The blues? Ain't no first blues. The blues always been - Nelson "Big Eye" Delisle, early New Orleans jazz clarinetist, in response to an Alan Lomax question in 1940
Hey folks.-I'm gettin' the post bug I guess. Here is a take on St. Thomas inspired by my pal Andy Cohen who gives it a better feel than I'm presenting. I recorded it too slow but will re record at a more appropriate speed and feel. Anyway....
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Andy If you don't believe I'm leavin', you can count the days I'm gone!
For some reason your playing made me think of Ry Cooder.
Cheers
Pan
Agreed. It might be Joseph Spence via Ry Cooder. Some of the tune also reminds me slightly of Roger Hubbard's African-influenced tune "The Puller" which he wrote as a tribute to Nelson Mandela.
Delightful picking, Andy.
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"I ain't good looking, teeth don't shine like pearls, So glad good looks don't take you through this world." Barbecue Bob
Hi all, For what it's worth, "St. Thomas" is by the great Jazz tenor saxophonist, Sonny Rollins. He recorded it for Prestige in 1956. I had the idea to give the tune a sort of Joseph Spence type of treatment and recorded it on my second Blue Goose album, "How About Me". Since then, it has been recorded by a variety of other finger-picking guitarists, Pat Donohue, Phil Heywood, Andy Cohen and others, generally with the same sort of approach. All best, Johnm
Fascinating lines of transmission. John, why don't you post your version so we can hear how this game of musical telephone has unfolded. I'd love to hear your original. And Andy were you aware that this tunes guitaristic origins occurred at the hands of Weenies own John Miller? I imagine not. An interesting coincidence at the Weenie neighborhood bar.
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My loathings are simple: stupidity, oppression, crime, cruelty, soft music. Vladimir Nabokov (1899 - 1977)
I like your idea, Phil. I will have access to the recording this week-end, and if I can figure out how to save it as an mp3, I will do so and post it here. I reckon I will have to read the advice on how to make it the right size and so on. I hope it works out, and if I can't figure it out, I know many tech-savvy people who can talk me through it--it's been done before. All best, John
I forgot to say that I listened to your version of "St. Thomas", Andy, and enjoyed it. I think the way the tune has evolved since I recorded it is more African-sounding and less Caribbean-sounding perhaps. Nice job. all best, Johnm
Thank you Johnm. I agree. If I may be self critical on this one- In recording it I think I was over careful about getting the notes right-(I get nervous in front of the mic)- It became a pretty thing without the "funk" that really belongs in there. I do appreciate your taking the time to listen and comment.
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Andy If you don't believe I'm leavin', you can count the days I'm gone!
This is good. Nice improvising. It inspired me to work up a version. I thought I could do 'better', or at least avoid aspects I didn't care for as much in Andy's version. Now I'm not so sure . Maybe with work. I won't be ready for prime time (ie. posting here) for quite a while. I'm avoiding listening to it again, because I want my version to truly be my own. I've never heard Johns or anyone else's but Rollin's version.
But Andy, really it was fine, I don't mean to disparage at all.
For me, the beauty of John Miller's arrangement of St. Thomas lies in the hints that he gives as 'teases' which are fully developed a few bars farther along -- if it were a novel you would call it forshadowing.
Both versions are a lot of fun, and capture the essence of Sonny's spirit in a completely different context. I've seen him several times, over a 35 year span, and I've never seen him leave the stage without playing that tune--it's a key part of one of America's greatest musicians.
Andy, I don't know whether you were really trying to get the Joseph Spence feel as John was, but I think you have got it down, and at the same time there's something of a classical element to your playing. It's an unusual and interesting combination, and I like it a lot.
John, as one expects, yours is absolutely masterful, maybe with a bit less of that Spence rolling Caribbean feel to it but still quite strong, and the variations are great.
And Pan, thanks for pointing us toward John's version.