Showing posts with label Son HOUSE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Son HOUSE. Show all posts

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Son HOUSE - Live At The Gaslight Cafe (Jan 3rd 1965) 2000

Son HOUSE - Live At The Gaslight Cafe (Jan 3rd 1965) 2000

Blues

Son House's earliest recordings, three two-sided 78s ("My Black Mama," "Preachin' the Blues," "Dry Spell Blues") recorded in New York on May 28, 1930, proved to be a hard act to follow, and House never really equaled these fierce, driving performances again, although he came close. The field recordings he did for Alan Lomax in 1941 and 1942 are certainly indispensable, featuring a loose, ad hoc Delta string band on half the cuts, and the intimacy on these is amazing, but the larger-than-life roar of his 1930s Paramount tracks is muted (Catfish Records has released the early 78s and the Lomax field material on a single disc as Preachin' the Blues -- still the best Son House purchase out there). House's rediscovery in 1964 led to some interesting sessions for Columbia Records, and a handful of live recordings from his time on the folk and blues coffee house circuit have surfaced, including a set from House's Rochester home, recorded in 1969, but on each of these House sounds increasingly tired, worn, and wearied. The fire had long since gone out, although he was capable of generating a facsimile of the old roar on occasion, as this set recorded at Gaslight Café in New York in 1965 shows. The versions here of "Empire State Express" and "Death Letter Blues" (nearly nine minutes long and still incomplete, even at that length) are startling in their intensity, showing some of the power of the 1930s material, but it is obvious on most of the other tracks that age and a long, hard life have left House a mere shadow of his former musical self. Still, just like you don't want to be caught by a Baptist preacher (an occupation House once practiced) trying to sneak out on the sermon, it's nearly impossible not to listen to this set clear through once it begins. It feels like an important bit of living history, and behind every tortured, exhausted note you can almost hear the ghost of Son House in his fiery prime.
By Steve Leggett, All Music Guide.
**
01. Pony Blues   4:27
02. Motherless Children   4:10
03. Preachin' The Blues   4:59
04. This Little Light of Mine   3:53
05. Son's Blues   6:53
06. Death Letter Blues   5:20
07. I Shall Not Be Moved   3:17
08. Levee Camp Moan   8:32
09. Empire State Express   4:29
10. Pearline   4:00
11. Yonder Comes My Mother (When The Roll Is Called Up Yonder)   3:35
12. Louise McGhee   4:22
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Son HOUSE - The Original Delta Blues 1998

Son HOUSE - The Original Delta Blues 1998
CK 65515

Blues

Eddie James "Son" House, Jr. was originally legendary in blues circles for a small collection of live field recordings made by folklorist Alan Lomax in 1941 and 1942--and for having taught some important licks to both Robert Johnson and Muddy Waters. But much of his present blues immortality rests on 21 tracks recorded in 1965, after his "rediscovery" on the college blues circuit. Son House showed worshipful youngsters how his modal acoustic blues and stabbing style of bottleneck slide guitar, heard to best advantage on tracks like the chilling "Death Letter," earned him the title "Father of the Delta Blues."

The first nine tracks on THE ORIGINAL DELTA BLUES were issued in 1965 as THE LEGENDARY SON HOUSE, which has been repackaged endlessly under various titles. The remaining two inclusions are outtakes from those sessions that previously appeared on the 1992's FATHER OF THE DELTA BLUES compilation.
**
Son House- (Vocals, National Guitar);
Alan Wilson- (Guitar, Harmonica).
**
01. Death Letter  4:19
02. Pearline  4:32
03. Louise McGhee  6:12
04. John the Revelator  2:30
05. Empire State Express  3:39
06. Preachin' Blues  5:22
07. Grinnin' in Your Face  2:06
08. Sundown  6:12
09. Levee Camp Moan  9:28
10. Pony Blues  5:17
11. Downhearted Blues  6:03
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*