Showing posts with label slide guitar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label slide guitar. Show all posts

Friday, April 6, 2007

Is Blog Plus Ultra making millions exploiting the black man?

Of course! What a wonderful time we are living in today. I call it the Blog Plus Ultra 2.0 Times, but you may know it better as youtube or web 2.0. Whatever time it is, All of us human beings have a pre-programmed need to entertain ourselves. It is what separates us from the animal world. In the earliest of years our ancestors would beat with sticks on trees and gourds in Africa(Mother Land) too stay entertained with music. Thousands of years later my European ancestors moved to a new world called America, quickly and efficiently claiming, killing for and stealing the land from the Original Native or Indigenous peoples. Along with them they also brought many human beings from Africa known as slaves. These brown skinned people were used to grow cotton, feed and cloth children, and would do anything you told them to and best of all, worked for free. The work they did made the white people they worked for rich, so they could afford to buy more slaves. And from this new world came a new music known as the blues. It was a new kind of music being created that included some of my European ancestors stringed instruments and the African's primordial rhythm's. Today I would like to speak more specifically about the Mississippi Delta Blues. At around the same time gasoline was selling for exactly 26 cents a quart, a man named Fred Mcdowell was goin' down to the Mississippi River.

Today in the year 2007 or as I mentioned earlier, the Blog Plus Ultra 2.0 Times, I am able to go back in time and find some of the best entertainment ever produced and post it here for you and everybody to enjoy. Imagine what Mississippi Fred would think of modern technology. Do you think one day we will be able to go back in time and jam with our caveman ancestors with sticks and bones? For the moment, being able to watch rare old Mississippi Delta blues video clips on your home computer is pretty entertaining to me. Check out the incredible Rhythms of Booker "Bukka" White playing Aberdeen Mississippi Blues on his slide accoustic guitar!

Ever Higher Ever Farther Ever Better,
Plusultra

Related Posts - R.L. Burnside

Thursday, April 5, 2007

R.L. Burnside on Blog Plus Ultra

Biography by Richard Skelly North Mississippi guitarist R.L. Burnside was one of the paragons of state-of-the-art Delta juke joint blues. The guitarist, singer and songwriter was born November 23, 1926 in Oxford, MS, and made his home in Holly Springs, in the hill country above the Delta. He lived most of his life in the Mississippi hill country, which, unlike the Delta region, consists mainly of a lot of small farms. He learned his music from his neighbor, Fred McDowell, and the highly rhythmic style that Burnside plays is evident in McDowell's recording as well. Despite the otherworldly country-blues sounds put down by Burnside and his family band, known as the Sound Machine, his other influences are surprisingly contemporary: Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker and Lightnin' Hopkins. But Burnside's music is pure country Delta juke joint blues, heavily rhythm-oriented and played with a slide.
R.L. Burnside performing Jumper on the Line from the documentary film Deep Blues


It wasn't until the 1990's that he began hitting full stride with tours and his music, thanks largely to the efforts of Fat Possum Records. The label has issued recordings made by a group of Burnside's peers, including Junior Kimbrough, Dave Thompson and others.

Up until the mid-'80s, Burnside was primarily a farmer and fisherman. After getting some attention in the late '60s via folklorists David Evans and George Mitchell (Mitchell recorded him for the Arhoolie label), he recorded for the Vogue, Swingmaster and Highwater record labels. Although he had done short tours, it wasn't until the late '80s that he was invited to perform at several European blues festivals. In 1992, he was featured alongside his friend Junior Kimbrough (whose Holly Spings juke joint Burnside lives next to), in a documentary film, Deep Blues. His debut recording, Bad Luck City, was released that same year on Fat Possum Records. Burnside has a second record out on the Oxford-based Fat Possum label, Too Bad Jim (1994).

R.L. Burnside, Mississippi bluesman from the Hill Country, performing Poor Black Mattie in 1984.

These recordings showcase the raw, barebones electric guitar stylings of Burnside, and on both recordings he's accompanied by a small band, which includes his son Dwayne on bass and son-in-law Calvin Jackson on drums, as well as guitarist Kenny Brown. Both recordings also adequately capture the feeling of what it must be like to be in Junior Kimbrough's juke joint, where both men played this kind of raw, unadulterated blues for over 30 years. This is the kind of downhome, backporch blues played today as it has been for many decades. In 1996, Burnside teamed with indie-rocker Jon Spencer to cut A Ass Pocket O' Whiskey for the hip Matador label; he returned to Fat Possum in 1998 for the more conventional Come on In. As Burnside had been recording intermittently since the late '60s a spate of re-issues and live recordings began to appear in the 2000's. Chief among them were Mississippi Hill Country Blues, largely recorded in the Netherlands in the 1980s; First Recordings, which gathered 14 of George Mitchell's 1967 field recordings of Burnside in Coldwater, MS; a live set documenting a west coast tour Burnside on Burnside appeared in 2001. His next studio album Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down appeared in 2000 but it would be another 4 years before the next new R.L. Burnside recording Bothered Mind was released. That same year Burnside suffered a heart attack and underwent bypass surgery. He never fully recovered from the attack and in 2005, at the age of 79, R.L. Burnside passed away in a Memphis, TN hospital.

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