Document Records - Vintage Blues and Jazz

Skip James Live Volume 1 - Bloomington 1968 Part 1

£7.99   
 

On the night of this Skip James concert, performed at the student–run Indiana University Folksong Club at Bloomington, Indiana the small auditorium was filled with about two hundred persons who knew more about local bluegrass traditions (Bill Monroe's Sunday bam fests took place in nearby Beanblossom) than blues, but who enjoyed listening to various forms of traditional music. As one can hear on this recording, they were not disappointed. Skip James played a total of twenty "pieces" from his repertoire. These included God Is Realwhich to my knowledge he had not recorded before, as well as two other "spirituals":Look At The People (Got To Go To Judgement) and Keep Your Lamp Trimmed And Burning. Skip James's penchant for mixing sacred and secular songs was well received by an audience used to similar European-American concert traditions in country music. In addition, he played eight songs first recorded during his 1931 sessions by Paramount producer Arthur Ubly in Grafton, Wisconsin. Skip introduced I'm So Glad, the best known of these because of its 1960s cover version by the Cream (featuring Eric Clapton), with the story of how Laibly at first urged him to "play the song as fast as you can". On actually hearing it at that speed, Laibly advised Skip to slow down. Listening to his performance of the song in concert, one can hear James gradually accelerate the tempo of "I'm So Glad" as a dramatic demonstration of his continued finger-picking prowess. The circumstances of Skip James’ life, since he had resumed his performing his performing career in 1964, provided the fodder for three newer original blues compositions - Lorenz, concerns his wife Lorenzo Meeks James (1905-1977), and two blues about his hospitalizations, one in Tunica, Mississippi, Sickbed Blues, the other focusing on his stay at Washington D.C. Hospital Center Blues. The remaining six songs were Skip James arrangements of a variety of popular songs. Backwater Blues recounted the disastrous flooding of the Mississippi river, in the winter and spring of 1927, as popularised by Bessie Smith and Lonnie Johnson recordings issued that year. Hard Headed Woman Bluesadapted the 1934 hit “Black Gal (What Makes Your Head So Hard?) "of Joe Pullum, covered by Leroy Carr and Scrapper Blackwell. Catfish Blues, combined lyrics recorded by Robert Petway (“Catfish Blues Blues" DOCD-5671) and Tommy McClennan ("Deep Blue Sea Blues" DOCD-5670) in 1941, later to be reconfigured by McKinley Morganfield, aka Muddy Waters, in his rendition of “Rolling Stone" (1950). Having been ordained as both a Baptist and Methodist minister, Skip’s singing of Petway's verse, "I went to the church house and they called on me to pray; I got all on my knees, but I couldn't find a word to say”, must have possessed personal poignancy. Skip James's Bloomington appearance introduced his unique "Bentonia (Mississippi) School" of minor key blues to an appreciative audience.

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Skip James More Titles?

    TRACK LIST
    01 - introduction by peter narváez
    02 - Skip James talking
    03 - God is real
    04 - Skip talking
    05 - Crow Jane MP3
    06 - Skip talking
    07 - Look down the road
    08 - Skip talking
    09 - Lorenzo blues
    10 - Skip talking
    11 - Devil got my woman MP3
    12 - Skip talking
    13 - I`m so glad
    14 - Skip talking
    15 - Hard time killin` floor blues MP3
    16 - Skip talking
    17 - Cherry ball blues
    18 - Skip talking
    19 - Sickbed blues MP3

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