Mostrando postagens com marcador Irene Scruggs. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Irene Scruggs. Mostrar todas as postagens

20.2.26

MARTHA COPELAND — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order Volume 2 · 1927-1928 + IRENE SCRUGGS — The Remaining Titles 1926-1930 | DOCD-5373 (1995) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

One of many early blues and jazz women who were overshadowed and ultimately eclipsed by Ma Rainey, Ethel Waters, and Bessie Smith, Martha Copeland made about three dozen recordings during the 1920s that were reissued seven decades later on two CDs by the Document label. The second volume traces her Columbia recording activity from October 1927 to August 1928. Her little backing group, billed as her Smokey City Trio on December 6, 1927, was named after Copeland's home town of Pittsburgh, PA. "Wylie Avenue Blues" refers to the main drag in the Lower Hill District where the city's African-American population was concentrated. Her pianists during this period were Porter Grainger (tracks one through six); Rube Bloom (on "I Can't Give You Anything But Love" and "My Daddy Can't Do Nothin' Bad"); James P. Johnson (on "Somethin' Goin' on Wrong" and "Desert Blues"); and J.C. Johnson, who is joined by cornetist Bubber Miley on "Mama's Well Has Done Gone Dry" and "I Ain't Your Hen Mister Fly Rooster." The second half of this compilation holds a smattering of records cut by St. Louis blues woman Irene Scruggs between April 1926 and August 1930. On "Home Town Blues" and "Sorrow Valley Blues," Scruggs was backed by King Oliver's Dixie Syncopators, a rough-edged little group that included trombonist Kid Ory and clarinetist Albert Nicholas; at the same session, Oliver's band backed Georgia Taylor as she sang "Jackass Blues." Scruggs is heard with guitarist Lonnie Johnson on tracks 15 and 16, and the disc closes with five titles recorded for Gennett in Richmond, IN, at the end of the summer of 1930. Anyone seeking more recordings by Irene Scruggs ought to investigate her collaborations with Blind Blake and Little Brother Montgomery, all dating from 1930. arwulf arwulf
Tracklist :
1.    Martha Copeland–    Shootin' Star Blues 2:44
Clarinet – Bob Fuller
Piano – Porter Grainger
Vocals – Martha Copeland

2.    Martha Copeland–    Good Time Mama Blues
Clarinet – Bob Fuller
Piano – Porter Grainger
Vocals – Martha Copeland

3.    Martha Copeland, Acc. Her Smokey City Trio–    Wylie Avenue Blues 2:40
Alto Saxophone – Andrew Mead
Piano – Porter Grainger
Violin – Ralph Jones 
Vocals – Martha Copeland

4.    Martha Copeland, Acc. Her Smokey City Trio–    Everybody Does It Now 3:02
Alto Saxophone – Andrew Mead
Piano – Porter Grainger
Violin – Ralph Jones 
Vocals – Martha Copeland

5.    Martha Copeland–    Bank Failure Blues 2:53
Piano – Porter Grainger
Vocals – Martha Copeland

6.    Martha Copeland–    Second-Hand Daddy 2:42
Piano – Porter Grainger
Vocals – Martha Copeland

7    Martha Copeland–    I Can't Give You Anything But Love 3:16
Cornet – Irving Peskin
Piano – Rube Bloom
Vocals – Martha Copeland

8.    Martha Copeland–    My Daddy Can't Do Nothin' Bad 3:04
Cornet – Irving Peskin
Piano – Rube Bloom
Vocals – Martha Copeland

9.    Martha Copeland–    Somethin' Goin' On Wrong 3:25
Clarinet – Clarence Adams
Piano – James P. Johnson
Vocals – Martha Copeland

10.    Martha Copeland–    Desert Blues 3:13
Clarinet – Clarence Adams
Piano, Speech – James P. Johnson
Vocals – Martha Copeland

11.    Martha Copeland–    Mama's Well Has Done Gone Dry 3:03
Cornet – Bubber Miley
Piano – J.C. Johnson
Vocals – Martha Copeland

12.    Martha Copeland–    I Ain't Your Hen Mister Fly Rooster 2:45
Cornet – Bubber Miley
Piano – J.C. Johnson
Vocals – Martha Copeland

13.    Irene Scruggs–    Home Town Blues 2:46
Alto Saxophone [Prob.] – Billy Paige
Banjo – Bud Scott
Clarinet, Soprano Saxophone – Albert Nicholas
Cornet – King Oliver
Drums – Paul Barbarin
Piano – Luis Russell
Trombone – Kid Ory
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

14.    Irene Scruggs–    Sorrow Valley Blues (C-230) 2:34
Alto Saxophone [Prob.] – Billy Paige
Banjo – Bud Scott
Clarinet, Soprano Saxophone – Albert Nicholas
Cornet – King Oliver
Drums – Paul Barbarin
Piano – Luis Russell
Trombone – Kid Ory

Vocals – Irene Scruggs
15.    Irene Scruggs–    Lonesome Valley Blues 3:17
Guitar – Lonnie Johnson 
Piano – DeLoise Searcy
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

16.    Irene Scruggs–    Sorrow Valley Blues (80820) 3:10
Guitar – Lonnie Johnson 
Piano – DeLoise Searcy
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

17.    Dixie Nolan - Johnnie Hardge–    Worried Love - Part 1 2:55
Guitar – Unknown Artist, Unknown Artist
Vocals – Irene Scruggs
Vocals, Piano [Prob.] – Johnny Hodges 

18.    Dixie Nolan - Johnnie Hardge–    Worried Love - Part 2 2:57
Guitar – Unknown Artist, Unknown Artist
Vocals – Irene Scruggs
Vocals, Piano [Prob.] – Johnny Hodges 

19.    Irene Scruggs–    You've Got What I Want 2:51
Piano [Poss.] – J. Norman Ebron
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

20.    Irene Scruggs–    I Want You To Give Me Some 2:57
Guitar – Unknown Artist
Piano [Poss.] – J. Norman Ebron
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

21.    Irene Scruggs–    My Back To The Wall 2:48
Guitar – Unknown Artist
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

22.    Irene Scruggs–    Borrowed Love 2:44
Guitar – Unknown Artist
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

23.    Irene Scruggs–    The Voice Of The Blues 2:52
Guitar – Unknown Artist
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

27.12.24

BLIND BLAKE — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 4 : 1929-1932 | DOCD-5027 (1991) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The fourth and final volume in Document's series assembles a wide range of Blind Blake material, from sides cut under the name Blind Arthur ("Guitar Chimes" and "Blind Arthur's Breakdown"), collaborations with vaudeville singer Chocolate Brown (a.k.a. Irene Scruggs), and even his sole two-part blues, the morbid "Rope Stretchin' Blues." Among the final pair of tracks, from mid-1932, the first, "Champagne Charlie Is My Name," is so atypical that some question whether it is even Blake at all; however, his last known side, "Depression's Gone from Me Blues," is a career-capping triumph -- just why he never recorded again is just one of the many mysteries which continue to swirl about this legendary figure.   Jason Ankeny

Abridged from this album’s original booklet notes. Despite the name of Blind Arthur being used for two guitar solos recorded in October 1929, there can be little doubt that it is Blind Blake who is playing his “famous piano-sounding guitar” (to quote a Paramount advertisement) on Guitar Chimes. It has the same use of harmonics as in Police Dog Blues (DOCD-5026) but played in the key of C and latterly commented on by a noted musicologist thus, “most country blues guitarists were not sufficiently well versed in C to have hazarded such an instrumental”. By comparison, Blind Arthur’s Breakdown is an object lesson in finger-picking, the playing more in keeping with the technique of Virginian, William Moore. For Baby Lou and Cold Love, Blake again returns to his theme of the mistreating lover, Baby Lou having the chord structure and tempo of the South American tango. In May the following year Blake was in the studio, both in his own right and as accompanist to former St. Louis vaudeville singer, Irene Scruggs. Recording as Chocolate Brown, on one song, Itching Heel, Scruggs scoffs at chauvinistic blues singers (“he don’t do nothing but play on his old guitar, while I’m busting suds in the white folks yard”) to which Blake, in knee-jerk reaction, responds by speeding up the rhythm indicating that the remark hadn’t escaped unnoticed. Diddie Wa Diddie No. 2, unlike the first song (DOCD-5026), now finds Blake admitting that he knows what “diddie wa diddie means” which he delivers with heavy irony. In his long career Blind Blake only once recorded a two part blues and in Rope Stretchin’ Blues, suitably sung to the tune of “St James Infirmary”, he uses the occasion to recount, with a degree of morbidity, the ultimate penalty resulting from the infidelities of others;

Don’t trust no woman who mistreats a man, when you think she’s in your kitchen cooking, she’s got a stranger by the hand,

I have a lots of women I sure don’t want none now, she always milks me dry, than ever you milk a cow.

Blind Blake’s final two recordings took place in June 1932 and so uncharacteristic is one of the songs that commentators have argued that perhaps two singers were involved with the session. Despite doubts it is fairly certain that Blake sings on Champagne Charlie Is My Name, a song composed by George Leybourne and set to music by Alfred Lee in 1868, found fame in the Victorian music hall. The equally topical Depression’s Gone From Me, appropriately sung to the tune of “Sitting On The Top Of The World”, witnessed Blind Blake ending his six year recording career and, one assumes, his life, on a positive note. DOCD-5027
Tracklist :
1    Blind Blake–    Sweet Jivin' Mama    2:56
2    Blind Blake–    Lonesome Christmas Blues 3:36
Piano [Poss./Or] – Aletha Dickerson, Tiny Parham
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake

3    Blind Blake–    Third Degree Blues 3:19
Piano [Poss./Or] – Aletha Dickerson, Tiny Parham
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake

4    Blind Arthur–    Guitar Chimes 2:57
Guitar – Blind Blake
5    Blind Arthur–    Blind Arthur's Breakdown 2:59
Guitar – Blind Blake
6    Blind Blake–    Baby Lou Blues    2:59
7    Blind Blake–    Cold Love Blues    2:54
8    Papa Charlie Jackson And Blind Blake–    Papa Charlie And Blind Blake Talk About It - Part I 3:14
Vocals, Banjo, Speech – Papa Charlie Jackson
Vocals, Guitar, Speech – Blind Blake

9    Papa Charlie Jackson And Blind Blake–    Papa Charlie And Blind Blake Talk About It - Part II 3:16
Vocals, Banjo, Speech – Papa Charlie Jackson
Vocals, Guitar, Speech – Blind Blake

10    Chocolate Brown–    Stingaree Man Blues 3:21
Guitar, Speech [comments] – Blind Blake
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

11    Chocolate Brown–    Itching Heel 3:16
Guitar, Speech [comments] – Blind Blake
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

12    Chocolate Brown–    You've Got What I Want 2:29
Guitar, Speech [comments] – Blind Blake
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

13    Chocolate Brown–    Cherry Hill Blues 3:00
Guitar, Speech [comments] – Blind Blake
Vocals – Irene Scruggs

14    Blind Blake–    Diddie Wa Diddie No. 2    3:25
15    Blind Blake–    Hard Pushing Papa    2:34
16    Blind Blake–    What A Low Down Place The Jailhouse Is    2:55
17    Blind Blake–    Ain't Gonna Do That No More    3:11
18    Blind Blake–    Playing Policy Blues    2:24
19    Blind Blake–    Righteous Blues    2:35
20    Laura Rucker–    Fancy Tricks 2:55
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Laura Rucker

21    Blind Blake–    Rope Stretchin' Blues - Part 2    2:46
22    Blind Blake–    Rope Stretchin' Blues - Part 1    2:58
23    Blind Blake–    Champagne Charlie Is My Name    2:29
24    Blind Blake–    Depression's Gone From Me Blues    3:30

FRANKIE "Half-Pint" JAXON — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order Volume 3 · 1937-1940 (1994) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

After cutting records with the Harlem Hamfats in Chicago during the years 1937 and 1938, Frankie "Half Pint" Jaxon made his final ...