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So they get part of the tune. Then they flag it and get frustrated. Damn, be happy! You got part of the tune. That doesn't stop you... it's not being complacent, it's being realistic. You can't just go through every CD you have and every tune that you like say 'Why can't I play that?' Or 'Why can't I play it as well as that?' - Jerry Ricks, Port Townsend 97

Author Topic: Cephas and Wiggins - Richmond Blues  (Read 1878 times)

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Offline dave stott

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Cephas and Wiggins - Richmond Blues
« on: August 08, 2008, 09:22:40 AM »
great new CD out by the smithsonian /folkways group with awesome sound quality

Cephas and Wiggins
Richmond Blues

SFW40179
Richmond Blues
Cephas and Wiggins


Notes - In Richmond Blues, guitarist-singer John Cephas and his harmonica-player partner Phil Wiggins personify the century-old blues sound of the Piedmont, the Appalachian foothills running from Richmond to Atlanta. Drawing from roots of ragtime, ballads, country, old-time string band, rhythm and blues, and more, Richmond Blues is a musical roadmap of the Virginia Piedmont tradition. While Cephas calls it "part of my heritage, part of my soul," their sound is at the same time distinctly modern, a kind of "urban acoustic blues."
This recording is part of the Smithsonian Folkways African American Legacy series, co-presented with the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.

32-page booklet with extensive notes and photos, 16 tracks, 65 minutes.

Track Listing:

Richmond Blues
Going to the River
Keep your hand off
My Baby
Black Rat Swing
Mamie
Crow Jane
Dog Days of August
John Henry
Pigmeat Crave
Prison Bound Blues
Key to the Highway
Going down the Road Feeling bad
Careless Love
Great Change ( Rev Gary Davis Tune)
Reno Factor
Step it up and Go

 


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