My mama told me, my papa too, don't let no woman be the death of you, 'cause she didn't allow me to stay out all night long - Charley Jordan, Hunkie Tunkie Blues
This is one of the most exciting and propulsive song families in the genre. Arthur Big Boy Crudup?s great Mean ol? Friscohas become a deeply ingrained part of the language and many players have done some variation of it. Crudup, as much or more than Robert Nighthawk, Elmore James or Muddy Waters was the link between country Blues and what came after, though in some ways he retained the originality of rural Blues more completely than the others mentioned. He was a superb singer, unique sounding, subtle and endlessly emotive and expressive. I suspect Mean ol' Frisco had precedents in terms of basic structure. Perhaps some of you can dig them up. I seem to recall a Patton tune or two that may have been the model.
Frankie swears that Crudup ONLY played in Crossnote which could account for the dark sounding tonality lurking in much of Crudup?s music.
My favorite version is Locomotive Blues by Smokey Babe. His propulsive drive aided by an off key harmonica just drives.
Joe Savage
Lightnin? weighs in:
Little Walter
Sonny & Brownie 1946
Snooks Eaglin
The Mighty Chuck
Clarence Edwards, Cornelius Edwards And Butch Cage - Mean Old Frisco
B.B.
Here?s my own version replete with self inflicted overdubbs of slide, Harp and Washboard
Great song, and some great versions there, including the O'Muck Gesamtkunstwerk! Snooks and BB both have interesting takes on the lyric! I think Arthur Crudup always played in crossnote tuning. It remains my favourite version, having been the first one I heard.
Great topic! I'm generally guilty of ignoring uptempo tunes, particularly if they're ubiquitous like MOF... listening to all of these is interesting. I had forgotten how amazingly great Crudup's version is. Chord changes are soooooo overrated.
Thanks very much for the topic and for tracking down all the versions, O'Muck. I haven't heard a lot of the versions previously, but they're going to have to go a ways to match Arthur Crudup's. I do love Lightnin's too, though. Aah, abundance!
I too had forgotten how great the Crudup song is. Thanks for reminding me, of all the other interesting versions, and for the very lively O'Muck interpretation!
Hi all, Here are lyrics for Arthur Crudup's 1942 version of "Mean Ol' Frisco Blues". What a singer, and what a player! His sound on his electric guitar was just magical, and his ideas for playing in cross-note suggest a lot of possibilities that have never been adequately explored.
Well, that mean old, old Frisco, and that low-down Santa Fe Yes, that mean old Frisco, low-down Santa Fe Done took my babe away, Lord, and blowed back out of me
Well, my Mama, she done told me, and my Papa told me, too Yes, my Mama told me, Papa told me, too Son, every woman, grin in your face, Lord, she ain't no friend to you
SOLO
Lord, I wonder, do she ever think of me? Lord, I wonder, do she ever think of me? Well, I wonder, I wonder, will my babe come back to me?
Well now, standing, Lord, looking, watching that Southern whistle blow Yes, I was standing, looking, watching that Southern whistle blow Well, she didn't catch that Southern, Lord, now where did the woman go?
Lord, I ain't got no special rider here Lord, I ain't got no special rider here I might lea-eave, 'cause I don't feel welcome here
All best, Johnm
« Last Edit: September 11, 2015, 06:16:10 PM by Johnm »
Great song and lots of interesting versions. Nice choice O'Muck.
Somehow this song puts me in mind of Will The Circle Be Unbroken - and I don't think it's just the "I was standing ..." line. Not quite the same structure but they hint at each other.
I had assumed in choosing this song that some more knowledgable person would turn up a song from the twenties or thirties which provided or inspired its basic structure, but perhaps I am wrong about that and there is no such song and Crudup's is truly original. That would be a surprising discovery.
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My loathings are simple: stupidity, oppression, crime, cruelty, soft music. Vladimir Nabokov (1899 - 1977)
Here's a song from 1939 the same year Crudup hit Chicago. While this song is not a direct predecessor of MOF, it is not too much of a stretch to see Memphis Minnie as a stylistic precursor of Crudup's, probably a big influence given the similarity of their vocal range.
« Last Edit: September 13, 2015, 08:50:19 AM by Slack »
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My loathings are simple: stupidity, oppression, crime, cruelty, soft music. Vladimir Nabokov (1899 - 1977)