Wiggins- harmonica.
4.) Mr. Freddie Blues- Memphis Piano Red- vocal, piano.
5.) Corrine, Corrina- Hammie Nixon- vocal, harmonica, kazoo, jug.
6.) Rollin’ and Tumblin’- Lottie Murrell- vocal, guitar.
7.) She’s Tailor Made- Charlie Sangster- vocal, guitar.
8.) The Hounds- Sam “Stretch” Shields- harmonica.
9.) You Got to Move- Boyd Rivers- vocal, guitar.
10.) Let Me Play With Your Poodle- CeDell Davis- vocal, guitar.
11.) Viola Lee Blues- Hammie Nixon- vocal, harmonica.
12.) Joe’s Prison Camp Holler- Joe Savage- vocal.
13.) When the Saint’s Go Marching In- Othar Turner and the Rising Star Fife and Drum Band: Othar Turner- vocal, cane fife, Bernice Evans, Eddie Ware, R.L. Boye- drums.
14.) Spoonful- Lottie Murrell- vocal, guitar.
15.) You Got to Do the Boogie Woogie- CeDell Davis- vocal, guitar.
16.) Trouble Late Last Night- Lottie Murrell- vocal, guitar.
17.) Dry Bones in the Valley- Cora Fluker- vocal, guitar.
18.) I Got a Gal ‘Cross the Bottom- Lottie Murrell- vocal, guitar.
19.) Soon One Mornin’- Hammie Nixon- vocal, harmonica, kazoo.
20.) Levee Camp Holler- Walter Brown- vocal.
21.) Precious Lord- Boyd Rivers- vocal, guitar.

File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 145,1 MB
Time: 62:43

Cd 3, You Got to Move



Baby Tate - See What You Done Done
Archie Edwards - Blues 'n Bones

Posted by muddy

Oznake: Various, Pre-War Blues, Country Blues, Delta Blues, Piedmont Blues

- 23:01 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

<< Arhiva >>

< srpanj, 2014  
P U S Č P S N
  1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31      

a few words
  • Jan 23, 2014
    We have created a new place that we called the garret, there you can post your albums as much as you want.
    Become a regular visitor of our garret.


    We are a group of friends from different parts of the world which has one important thing in common, our love for the blues. We are here to promote blues and blues musicians who we think deserve more attention and that is the only purpose of this blog.
    Never forget that these compressed files will never have the quality that can provide Cd, so whenever you can buy a Cd and support the artists. Artists will repay us with more great music.
    The C-box is only for messages related to this blog and for your requests. We'll try our best to get and post your requested album.
    Always leave your name/nick/aka when submitting a comment on the C-box or comment box of the post.

    Entering Comments: For those who don't read Croation here is a translation of the comment box of the post.
    Choose Anonymous, add your comment, enter your nick and click on POŠALJI.
    Thank you for visiting. We will appreciate any feedback from you.

    Sincerely, Divin' Ducks

blues chat




on this blog




  • online


    Flag Counter