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Who is your favorite Delta blues musican

03 Jun 02 - 09:49 PM (#722474)
Subject: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Bobert

Well, we kind of bounce around this from timne to time over at Tweeds but never just let it get to "battle of the bands" status. Some folks over there think that unless it was recorded before WWII than it doesn't count, but Iz not going to get into that here. My favorite is Mississippi Fred McDowell. Who's yours?????


03 Jun 02 - 09:58 PM (#722480)
Subject: RE: BS: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: khandu

Mississippi John Hurt...wonder if he is kin to Mississippi Fred McDowell, they got the same first names!

khandu


03 Jun 02 - 10:00 PM (#722484)
Subject: RE: BS: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Justa Picker

I'm with Khandu on this one. (MJH)


03 Jun 02 - 10:16 PM (#722498)
Subject: RE: BS: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Steve Latimer

Robert Johnson, followed closely by MJH and Son House. Some purists will say that MJH's hometown of Avalon isn't in the Delta, and that accounts for why his stuff is so different to the Johnson, House, Patton etc. stuff. Given that, it's probably why he's not #1 on my list.


03 Jun 02 - 10:22 PM (#722502)
Subject: RE: BS: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: khandu

Actually, Avalon is in the Delta, but John's home( a few miles away) is in the hills, located in the Valley community where he lived when he was "rediscovered".

Another point, it has been wrongfully stated on the internet that Teoc, John's birthplace, later had it's name changed to Avalon. Actually Teoc is several miles from Avalon, located right at the end of the hills going into the Delta.

khandu


03 Jun 02 - 10:24 PM (#722503)
Subject: RE: BS: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: CarolC

My vote definitely goes for Mississippi Fred McDowell.


03 Jun 02 - 10:32 PM (#722511)
Subject: RE: BS: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Steve Latimer

There were just so many, it's tough to pick a favourite. I just thought of Blind Willie Johnson & Bukka White.

Thank goodness that technology allows us to hear this wonderful music all these years later.


03 Jun 02 - 10:43 PM (#722517)
Subject: RE: BS: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: ddw

Charlie Patton is one of the biggies for me, as is Bukka. McDowell didn't do much for me when I first heard him, but he's growing on me. I have a hard time putting Robert Johnson and MJH in the "delta" school. They may have lived in the delta, but their styles aren't typical of what was coming out of there most of the time between the 1920s and 1960s. RJ retained a little of the rawness I associated with the delta style, but took it to an intricacy that put it in another realm. MJH's style actually comes closer to the Texas drone-string bass style or the alternating bass against a melody line associated with the Piedmont guys.

Just my two cents worth....

cheers,

david


03 Jun 02 - 10:45 PM (#722519)
Subject: RE: BS: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: ddw

Hey Bobert,

I notices your "kick me" thread. You going to Augusta? Have you been before?

david


03 Jun 02 - 10:47 PM (#722520)
Subject: RE: BS: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Bobert

Thanks, CarolC, MJH is gonna be a tough customer, as well he should be. But, Fred McDowell just lights it up with his work on the bass strings. As a blues player myself, I just wonder how he works those bass strings so heavily without interfering with the the higher strings. I asked this question of Rolfy at Tweeds, thinking that ol' Fred used two slides with one being a stubby on his index finger, but Rolfy said: One man, One slide, Deal with it! Hmmmmmm? How do ya' play that stuff, Fred? Oh, to have just seen him once.... Oh.....

And for those of you who think the 2 slides is a good idea? Well, Iz been trying it and it ain't all that easy. I can get the thing cranked up fir a few seconds before it breaks down. I think I'll just try to find out how Fred McDowell did it with one, thank you....

Bobert


04 Jun 02 - 12:13 AM (#722560)
Subject: RE: BS: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: CarolC

Well, I have to fess up. It was pretty easy for me to make a choice because old Mississippi Fred just may be the only Delta bluesman whose work I'm actually familiar with.

But I sure do like his stuff.


04 Jun 02 - 03:14 AM (#722624)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: alanabit

I've always loved Mississippi John Hurt for the laughing tone in his voice and his picking. He sounds closer to a ragtime style guitarist to me than a traditional delta bluesman. He also covered a much wider range of material. Oddly enough, when I put his record on a couple of years back, both my small children started dancing. I'm a big fan of Robert Johnson too - especially his incredible technique as a slide guitarist.


04 Jun 02 - 05:36 AM (#722658)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: GUEST

Alex Campbell said he was a bluesman from the Clyde delta, i.e.Glasgow.


04 Jun 02 - 05:44 AM (#722660)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: GUEST

Whoops lost my cookie!!.....Giok


04 Jun 02 - 07:49 AM (#722694)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: GUEST,forty two

All the names so far one can hardly argue with but let me throw in a name of a guy who I saw in London back in the early 70's. Michael Jackson played at our Students Union in the East End, the first gig of his UK tour. He came in, sat down and played a two hour set; just him his accoustic guitar and no sound system. It was a privelege to be there.

I had never heard of him before: I've never heard of him since although I am sure he is dead by now. All I know is that concert was onehelluvanexperience.


04 Jun 02 - 08:04 AM (#722701)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Bobert

David: Sorry I missed your post last night. Yes, I am a veteran of Blues Week. The last time I spent most of the week getting my butt kicked by the Colonel... Sparky Rucker. As fir this time around I'm real torn between Sparky and Corey but leaning toward Corey. But no matter what, the Colonel is mah main man and we keep in touch.

Bobert


04 Jun 02 - 09:01 AM (#722730)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Devilmaster

I was always partial to Leadbelly myself.

Steve


04 Jun 02 - 09:36 AM (#722752)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: GUEST,F. Gerlach

Delta Blues is a specific style of blues playing that developed in the Mississippi River Delta region.

Mississippi John Hurt was from the Mississippi Hill region, not the Delta. His playing and singing style was not of the Delta.

Blind Willie Johnson was from Texas. His bottleneck style was more melodic than the more rhythmic Delta style.

Lead Belly was also from Texas and his music had little to do with Delta Blues.

F. Gerlach


04 Jun 02 - 10:40 AM (#722788)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: 53

John Cougar Mellencamp. I know that he's not a true blues musician but he does a lot of neat blues stuff. Bob


04 Jun 02 - 01:43 PM (#722879)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: M.Ted

I liked John Lee Hooker best, though some might not want to count him for bizarre reasons of their own--Of the old guys, Charlie Patton and Son House--RJ was great,(but not very original)--still, it's all really good--


04 Jun 02 - 02:41 PM (#722918)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Spartacus

Rollie Tussing III

-spartacus


04 Jun 02 - 03:08 PM (#722932)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Mark Ross

Actually, Robert Johnson named Lonnie Johnson as on of his influences. If you listen to the complete recordings RJ does a highly credible imitation of LJ. I have a feeling that Robert used a slide not only to echo what he was hearing around him in the Delta, but also to try and imitate Lonnies' vibrato(done with just the fingers.

Mark Ross


04 Jun 02 - 03:22 PM (#722944)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: mousethief

Hmm. I was going to say MJH but now I'm told he doesn't count. I shall have to listen to Fred McDowell; he seems to be well-liked here. Off to find some MFM music...

Alex


04 Jun 02 - 03:25 PM (#722948)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: M.Ted

Where did Robert Johnson mention his influences?


04 Jun 02 - 04:19 PM (#723006)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: dwditty

Bobert,

Please consider coming onto Paltalk (www.paltalk.com). It's free, it's fun, and there is some awesome live acoustic blues...delta and otherwise.

dwditty
(taken from the great Piedmont player's, Blind Blake's, song)


04 Jun 02 - 04:34 PM (#723018)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: CarolC

Heh. I just rememberd something interesting about how I became familiar with Mississippi Fred. I rememberd that it was a recording an old housemate of mine back in the late '70s had that I had heard. But I had forgotten the rest of it.

I can't remember what the context was, but my old housemate knew Fred McDowel. Apparently they spent quite a bit of time together for some reason for a little while there. (Don't know when that was.) But I remember she said that he was very partial to peach brandy or something like that. She had some interesting stories to tell about him, but I don't remember much more than that.


04 Jun 02 - 04:40 PM (#723025)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Wesley S

My favorite Mississippi Foothills singer is the aforementioned Mississippi John Hurt. But for the younger guys I like the New York City Delta singer John Hammond Jr.


04 Jun 02 - 04:41 PM (#723027)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Mary in Kentucky

I have a geography question. Just why do they call the area between Memphis and Vicksburg the Delta? There is some blues info here. But I always thought a delta was where a river ran into a larger body of water, like the Mississippi River at New Orleans. I'm currently reading a book, North Toward Home whose author, Willie Morris, was from Yazoo City. In it he talks a little about the "floor of the sea" and the "primordial forests." Amybody know what this means?


04 Jun 02 - 04:45 PM (#723032)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: mousethief

"Delta" also means "something shaped like a wedge or triangle." Which is indeed how river deltas got their name.

Wesley: promises, promises! :)

Alex


04 Jun 02 - 05:29 PM (#723064)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Sandy Paton

Robert Pete Williams. Zachary, LA, must be in the Delta.
Sandy


04 Jun 02 - 08:33 PM (#723192)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Bobert

Wesley: Yeah, John Hammond is real, real good.

I'm kindof surprised there ain't more folks talkin' about Son House, Muddy Waters and some contempories like R.L Burnside and T. Model Ford.

dwditty: Thanks fir the invite. I'll stop on buy and say, "Hey".


04 Jun 02 - 08:42 PM (#723202)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: ddw

Thread creep.

Bobert -- I'm green. I was at Augusta Blues Week last year and loved it. Can't swing it this year, but I'm definitely shooting for next summer. I spent most of my time there with Paul Geremia, John Jackson and David Jacob-Strains. Met lots of great people. Enjoy for me too, won'tcha?

cheers,

david


04 Jun 02 - 09:14 PM (#723219)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Bobert

Will do, David... It's gonna be hard without the porch jams with John Jackson. I missed last summer because Sparkey wasn't going. He did Common Ground and I went up there and visited with him. I'm gonna work with Cory Harris this time around. He ought to give me a good butt whoppin but it will be worth it.

Bobert


04 Jun 02 - 09:30 PM (#723227)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: ddw

Bobert, While you're there, hook up with Mark Kinniburgh if you haven't already. He's from the Washington, D.C. area and favors National wood-bodied guitars. Those things are so loud, you never have to wonder where he is. He told me a few weeks ago he's been working on some MFMcD stuff.

david


04 Jun 02 - 10:33 PM (#723261)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: khandu

Mary in Kentucky, the Mississippi Delta is a large part of Northwestern Mississippi which was once the Mississippi River bed. Through eons, the river changed it's course, leaving behind the flat fertile land which we call the Delta. There is an amazing change in topography from the hills into the Delta. Within a very short distance, you drop 200 + feet from the hills into the Delta.

Again, Avalon, MS is in the Delta. MJH had a song called (depending on which version you hear) "Avalon, My Hometown" or "Avalon Blues". It was this song that aided in his "rediscovery". However, Hurt actually lived in the Valley community, in the hills, a few miles from Avalon.

khandu


04 Jun 02 - 10:42 PM (#723267)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Bobert

Will do, David. I'm taking 3 guitars but will probably play my Regal steel bodied reso most. Talk about bright! This is the altimate, non National steel, affordable reso to play....But, I'll take my poor ol 1964 Martin D-18, too, which at it's age shouldn't have to put up with my crap. But it does...and slides reasonably well fir a country/hillbilly instrument.


05 Jun 02 - 08:50 AM (#723464)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Mary in Kentucky

Thanks Khandu, I suspected it must be something like that. My book describes leaving Yazoo City and the hills, and pretty much coasting to Memphis.


05 Jun 02 - 08:05 PM (#723936)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Steve-o

Unbelievable....a note right in the middle of this from Fred Gerlach, one of the greats of the twelve-string guitar, and nobody gets excited or even says "Woo-hoo"!! It amazes me how many serious folkies are onto this here Mudcat. Hey, Fred, you're still one of my heroes! BTW, my vote is for Son House.


05 Jun 02 - 08:46 PM (#723950)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: GUEST,petr

M. Fred McDowell and R. Johnson thread creep, on one recording Fred talks about the origin of the blues, and says the 'blues came from the reel' which strikes me as rather odd as the 12bar pattern is quite different than the 16 bar 4/4 pattern for reels. (of course Id suspect that Ragtime, Minstrel, Gospel etc would be influences but any thoughts on this) I confess I dont know much about the very early blues origins, but would love to find out more. Petr


05 Jun 02 - 11:15 PM (#724029)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: CarolC

Hey Bobert. Were you at Common Ground three years ago when Sparky was there? I was one of the sound techs that year, and I ran the sound board for Sparky's Saturday afternoon, stage B performance.


06 Jun 02 - 09:24 AM (#724256)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: GUEST,Roger the skiffler at the public library

All of 'em but especially Mississippi Fred
RtS


06 Jun 02 - 10:07 AM (#724286)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Steve Latimer

Well, he's not a Delta guy, but I just picked up a 2CD Lightnin' Hopkins set and I'm loving it.


06 Jun 02 - 10:41 AM (#724310)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Bobert

CarolC: Nope. I didn't meet the Sparkman until two summers ago at Elkins. He and I hit it off real well since we are both the same age and have similar political beliefs. When he emailed me last year and said he wasn't going to do Blues Week, i said heck with it and the week he was going to be at Westminster, I had other plans. I'll send you another tape of some of my Delta stuff and you'll hear Sparky in there, fir sure.


06 Jun 02 - 12:09 PM (#724406)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: GUEST,mike strobel

Yes, I must agree with Mississippi Fred McDowell. Some body help me here, but I thought I saw Mississippi Fred perform at the Mariposa Folk Festival in Toronto, Ontario,circa- 1970-1972. I think Bonnie Raitt and Fred were swapping a small bottle in a Brown bag, around 10:00 AM. A musical mentor of mine from here in Western New York State, just gave me two albums to listen to of Fred Gerlach. So a big HELLO to one of the best on 12 string, Fred Gerlach. I live in Rochester, New York and we are indeed bring in John Hammond Jr. this week, ( one of my favorites ) and Sparky Rucker & wife in November-2002.


06 Jun 02 - 12:23 PM (#724415)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: mousethief

The 12-bar form is rather a late arrival, if I remember my blues history right. I believe the 16-bar (aaab) form predates it. Maybe that's what Fred was referring to.

Alex


06 Jun 02 - 03:22 PM (#724581)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: GUEST,PJ Curtis (Ireland)

For me its Robert Johnson and the amazing Skip James....His 'Devil Got MY Woman' and Cypress Grove' and downright scary!!! pjc


06 Jun 02 - 03:33 PM (#724593)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Lonesome EJ

Khandu...the Mississippi Delta also encompasses parts of Arkansas and Louisiana, since the riverside communities had more shared culture and geography with each other than with the rest of their states. "I'm gonna send you back to Arkansas" meant a short trip down the road. Most of the old Blues guys routinely played roadhouses in several states on the Blues circuit.

Bob Johnson would be my favorite, along with some later comers like Sonny Boy Williamson 2 and Muddy.


06 Jun 02 - 11:21 PM (#724937)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: khandu

Yes, Lonesome, you are correct, and when I posted I was intending to mention Louisiana and Arkansas. Thanks for bringing it up!

khandu


07 Jun 02 - 01:49 AM (#725002)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: GUEST,andrew.maher@air.gov.au

I'm surprised that Son House hasn't been given a bigger wrap - one listen to "Death Letter Blues" was enough for me (also heard in [I presume] an earlier form in My Black Mama II). Also Skip James - and although it might be obvious, Robert Johnson - his version of "Preachin blues" is just outright amazing - also "Hellhound.." goes to show that he wasn't just a reworker of other popular pieces played in the region - a Skip James tuning maybe but definitely not a Skip James song!


07 Jun 02 - 03:50 PM (#725479)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: pattyClink

Let's face it, the Mississippi Alluvial Plain just ain't got the same ring to it. But that's what it is, and it stretches up to Cairo, Illinois, widening out down to N.O. and taking in parts of the 3 states.

Mary, who knows what Willie was thinking. It's been a long time since it was the floor of the sea, although it was at one time. But I will buy the primordial forests part. Much of the Delta was thick dense malarial forests, some not cleared until well into the 20th century. It took a lot of work and death to clear it. Forested parts still remain and the Conservancy and other groups are trying to get the percentage of land in hardwood bottomland restored to some glimmer of what was once there. Although the panthers and bears are few and the parakeets are gone, it is still a mighty refuge for lots of wildlife, especially the Great Mississippi Flyway for birds. There is a reason Audubon hung out there.

Like in the west, there will be struggles ahead between the need to restore land and the need to keep it as the great agricultural resource it is.

It's a special place, come see it sometime if you haven't. I recommend not in the summer. Cotton time is good (September), come for a festival and take a blues pilgrimage.


07 Jun 02 - 04:06 PM (#725502)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: mousethief

The "mississippi alluvial plain" and the "mississippi delta" are not coterminous. The delta ends just south of Memphis; the MAP as you say extends upstream some way.

Alex


07 Jun 02 - 07:26 PM (#725649)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Bobert

GUEST, Andrew: Gotta agree with you on Son House. On my favorites list he comes in a close second. "Death Letter Blues" is awesome. I've been doing a rockified "Empire State Express" but absolutely love the way ha does that song... And as far as rankings go, Robert Johnson ranks just behind Son. I think Son gets a tad more credit because he came first and managed to live a whole lot longer. Had Robert Johnson lived to a ripe old age, it's almost impossible to comprehend how he would have effected the blues.

Bobert


07 Jun 02 - 10:30 PM (#725730)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: khandu

Ah, but the Delta doesn't end just south of Memphis. Everyone knows that "The Delta begins at the front steps of the Peabody"!

khandu


07 Jun 02 - 10:57 PM (#725738)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: Mary in Kentucky

Ha! That's what my book says! Do they still have the ducks there?


07 Jun 02 - 11:04 PM (#725745)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: van lingle

I like most of those artists from the first (recording) generation of Delta blues musicians but Charlie Patton is my favorite. His King of the Delta Blues on Yazoo was a real eye-opener for me. His voice, his rhythmic propulsion and the subtlety and complexity of his accompaniments were without equal IMHO. vl


07 Jun 02 - 11:08 PM (#725747)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: van lingle

BTW, Revenant has recently rereleased his complete recordings and it's suppose to be a pretty good collection.vl


07 Jun 02 - 11:31 PM (#725767)
Subject: RE: Who is your favorite Delta blues musican
From: khandu

Yes, Mary, the ducks are still there, or so I hear!

In 1975, I visited with Jesse Hurt, Mississippi John's wife, in Grenada, MS. She was a rather gracious lady. She allowed me to enjoy John's guitar for a while. She had some of the recordings made shortly after his "rediscovery", however, she said she would not play them whenever she was alone, because "John would come into the room".

She told me of their son, John, Jr. She said he could play like his daddy. Unfortunately, I have never heard him. He responded to a Greenwood, MS newspaper article a few years ago, and said he lived in Detroit. I have never heard of his having made any recordings. Have any of you heard of him, or heard his music?

khandu