Syncopated Country Blues Of

Blind Willie Mctell
Syncopated Country Blues Of

11,89 EUR
CD
Jasmine
Release date: 20/May/2022
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Sales Rank: #167045 in Other Pop
#177812 in Pop
Style: Other Pop
Product No.: 2100567032

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Content:

Details / Tracklist: 1.1 Broke-Down Engine Blues
1.2 Dying Crapshooter's Blues
1.3 Pinetop's Boogie Woogie
1.4 Blues Around Midnight
1.5 Last Dime Blues
1.6 On the Cooling Board
1.7 Motherless Children Have a Hard Time
1.8 Soon This Morning
1.9 Don't Forget It
1.10 A to Z Blues
1.11 Good Little Thing
1.12 You Can't Get Stuff No More
1.13 Love Changin' Blues
1.14 Savannah Mama
1.15 Talkin' to You Mama
1.16 East St. Louis
1.17 Wee Midnight Hours
1.18 Pal of Mine
1.19 Honey It Must Be Love
1.20 Sending Up My Timber (TK. 2)
1.21 Lord Have Mercy If You Please
1.22 It's My Desire
1.23 Hide Me in Thy Bosom
1.24 River Jordan
1.25 How About You
1.26 Trying to Get Home (Climbing High Mountains)
Number of discs: 1
Extra-Infos: .. Blues Of
Description:A man once immortalised in song by Bob Dylan, no less, BLIND WILLIE McTELL was a noted Piedmont Blues and Ragtime singer and guitarist, who made his first recordings in the late 1920s. Dylan sang: ??And I know no one can sing The Blues like Blind Willie McTell.? Essentially a rambling, street musician in Georgia and on the streets of Atlanta, McTell played with a fluid, syncopated fingerstyle guitar technique, although unlike his Piedmont contemporaries, he played twelve-string guitars almost exclusively. He was also an adept slide guitarist, which was unusual among Ragtime Bluesmen. His vocal style, a smooth and often laid-back tenor, differed greatly from the harsher voices of Delta Bluesmen like Charley Patton. The material on this collection was recorded for Atlantic and Regal, in 1949, although many of these sides would not be released until the late 60s/early 70s Blues revival, some twenty years later. - .. BLUES OF
A?man once immortalised in song by Bob Dylan, no less, BLIND WILLIE McTELL was a noted Piedmont Blues and Ragtime singer and guitarist, who made his first recordings in the late 1920s. Dylan sang: "And I know no one can sing The Blues like Blind Willie McTell. "Essentially a rambling, street musician in Georgia and on the streets of Atlanta, McTell played with a fluid, syncopated fingerstyle guitar technique, although unlike his Piedmont contemporaries, he played twelve-string guitars almost exclusive. He was also an adept slide guitarist, which was unusual among Ragtime Bluesmen. His vocal style, a smooth and often laid-back tenor, differed greatly from the harsher voices of Delta Bluesmen like Charley Patton. The material on this collection was recorded for Atlantic and Regal, in 1949, although many of these sides would not be released until the late 60s/early 70s Blues revival, some twenty years later.
No. of tracks: 26
Manufacturer No.: JASMCD3221
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