構成数 : 1
合計収録時間 : 01:15:06
Performers include: Coney Jones, Willie Reed.
Personnel: Coley Jones, Little Hat Jones (vocals, guitar); Carl Davis (guitar); Douglas Finnell (piano).
Audio Remasterer: Gerhard Wessely.
Liner Note Author: Paul Garon.
Recording information: Dallas, TX (12/03/1927-09/27/1935); San Antonio, TX (12/03/1927-09/27/1935).
One of Document's many regional blues anthologies, Texas Blues 1927-1935 is a particularly fine sampling of work by five different Lone Star bluesmen. You'll probably want to note that it contains T-Bone Walker's first two sides, which were waxed in Dallas near the end of 1929. Walker's primary inspirations were his boyhood friend Blind Lemon Jefferson, master guitarist Lonnie Johnson, and Johnson-influenced, Louisiana based Carl Davis, who backed Walker on this session along with pianist Douglas Fernell (or Finnell). For his first-ever 78 rpm phonograph record, Aaron Thibeaux Walker chose to be identified as "Oak-Cliff T-Bone." Oak Cliff was a section of South Dallas which served as his stomping grounds and was already well on its way to becoming an important locus for the African American population. "Trinity River Blues" describes a devastating flood (presumably the one that took place in 1908), while "Wichita Falls Blues" is primarily about his girlfriend. In keeping with the interconnectivity that always seems to have characterized the Southwestern blues environment, this collection also brings to light the first four sides ever recorded by another mentor of Walker's, Coley Jones, who led the Dallas String Band and recorded with vocalist Bobbie Cadillac. What Jones performed at his session in December 1927 were comedic narrative routines that root back to folk tradition, vaudeville, minstrelsy, and medicine shows. (For a real treat, compare Coley's "Drunkard's Special" and "Army Mule in No Man's Land" to the monologues of old-time British comedian Stanley Holloway.) To vary the mix, the producers of this collection added six rare titles by Willie Reed and two by Bo Jones, whose sounds have been compared with those of Alabamian bluesman Barefoot Bill. These straightforward rural Southern blues rituals add substance and depth to an already richly stocked archive of vintage Texas blues. Even given the wealth of talent already described, some may regard the complete recorded works of George Dennis "Little Hat" Jones as the real goldmine at the heart of this collection. While everyone else on this disc worked out of Dallas, Little Hat's home turf was San Antonio, and that's where his ten titles were recorded in 1929 and 1930. Something about this man is mesmerizing, and exposure to his expressive voice and personalized guitar technique may be habit forming. Although he lived until 1981, these are apparently the only records Little Hat ever made under his own name. Like Carl Davis and Willie Reed, he also recorded with Alger Texas Alexander. "Two String Blues" and "New Two Sixteen Blues", in fact, were cut on June 15, 1929, at the same session as Alexander's "Ninety-Eight Degree Blues" and "Someday, Baby, Your Troubles Is Gonna Be Like Mine." ~ arwulf arwulf
録音 : モノラル (Studio)
| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 2000年09月30日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入 |
| レーベル | Document |
| 構成数 | 1 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | 5161 |
| SKU | 714298516128 |
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