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Country/Blues
CDアルバム

Don't Forget It: The Post-War Years 1949-1950

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2022年06月03日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルDocument Records
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 BDCD6014
SKU 714298601428

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 01:15:33
ontains 25 tracks recorded in Atlanta and New York City.

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      My Baby's Gone
    2. 2.
      Ticket Agent Blues
    3. 3.
      Don't Forget (It)
    4. 4.
      A to Z Blues
    5. 5.
      Good Little Things
    6. 6.
      You Can't Get Stuff No More
    7. 7.
      Love Changin' Blues
    8. 8.
      Savannah Mama
    9. 9.
      Talkin' to You, Mama
    10. 10.
      East St. Louis Blues
    11. 11.
      Wee Midnight Hours
    12. 12.
      She Don't Treat Me Good No More
    13. 13.
      Brown Skin Woman
    14. 14.
      I Keep on Drinking
    15. 15.
      Pal of Mine
    16. 16.
      Pal of Mine
    17. 17.
      Honey It Must Be Love
    18. 18.
      Sending Up My Timber
    19. 19.
      Sending Up My Timber
    20. 20.
      Lord Have Mercy If You Please
    21. 21.
      Trying to Get Home (Climbing High Mountains)
    22. 22.
      It's My Desire
    23. 23.
      Hide Me in Thy Bosom
    24. 24.
      Some Rainy Day
    25. 25.
      Trixie
    26. 26.
      Hide Me in Thy Bosom
    27. 27.
      Some Rainy Day
    28. 28.
      Trixie

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Blind Willie McTellCurley Weaver

オリジナル発売日:1990年

商品の紹介

lind Willie McTell and Curley Weaver worked together on and off for many years, worrying their guitars and singing the blues. Aside from "My Baby's Gone," "It's My Desire," and "Hide Me in Thy Bosom," most of their Regal recordings of 1949-1950 remained unissued for decades and took a long time to become generally available. It wasn't until 2008 that the 1990 Document edition was reissued with the addition of three long lost selections for a total of 28 titles, and expanded liner notes by one David Evans. The newly amended titles are "I Got to Cross the River Jordan," "How About You," and an alternate take of "It's My Desire." If you want those additional tracks, go directly to the 2008 edition. Blind Willie's voice is easily identifiable, and Weaver is clearly audible as the singer on "Ticket Agent" and "My Baby's Gone." The Regal material bridges the temporal gap between McTell's Library of Congress recordings of 1940 and his last session, which took place in 1956. The Regals are more or less contemporaneous with his prized Atlantic recordings of 1949. Subject matter touches upon the usual spectrum of real life issues, with the "A to Z Blues" standing out as a nasty, violent, misogynistic remnant of minstrelsy and vaudeville. Recorded twice during the autumn of 1924, first by Butterbeans & Susie, then by Josie Miles and Billy Higgins, it is a longwinded tirade during which the singer threatens to mutilate every inch of a woman's body with a straight-edged razor. Despite anyone's intentions, it is not funny. When McTell for some ungodly reason chose to revive the tune in 1950, he turned it into a bouncy little strut which seems harmless enough until you start to absorb the meaning of the words. ~ arwulf arwulf|
Rovi

Blind Willie McTell and Curley Weaver worked together on and off for many years, worrying their guitars and singing the blues. Aside from "My Baby's Gone," "It's My Desire," and "Hide Me in Thy Bosom," most of their Regal recordings of 1949-1950 remained unissued for decades and took a long time to become generally available. It wasn't until 2008 that the 1990 Document edition was reissued with the addition of three long lost selections for a total of 28 titles, and expanded liner notes by one David Evans. The newly amended titles are "I Got to Cross the River Jordan," "How About You," and an alternate take of "It's My Desire." If you want those additional tracks, go directly to the 2008 edition. Blind Willie's voice is easily identifiable, and Weaver is clearly audible as the singer on "Ticket Agent" and "My Baby's Gone." The Regal material bridges the temporal gap between McTell's Library of Congress recordings of 1940 and his last session, which took place in 1956. The Regals are more or less contemporaneous with his prized Atlantic recordings of 1949. Subject matter touches upon the usual spectrum of real life issues, with the "A to Z Blues" standing out as a nasty, violent, misogynistic remnant of minstrelsy and vaudeville. Recorded twice during the autumn of 1924, first by Butterbeans & Susie, then by Josie Miles and Billy Higgins, it is a longwinded tirade during which the singer threatens to mutilate every inch of a woman's body with a straight-edged razor. Despite anyone's intentions, it is not funny. When McTell for some ungodly reason chose to revive the tune in 1950, he turned it into a bouncy little strut which seems harmless enough until you start to absorb the meaning of the words. ~ arwulf arwulf
Rovi

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