(Blues) Ruff Stuff - The Roots Of Texas Blues Guitarseeders: 5
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(Blues) Ruff Stuff - The Roots Of Texas Blues Guitar (Size: 119.34 MB)
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Styles: Acoustic Texas Country Blues
Recorded: 1964-1966 Released: 1993 Label: Catfish File: mp3 @ 320kbps Size: 118.99 MB Time: 51:37 Art: Front Cover Nataniel 'Bill' Barnes 1. Jack of Diamonds Is A Hard Card To Play - 2:13 Lee Mackey 2. Out And Down - 2:06 3. Jay Bird Blues - 2:37 Willie Manifee & Mance Lipscomb 4. If I Get Lucky, Mama - 3:37 Mance Lipscomb 5. Angel Child - 4:20 Mance Lipscomb & Teodar Jackson 6. Reconsider Baby - 3:58 Bill Neely 7. Matchbox Blues - 3:15 8. Graveyard Blues - 2:48 Nataniel 'Bill' Barnes 9. What's Wrong Baby - 5:16 Babe Stovall 10. Worried Blues - 6:13 11. Dirty Mistreater - 5:25 T.J. Jackson 12. Out And Down - 1:40 13. Corrina Corrina - 1:04 Oscar 'Preacher' Nelson & Newton 'Hoss' Nelson 14. Broke And Ain't Got A Dime - 2:35 Oscar & Newton Nelson 15. Alcohol Blues - 3:35 Jimmy Nelson 16. West Texas Blues - :46 Personnel: Nataniel 'Bill' Barnes, Lee Mackey, Willie Menifee Mance Lipscomb, Bill Neely, Jewel 'Babe' Stovall, T.J. Jackson, Oscar 'Preacher' Nelson, Newton 'Hoss' Nelson (brothers) Jimmy Nelson - Guitars Notes: A collection Texas blues, 16 songs cut during the mid-'60s, featuring Mance Lipscomb and a brace of lesser-known Texas bluesmen born between 1895 and 1907 and, thus, heirs and successors to the likes of Blind Lemon Jefferson and other renowned Texas bluesmen of the '20s and '30s. Strangely, the notes refer to this collection as representing the 'heart's blood of [those] anonymous Texas bluesmen who labored by day and played by night,' but Lipscomb, at least, is far from anonymous today, mostly thanks to Arhoolie Records' recordings. What is sad is that the rest of the players here are genuinely obscure, but were clearly the equals of Lipscomb or any of his even more celebrated peers from Texas. Babe Stovall (whose nimble-fingered six-minute-plus 'Worried Blues' is a highlight of the album), Willie Menifee, Nathaniel 'Bill' Barnes, T.J. Jackson, et. al all deserved better. The playing is mostly solo acoustic, although 'Corrina, Corrina' gets a solo electric treatment, as a sort of fragmentary instrumental. Other familiar songs given fresh renditions include 'Jay Bird Blues' and 'Jack O' Diamonds.' And just for the record, there's little 'ruff' here except the wonderfully spontaneous singing - the playing is as articulate and unself-consciously beautiful as any acoustic blues you'll ever hear. ~~ from AMG Sharing Widget |
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