When she was just 13 and 14 years old, Helen Humes made her recording debut, cutting ten risque, double entendre-filled blues, naughty tunes that she later claimed to understand at the time. Until the release of this Classics CD in 1996, those numbers (which have backup in various settings by either De Loise Searcy or J.C. Johnson on piano, and Lonnie Johnson or the guitar duo team of Sylvester Weaver and Walter Beasley) had never been reissued on the same set before. Humes sounds fairly mature on the enjoyable blues sides. Her next session as a leader would not take place until 15 years later, when she was 28 and a veteran of Count Basie's Orchestra. The singer is heard here with groups in 1942 and 1944-1945, performing three numbers with altoist Pete Brown's sextet (a band including trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, who unfortunately does not solo), Leonard Feather's Hiptet (which has some rare solos from trumpeter Bobby Stark), and Bill Doggett's spirited octet. The latter date is highlighted by classic renditions of "He May Be Your Man" and "Be-Baba-Leba." Highly recommended. Scott Yanow
Tracklist + Credits :
4.7.23
HELEN HUMES – 1927-1945 | The Classics Chronological Series – 892 (1996) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
15.5.21
SYLVESTER WEAVER - Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order, Vol. 1 (1923-1927) DOCD-5112 (1992) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
Most of Sylvester Weaver's recorded works were reissued in his name by the Document label in the early '90s, and the first of two volumes covers most of his recording activity from November 1923 through August 1927. Weaver's initial appearance on records was as accompanist to blues singer Sara Martin, and while Document bundled most of their collaborations into Martin's four-volume Complete Recorded Works, she pops up here and there on this collection under the pseudonym Sally Roberts. "Where Shall I Be?" and "I Am Happy in Jesus" are sung by Weaver, "Roberts," and Hayes B. Withers. Two more gospel songs -- "I'm Going to Wait on the Lord" and "There's Plenty Room ‘Way in the Kingdom" -- were recorded by this vocal trio but do not appear to have been reissued anywhere. Six additional titles are Weaver/"Roberts" blues duets. "Steel String Blues" is an instrumental number played by Weaver, banjoist Charles Washington, and violinist E.L. Coleman, under whose name the record was originally issued. The rest of this collection is devoted to Weaver's solo guitar (with occasional vocal) or banjo ("Six-String Banjo Piece" and "Damfino Stomp"). Weaver was among the first blues guitarists ever to make records, and his slide technique is a marvel unto itself. Note that little or no remastering was employed to improve the sound quality of these historic OKeh sides. While some may bristle at having to hear this music exactly as it sounded when rising up off the surface of the original 78-rpm platters, that kind of authentic listening experience can and does have merit. Admittedly, it would be nice to hear the 1923 version of his famous "Guitar Rag" (later to become a staple of Western swing via the efforts of Bob Wills) in a slightly "cleaner" transfer using state-of-the-art noise reduction technology, but it is a fact that every technological advance has potential drawbacks and many early blues connoisseurs will swear by these authentic transfers, warts and all. Indeed, the way the tones emerge through a gentle mist of 78 rpm surface noise has a marvelous charm all its own, and for this reason, the strongest link to the atmosphere surrounding Weaver and his instrument when "Guitar Blues" and "Guitar Rag" were cut on November 2, 1923 might well be the unmodified playback experience described here. Of course, the 1927 remake of "Guitar Rag" was recorded using the new electrical process, so it sounds clearer and less scratchy. Generally speaking, this is a fine collection of rare early blues with a bit of gospel in the mix. It may be enjoyed casually while relaxing at home with trusted friends or loved ones who are willing and able to absorb this kind of magic without worrying about impressing those whose elevated technocratic expectations deprive them of the patience or sensitivity necessary for an intimate brush with history. arwulf arwulf
Tracklist :
1 Guitar Blues
2 Guitar Rag
3 Weaver’s Blues
4 Smoketown Strut
5 Mixing Them Up In C
6 I’m Busy And You Can’t Come In
7 Steel String Blues
8 Where Shall I Be?
9 I Am Happy In Jesus
10 Gonna Ramble Blues
11 Teasing Brown Blues
12 True Love Blues
13 Poor Boy Blues
14 Six-String Banjo Piece
15 Damfino Stump
16 Guitar Rag
17 Loving Is What I Crave
18 Useless Blues
19 Black Hearse Blues
20 Orn’ry Blues
21 Dad’s Blues
22 What Makes A Man Blue?
Credits :
Banjo – Charles Washington (tracks: 7), Sylvester Weaver (tracks: 14, 15)
Guitar – Sylvester Weaver (tracks: 1 to 13, 16 to 22)
Violin – E. L. Coleman (tracks: 7)
Vocals – Hayes B. Withers (tracks: 8, 9), Sally Roberts (tracks: 10, 11, 17, 18), Sara Martin (tracks: 8, 9, 19, 20), Sylvester Weaver (tracks: 8, 9, 12, 13, 21, 22)
SYLVESTER WEAVER - Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order, Vol. 2 (1927) (1992) DOCD-5113 | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
Document's second volume devoted to the (nearly) complete recordings of
blues guitarist Sylvester Weaver covers the second half of his brief
recording career, beginning with three titles waxed on August 31, 1927
and filling the rest of the picture with 18 sides cut three months later
on November 26, 27, and 30. Opening with the last two solo records he
is known to have made, this tasty collection gathers in all of Weaver's
collaborations with guitarist Walter Beasley, blended with five titles
featuring a young vocalist by the name of Helen Humes. Like Weaver a
native of Louisville KY, Humes was only 14 years old when she recorded
these salty sides with titles like "Cross Eyed Blues," "Garlic Blues,"
and "Nappy Headed Blues." Although Weaver is said to have "discovered"
her, Humes' recording debut actually took place more than half a year
earlier in April at the age of 13! The Weaver/Beasley duo was a fine
unit that compares and contrasts nicely with that of Lonnie Johnson and
Eddie Lang, who would begin making records together in November 1928
with Lang billed as Blind Willie Dunn in an attempt by the record
company to mask his whiteness. Many of the Weaver/Beasley duets were
issued under Weaver's name, and in fact the only titles released as by
Walter Beasley were "Georgia Skin" and "Southern Man Blues." Four titles
were recorded as by Weaver and Beasley: "Soft Steel Piston," "St. Louis
Blues," "Bottleneck Blues," and the delectable "Me and My Tapeworm,"
subtitled "Hungry Blues," which the squeamish management at OKeh left
unissued for some unaccountable reason. Taken at face value, a song
about an intestinal parasite occupies a special niche in musical history
alongside the "Mean Old Bedbug Blues," Memphis Minnie's report on her
bout with meningitis and other bracingly honest testimonials describing
problems that make the usual interpersonal relationship woes pale by
comparison. Think about it. What could bring on the blues more
viscerally than discovering that you are playing host to your very own
tapeworm? Years later, Alan "Duke of Ook" Seidler made a valiant effort
to explore this thorny issue with his "Oozing Cyst Blues," and dozens of
equally gross examples have probably surfaced since then in the blues
and other fecund genres. arwulf arwulf
Tracklist :
1 Can’t Be Trusted Blues
2 Penitentiary Bound Blues
3 Soft Steel Piston
4 Chittlin Rag Blues
5 Cross-Eyed Blues
6 Garlic Blues
7 Railroad Porter Blues
8 Me And My Tapeworm
9 Rock Pile Blues
10 Devil Blues
11 Polecat Blues
12 Alligator Blues
13 Nappy Headed Blues
14 Race Horse Blues
15 Bottleneck Blues
16 St. Louis Blues
17 Georgia Skin
18 Southern Man Blues
19 Toad Frog Blues
20 Sore Feet Blues
21 Black Spider Blues
Credits :
Guitar – Sylvester Weaver, Walter Beasley (tracks: 3 to 21)
Vocals – Helen Humes (tracks: 5, 6, 12 to 14), Sylvester Weaver (tracks: 1, 2, 4, 7 to 11, 21), Walter Beasley (tracks: 17 to 20)
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ESBJÖRN SVENSSON TRIO — Winter In Venice (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Esbjörn Svensson has stood not only once on stage in Montreux. He was already a guest in the summer of 1998 at the jazz festival on Lake Gen...