Country Blues > Super Electrical Recordings!
CDs/Sets You're Listening To
dj:
After Uncle Bud's latest post in the "Tunes You're Listening To" thread, I just couldn't post this there, so I've started a new thread. :D
After a long and difficult summer both at work and with rapidly aging parents, I finally was able to take a few days off last week to paint one side of the house. Of course I needed some entertainment, so I shoved a speaker into a window (who needs stereo with this stuff?) and loaded up the CD changer with some disks from the Document catalog.
One of the things I most enjoyed listening to was the four volumes of the Document "Piano Blues" series that I own - Volumes 1 (DOCD-5192), 2 (5220), 5(5337), and 6 (5645). Together they make up 4 1/2 hours of music recorded (mostly) between 1927 and 1940. Most of the artists are totally obscure, with Jesse James and Charlie Segar the only names apt to mean anything to even a fairly serious fan of pre-war blues. But put together for a morning or afternoon, this set makes a wonderfully varied program. There are vocals and instrumentals, vaudeville tunes, pop tunes, blues, rags, barrelhouse, and boogies. There are great singers (Jesse James, for one), and singers who struggle to stay on pitch and to project over the noise of the piano. There are clever lyrical turns of phrase and verse after verse of stock lyrics, tragic songs, comic songs, and songs filled with pretty crude sexual innuendo ("Sophisticated" Jimmy La Rue would be better named "Smarmy" Jimmy La Rue). Most of all, there's unending variety. Most of these artists only recorded two sides; George Ramsey and Charlie Segar sharing the prize for the most titles with eight. So every 6 minutes or so you're off to a new artist, a new style, new strengths, weaknesses, and idiosyncrasies.
About the only drawback of listening like this is that, spending most of my time on a ladder with a brush in one hand and a paint can in the other, I couldn't follow the discographies to see who was singing and playing on any given cut. :(
The current audience for the blues is pretty guitar-centric. Listening to these volumes of "Piano Blues" is an antidote to that. While necessarily not including major artists or the best that the genre has to offer, they form a virtual encyclopedia of what could (and couldn't quite!) be done with a piano, a voice, and a recording studio in the 1920s and 1930s.
dj:
Another "program" I enjoyed listening to last week was Document's "Male Blues Of The Twenties", Volumes 1 and 2 (DOCD-5482 and 5532). These songs were mostly recorded fairly early in the decade, with John P. Vigal's "Fowler Twist" going back to 1922. The "Blues" in the title doesn't refer to what most people would recognize as blues today, as these are primarily pop, vaudeville, and novelty songs in the "Memphis Blues" or "St Louis Blues" vein, i.e. with blue notes but not, for the most part, 8, 12, or 16 bar blues. The singers sound like they come out of the vaudeville tradition, not out of the cotton fields, and are, if anything, even more obscure than those on the "Piano Blues" series. "Sloppy" Henry might be known to some, as he appears on one of the Document Peg Leg Howell disks and has been discussed previously in the Weenie forum. As with the "Piano Blues" disks, the chief impression one brings from these disks after a few listens is of incredible variety, and of things one doesn't necessarily think of when thinking of "the blues". There are laughing songs, crying songs, yodeling songs (how the singer of "Sleep Baby Sleep" expects the baby to sleep while he's yodeling to it is anyone's guess), comedy songs, novelty songs, and skits. One of the things I find most interesting is the last artist on Volume 2, "New Orleans" Willie Jackson. In his 1926 recordings, he does the usual program for this pair of disks: some humorous numbers ("Who'll Chop Your Suey When I'm Gone", "Numbers On The Brain", "Hold 'Er, Deacon") and a dance tune ("Charleston Hound"), but by his 1928 session two years later, what we think of today as "the blues" is clearly starting to triumph over the other styles illustrated here, and Jackson is found doing covers of recent hits that would be recognizable as "blues" today: "Kansas City Blues", "T. B. Blues", and "How Long - How Long Blues". I would always get to that last song on disk 2 and think "An era has just passed".
uncle bud:
--- Quote from: dj on September 18, 2007, 02:53:09 PM ---After Uncle Bud's latest post in the "Tunes You're Listening To" thread, I just couldn't post this there, so I've started a new thread. :D
--- End quote ---
Thanks DJ. ;D Despite my little outburst (friendly, I hope!) in that thread, I'm always game for "What CD Are You Listening To" threads really, especially if they include great descriptions like you've given us here. For myself, because of a CD player on its last legs, I'm mostly listening to things through iTunes or minidisc these days and am on shuffle mode most of the time. So I'm still focused on individual songs.
I did find a way to listen to the Yazoo CD "Jackson Blues" (Yazoo 1007) earlier today, as noted in the Lonesome Home Blues thread. I guess a lot of this stuff is available on JSP sets in more economical groupings, but it is still great compilation IMO, with Tommy Johnson, Ishmon Bracey, Willie Lofton, Willie Harris, Charlie McCoy, Arthur Pettis etc. I haven't compared the Bracey tracks here with the Document/JSP equivalents, but just listening to them on their own, they sound a bit better - or maybe it's my memory. Will have to A/B them. The Tommy Johnson track Lonesome Home is certainly better.
mississippijohnhurt1928:
I just listened to the 30-second samples from "Living Country Blues: An Anthology".
That set is currently at the very top of my long, long list of CDs I want to purchase.
dj:
Hey, Uncle Bud,
--- Quote ---Despite my little outburst (friendly, I hope!)
--- End quote ---
Yes, I took it in a friendly way. I debated for a few days whether to post in the Tunes You're Listening To thread, and had just decided to do so. I opened the thread, and there was your post saying "single tunes, please". I was amused by the coincidence.
--- Quote ---especially if they include ... descriptions
--- End quote ---
I couldn't agree more. While it's mildly interesting to know what others are listening to, it's downright fascinating to know why they're listening. I love to hear what caught someone's ear about a song, or a group of songs, because so often that points me to something that I'd never really noticed, or at least not paid proper attention to, before.
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