Country/Blues
CDアルバム

Jimmie Gordon Vol.2 1936-1938

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2,409
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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2001年05月10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 DOCD5649
SKU 714298564921

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 01:02:06

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Jacksonville - Part 1
    2. 2.
      Jacksonville - Part 2
    3. 3.
      Think You Need a Shot
    4. 4.
      C.C. & St. Louis Blues
    5. 5.
      Playing in the Grass
    6. 6.
      You're Bound to Look Like a Monkey (When You Get Old)
    7. 7.
      Good as I Been to You
    8. 8.
      Rattlesnake Bite
    9. 9.
      I Believe I Been Hoodooed
    10. 10.
      She Wants to Rattle Me All the Time
    11. 11.
      Plenty Trouble on Your Hand
    12. 12.
      Crying My Blues Away
    13. 13.
      Fast Life
    14. 14.
      Sail with Me
    15. 15.
      Lonesome Bedroom Blues
    16. 16.
      Alberta Alberta
    17. 17.
      She's Doin' It Now
    18. 18.
      Keep Your Nose out of Other People's Business
    19. 19.
      Bleeding Heart Blues
    20. 20.
      Number Runner's Blues
    21. 21.
      Me and My Gin
    22. 22.
      Whip It to a Jelly

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Jimmie Gordon

商品の紹介

Volume 2 in Document's threefold complete reissued recordings of Jimmie Gordon covers the years 1936-1938. After four slow and at times crusty-sounding blues recordings, tracks five-22 are by Jimmie Gordon and His Vip Vop Band, a swinging little group that included members of a Chicago-based jazz band known as the Harlem Hamfats. These were clarinetist Odell Rand, pianist Horace Malcolm, guitarist Joe McCoy, and bassist John Lindsay. (Note that Charlie McCoy, who appeared on earlier Gordon recordings, played a lot of guitar and mandolin with the Hamfats). Other "vip voppers" on this album are a flugelhorn player by the name of Joe Bishop, pianists Peetie Wheatstraw and Sam Price, guitarists Teddy Bunn and Lonnie Johnson, bassist Richard Fullbright, and drummer Fred Flynn. What was the origin of the term "vip vop"? In the liner notes to this CD, David Evans of the University of Memphis compares "vip vop" with the "be bop" of the 1940s as well as the "hip-hop" that arose in the 1980s. These musical genres, wrote Evans, "...are [each] associated with an aggressive, rhythmic, and 'in your face' approach to performance, full of humor, multiple layers of meaning and in-group references...with an entire lifestyle in the vanguard of fashion, centered in musical expression and consciously existing in opposition or as an alternative to the lifestyle of conventional society." Solidly in place as an example of the "dirty dozens," that grand old African-American tradition of the artful and often mercilessly exaggerated putdown, "You're Bound to Look Like a Monkey When You Get Old" was written by Clarence Williams and Alex Hill, was recorded several times by Williams and was covered (in what today seem like uncomfortably inappropriate contexts) by white musicians like Western swing bandleaders Hank Penny and Milton Brown and the Bob Cats, a Dixieland swing band led by Bing Crosby's little brother Bob. "Plenty Trouble on Your Hand" is equipped with all the trademarks of classic Chicago blues, most conspicuously the slaughterhouse worker's existence on the killing floor and the transferal of that violence into the domestic sphere. It was during this period that Gordon made inroads into the field of herpetology with "Rattlesnake Bite" (closely based upon his hit "I'd Rather Drink Muddy Water") and "She Wants to Rattle Me All the Time," which traces back to Blind Boy Fuller's "I'm a Rattlesnakin' Daddy," composed and originally recorded by North Carolina yodeler Homer Callahan. "Number Runner's Blues" and "Whip It to a Jelly" are credited to Lemuel Fowler while "Me and My Gin" (famously handled by Bessie Smith) was written by J.C. Johnson, born in Chicago but very much a part of Harlem's thriving jazz scene in the '30s through his work with Fats Waller. ~ arwulf arwulf|
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