Blind Willie McTell – Stole Rider Blues (1927)

Born blind in the town of Thomson, Georgia, Blind Willie McTell learned how to play guitar in his early teens. He soon became a street performer around several Georgia cities, such as Atlanta and Augusta, and first recorded in 1927 for Victor Records. Although he never produced a major hit record, McTell’s recording career was prolific, recording for different labels under different names throughout the 1920s and 30s. In 1940, he was recorded by John Lomax for the Library of Congress’s folk song archive. He would remain active throughout the 1940s and 50s, playing on the streets of Atlanta, often with his longtime associate, Curley Weaver. Twice more he recorded professionally. McTell’s last recordings originated during an impromptu session recorded by an Atlanta record store owner in 1956. McTell would die three years later after suffering for years from diabetes and alcoholism.




blindwilliemctell

Third Man Records is thrilled to announce the release of the first three records in our highly-anticipated Document Records reissue series.

Pre-orders are available now in our online store (with a January 29th in-store release date) for Volume 1 of The Complete Recorded Works in Chronological Order of Charley Patton, Blind Willie McTell and The Mississippi Sheiks. The first 400 customers to purchase the bundle of all three records will receive a free 5″ x 8″ print insert of the Rob Jones Charley Patton cover image.

Subsequent volumes will be released regularly and new artists will be slotted for release from this fantastic catalog of blues greats as soon as this first series is complete.

The recordings we’ll be presenting in this reissue series are the building blocks and DNA of American culture. Blues, R&B, Elvis, teenagerism, punk rock… it all goes back to these vital, breathtaking recordings. Third Man Records is proud to present these landmark albums in conjunction with Document Records, with brand new, jaw-dropping artwork by Rob Jones and new insightful liner notes, on vinyl for the first time in decades. Every record collection should have ample room for these highly important and endlessly listenable albums.

Charley Patton – Mississippi Boweavil Blues (1929)

Perhaps as early as 1908, blues pioneer Charley Patton wrote a song called “Mississippi Bo Weavil Blues” and recorded it in July 1929 (as “The Masked Marvel”) for Paramount Records. Some of the lyrics are similar to “Boll Weevil,” describing the first time and “the next time” the narrator saw the boll weevil and making reference to the weevil’s family and home.




charleypatton

Third Man Records is thrilled to announce the release of the first three records in our highly-anticipated Document Records reissue series.

Pre-orders are available now in our online store (with a January 29th in-store release date) for Volume 1 of The Complete Recorded Works in Chronological Order of Charley Patton, Blind Willie McTell and The Mississippi Sheiks. The first 400 customers to purchase the bundle of all three records will receive a free 5″ x 8″ print insert of the Rob Jones Charley Patton cover image.

Subsequent volumes will be released regularly and new artists will be slotted for release from this fantastic catalog of blues greats as soon as this first series is complete.

The recordings we’ll be presenting in this reissue series are the building blocks and DNA of American culture. Blues, R&B, Elvis, teenagerism, punk rock… it all goes back to these vital, breathtaking recordings. Third Man Records is proud to present these landmark albums in conjunction with Document Records, with brand new, jaw-dropping artwork by Rob Jones and new insightful liner notes, on vinyl for the first time in decades. Every record collection should have ample room for these highly important and endlessly listenable albums.

Skip James – I’m So Glad (1966)

“I’m So Glad” was written and originally recorded as one of 18 recordings by Skip James in 1931. These recordings would influence many early Delta blues artists – including the great Robert Johnson. However, for the next 30 years James would virtually disappear. He didn’t record and drifted in and out of music until his rediscovery in 1964. Eric Clapton and Cream recorded “I’m So Glad” for their 1966 debut album and provided James with the only windfall of his career. Deep Purple also covered the song in 1968 their first album. Skip James died of cancer in 1969 at the age of 67. [Source]












Blind Willie McTell – Broke Down Engine (1933)

Blind Willie McTell (born William Samuel McTier May 5, 1898 – August 19, 1959), was an influential Piedmont and ragtime blues singer and guitarist. He played with a fluid, syncopated fingerstyle guitar technique, common among many exponents of Piedmont blues, although, unlike his contemporaries, he used exclusively a twelve-string guitar. As well as this, McTell was an adept slide guitarist, unusual among many ragtime bluesmen. His vocal style, a smooth and often laid-back tenor, differed greatly from many of the harsher and more expressive voice types employed by Delta bluesmen such as Charlie Patton. McTell embodied a variety of musical styles, including blues, ragtime, religious music, and hokum.




Feel like a broke down engine, ain’t got no drivin’ wheel
Feel like a broke down engine, ain’t got no drivin’ wheel
You all been down and lonesome, you know just how a poor man feels
Been shooting craps and gambling, mama, and I done got broke
Been shooting craps and gambling, mama, and I done got broke
I done pawned my pistol, baby, my best clothes been sold
Lordy, Lord, Lordy, Lord, Lordy, Lord, Lordy, Lord,
Lordy, Lord
I went down in my praying ground, fell on my bended knees
I went down in my praying ground, fell on my bended knees
I ain’t crying for no religion, Lord, give me back my good girl please
If you give me back my baby, I won’t worry you no more
Give me back my baby, I won’t worry you no more
Don’t have to put her in my house, Lordy, just lead her to my door
Lordy, Lord, Lordy, Lord, Lordy, Lord, Lordy, Lord,
Lordy, Lord
Can’t you hear me, baby, rappin’ on your door?
Can’t you hear me, baby, rappin’ on your door?
Now you hear me tappin’, tappin’ across your floor
Feel like a broke down engine, ain’t got no drive at all
Feel like a broke down engine, ain’t got no drive at all
What make me love my woman, she can really do the
Georgia crawl
Feel like a broke down engine, ain’t got no whistle or bell
Feel like a broke down engine, ain’t got no whistle or bell
If you’re a real hot mama, come take away daddy’s weeping spell

Bessie Smith feat. Louis Armstrong – The St. Louis Blues (1925)

A standard and an early classic of jazz and blues, ‘St. Louis Blues’ was written and published in 1914 by W.C. Handy, the so-called ‘father of the blues’, and one of the most important songwriters of early American pop. Prior to the ‘Crazy Blues’ recording revolution, this song was one of the first songs written in blues form to find popular success. The song was a formal experiment – adopting the ragtime trick of combining different rhythms, with the main refrain in 12-bar blues time and the bridge in a 16-bar tango rhythm, Handy cashing in on the popularity of tango at the time. It was inevitable that Bessie Smith, the Empress of 1920s blues, should turn her hand to it; her version is definitive and breathtaking. Where to begin? Bessie’s vocal is front and centre, alongside Louis Armstrong‘s cornet. As Smith and Armstrong dance around each other, vying for the listener’s attention, they have an unsettling, eerie noise providing their musical backing; that’s Fred Longshaw, playing the reed organ. Reed organs were popular in the 19th century, and could be found in plenty of homes and small churches; but by the 1900s, pianos were becoming more commonplace and affordable, and the reed organ was falling out of favour. By the time recording became relatively commonplace in the ’20s, the reed organ was basically a thing of the past. And the instrument gives Bessie Smith’s version of ‘St. Louis Blues’ a decidedly weird flavour; a piano would make the song sound much more bluesy and jazzy – much more 1920s – while the reed organ sounds out of place and out of time, solemn and serious. Fittingly, the signification of the instrument was halfway between the religious pipe organ and the secular piano – fitting for this music’s secularisation of the sacred, marrying solemn spirituals with bawdy ragtime. At the time, the reed organ would have been old-fashioned; now it sounds so alien as to seem almost futuristic. [Source]

Audio:

Longform video:

[Dedicated to my dear friend Kristian Sandvad. He was not born in 1925. But it is his 50th birthday today!]

Captain Beefheart – Electricity (1967)

Safe as Milk is the debut album by Captain Beefheart & his Magic Band, originally released in 1967. It is a heavily blues-influenced work, but also hints at many of the features — such as surreal lyrics and odd time signatures — that would later become trademarks of Beefheart’s music. The album is also notable for the involvement of a 20-year-old Ry Cooder, who plays guitar and wrote some of the arrangements. Before recording Safe As Milk, the band had previously released a couple of singles through A&M Records, and it was to this company that the group first proposed their debut album in 1966. They presented the label with a set of heavily R&B-influenced demos, which the label apparently felt were too unconventional, and A&M decided to drop the band. Don Van Vliet later claimed the label dropped them after hearing the song “Electricity” and declaring it “too negative.”




[via Henrik Queitsch]

Leadbelly – Christmas Is A-Coming (1940s)

This collection features delightful songs for young children as well as the work songs, blues, and spirituals Lead Belly used to teach children about the experiences and emotions of adult life. Originally recorded in children’s concerts and studios for Moses Asch and Folkways Records in the 1940s, the 28 songs and spoken introductions reveal the humor, humanity, and musical genius of one of the great artists of the twentieth century. Essential listening for all ages. Produced by Moses Asch. Reissue compiled and annotated by Jeff Place. [Source]




[via Val Moulton]

Captain Beefheart – I’m Gonna Booglarize You Baby (1972)

The Spotlight Kid is the sixth album by Captain Beefheart (Don Van Vliet) and the Magic Band, originally released in 1972. It is the only album formally credited solely to Captain Beefheart. Often cited as one of the most accessible of Beefheart’s albums, it is solidly founded in the blues but also uses instruments such as marimba and jingle bells that are not typical of that genre. The incarnation of the Magic Band on this album was Bill Harkleroad and Elliot Ingber, guitars; Mark Boston, bass; John French, drums; and Art Tripp, marimba. Session drummer Rhys Clark substituted for French on one track, “Glider.”


[via Paul Newport - Dedicated to Jacob Grønlykke]

David Honeyboy Edwards – Wind Howlin Blues (1942)

In 1942, Alan Lomax recorded David Honeyboy Edwards in Clarksdale, Mississippi for the Library of Congress. He recorded a total of fifteen sides of Honeyboy’s music. Honeyboy didn’t record again commercially until 1951, when he recorded “Who May Your Regular Be” for Arc Records. Honeyboy also cut “Build A Cave” as ‘Mr. Honey’ for Artist.




[David Honeyboy Edwards R.I.P.]