28.12.24

MEMPHIS MINNIE & KANSAS JOE — 1929-1934 Recordings In Chronological Order ★ Volume 4 • 1933-1934 | DOCD-5031 (1991) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Although the title credits the material herein to Memphis Minnie and Kansas Joe, very few of the tracks which comprise this volume are actually collaborative efforts between the duo -- by 1933 their personal and professional relationships were both on the rocks, with Minnie instead recording solo and Joe working with his guitarist brother Charlie. The Minnie solo sides which open the set are uniformly excellent, with the saucy "My Butcher Man" spotlighting her gifts as a lyricist and the Mississippi-styled "Too Late" underscoring her guitar prowess. By mid-1934, some measure of reconciliation had clearly been reached, as the couple was now performing together again; although their reunion was short-lived -- and their subsequent break final -- these last sides are also powerful, with the revealing "Moaning the Blues" capping their career in peak form. Jason Ankeny

Abridged from this album’s original booklet notes After a gap of almost two years Memphis Minnie returned to the studio in November 1933 but this time it was as a solo artist. The session only produced four numbers of which two were commercially released. My Butcher Man, a double-entendre employing some nice ‘meat cutting’ imagery (“slice my pork chop, grind my sausage too” etc) and culminating in the vivid,

If anybody ask you “butcher man where you bin?”, Show them that long bladed knife, tell ’em you’ve bin butchering out in that slaughter pen.

was coupled with the outstanding, Too Late, a blues that in structure and attack owed more to Mississippi than Memphis or Chicago, the superb guitar accompaniment so reminiscent of Mattie Delaney. Four months later, in March 1934, she returned to record a further two titles, Stinging Snake Blues and Drunken Barrel House, again without Joe McCoy. The reasons behind Joe McCoy‘s disappearance from the recording scene have never been explained, though artists who knew the couple reported that Joe couldn’t come to terms with Minnie’s success and as such was putting a strain on the marriage. However, they must have resolved their problems because in August 1934 they signed to the newly formed Decca label. The company policy was to undercut existing race labels by pricing all records at 35 cents. This was justified by maintaining that corresponding cuts in overheads would be achieved by keeping as many recordings as possible to a single take. In practice though this seldom happened as the two takes of Keep It To Yourself prove. It was in this climate that Memphis Minnie and Joe McCoy came to record their initial sessions for Decca and over a two month period they cut a mixture of duets and solo items. The reconciliation, however, was short lived and following their last recording, the magnificent if slightly prophetic, Moanin’ The Blues, they parted permanently. Ironically the split was to coincide with a shift in the tastes of black record buyers who were demanding less traditional sounds and more ‘swing’. Joe McCoy forged a career for himself under his own name, finally teaming up with the Harlem Hamfats and Memphis Minnie embarked upon a very busy recording career which will be covered by further discs in this series. DOCD-5031
Tracklist :
1    Memphis Minnie–    My Butcher Man 2:58
Vocals, Guitar – Memphis Minnie
2    Memphis Minnie–    Too Late 2:56
Vocals, Guitar – Memphis Minnie
3    Memphis Minnie–    Ain't No Use Trying To Tell On Me 3:11
Vocals, Guitar – Memphis Minnie
4    Memphis Minnie–    Stinging Snake Blues 3:01
Vocals, Guitar – Memphis Minnie
5    Memphis Minnie–    Drunken Barrel House Blues 2:50
Vocals, Guitar – Memphis Minnie
6    The Mississippi Mudder (Mud Dauber Joe)–    I Got To Have A Little More 3:16
Piano – Chuck Segar
Vocals – Unknown Artist
Vocals, Guitar – Kansas Joe McCoy
Washboard [Prob.] – Unknown Artist

7    The Mississippi Mudder (Mud Dauber Joe)–    Someday I'll Be In The Clay 3:12
Piano – Jimmie Gordon
Vocals, Guitar – Kansas Joe McCoy
Washboard [Prob.] – Unknown Artist

8    Kansas Joe McCoy–    Evil Devil Woman Blues 3:10
Guitar [Poss.] – Charlie McCoy
Vocals, Guitar – Kansas Joe McCoy

9    Kansas Joe McCoy–    Going Back Home Blues 3:02
Guitar [Poss.] – Charlie McCoy
Vocals, Guitar – Kansas Joe McCoy

10    Kansas Joe McCoy–    Meat Cutter Blues 2:52
Guitar [Poss.] – Charlie McCoy
Vocals, Guitar – Kansas Joe McCoy

11    Memphis Minnie And Kansas Joe–    You Got To Move - Part I 3:02
Vocals, Guitar – Kansas Joe, Memphis Minnie
12    Memphis Minnie–    Keep It To Yourself 2:47
Vocals, Guitar – Memphis Minnie
13    Memphis Minnie–    Keep It To Yourself 2:55
Vocals, Guitar – Memphis Minnie
14    Memphis Minnie–    Chickasaw Train Blues (Low Down Dirty Thing) 3:15
Vocals, Guitar – Memphis Minnie
15    Memphis Minnie–    Banana Man Blues (I Don't Want That Thing) 3:02
Vocals, Guitar – Memphis Minnie
16    Memphis Minnie And Kansas Joe–    You Got To Move - Part II 2:47
Vocals, Guitar – Kansas Joe, Memphis Minnie
17    Memphis Minnie And Kansas Joe–    Hole In The Wall 3:11
Vocals, Guitar – Kansas Joe, Memphis Minnie
18    Memphis Minnie And Kansas Joe–    Give It To Me In My Hand (Can I Go Home With You) 3:25
Vocals, Guitar – Kansas Joe, Memphis Minnie
19    Memphis Minnie–    Squat It 2:48
Guitar – Kansas Joe McCoy
Vocals, Guitar – Memphis Minnie

20    Memphis Minnie–    Moaning The Blues 3:05
Guitar – Kansas Joe McCoy
Vocals, Guitar – Memphis Minnie

27.12.24

BLIND BLAKE — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 1 : 1926-1927 | DOCD-5024 (1991) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Blind Blake, one of the top blues guitarists and singers of the 1920s, is a mystery figure whose birth and death dates are not definitively known. He recorded 84 selections in six years (1926-1932), and fortunately all have been reissued on four Document CDs. Vol. 1 mostly features Blake in unaccompanied performances other than six numbers backing singer Leola Wilson, one song in which he is joined by a kazoo player and two in which someone plays rattlebones behind his guitar. Among the classics heard on this CD are "Early Morning Blues," "Too Tight," "Come on Boys Let's Do That Messin' Around," and "Seabord Stomp." All four of Blind Blake's Document CDs are essential for every serious blues collection. Scott Yanow

Abridged from this album’s original booklet notes. Over a six year period Blind Blake recorded eighty-four titles together with numerous as house guitarist to artists like Papa Charlie Jackson, Ma Rainey, Leola B. Wilson and Irene Scruggs. This compilation covers his formative years and it has been surmised that initially he made three visits between August and December 1926 to Paramount’s Chicago studio. Blake’s first record West Coast Blues / Early Morning Blues was released on October 2 1926, the former title being basically a dance piece with Blake’s jaunty voice exhorting his listeners to do that old country rock, underpinning the spoken lyric with sophisticated, ragtime guitar accompaniment, taking the opportunity to incorporate a popular advertising slogan of the day (Good to the last drop, just like Maxwell House coffee). Early Morning Blues, on the other hand, was lyrically far more menacing, his warm, wistful and insinuating voice, at times reminiscent of Lonnie Johnson’s approach, giving lie to the seriousness of the subject (When you see me sleeping, baby don’t you think I’m drunk, I got one eye on my pistol, the other one on your trunk).
 
The role of Blind Blake as accompanist to Leola B. Wilson, an artist who sang on the vaudeville circuit, displays his ability to use double and stop time phrases, as well as managing to copy her vocal range on Down The Country Blues, a number inspired by a Bessie Smith song. The instrumental, Buck Town Dance, with kazoo playing from Dad Nelson, was probably the model for the piece so often recorded by John Hurt and Gary Davis during the 1960s while Dry Bone Shuffle and That Will Never Happen No More have noticeable echoes of minstrel and white influence. As both were recorded as part of a hillbilly session by the Kentucky Thorobreds perhaps Paramount were hoping to sell Blind Blake to both markets. Blake’s true guitar genius is evinced with Sea Board Stomp (perhaps the basis for some of Big Bill Broonzy’s stomps) where, not satisfied with emulating instruments like cornet, saxophone and trombone, he also treats his audience to a lesson in the syncopations of Dixieland Jazz. DOCD-5024
Tracklist :
1    Leola B. Wilson–    Dying Blues 2:45
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Leola B. Wilson

2    Leola B. Wilson–    Ashley St. Blues 2:58
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Leola B. Wilson

3    Blind Blake–    Early Morning Blues 2:52
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
4    Blind Blake–    West Coast Blues 3:09
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
5    Blind Blake–    Early Morning Blues 3:00
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
6    Blind Blake–    Too Tight 2:30
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
7    Blind Blake–    Blake's Worried Blues 3:03
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
8    Blind Blake–    Come On, Boys, Let's Do That Messin' Around 2:43
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
9    Blind Blake–    Tampa Bound 2:41
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
10    Blind Blake–    Skeedle Loo Doo Blues 3:05
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
11    Blind Blake–    Skeedle Loo Doo Blues 3:01
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
12    Blind Blake–    Stonewall Street Blues 2:53
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
13    Leola B. Wilson–    State Street Men Blues 3:09
Guitar – Blind Blake
Piano [possibly] – Jimmy Blythe

Vocals – Leola B. Wilson
14    Leola B. Wilson–    Down The Country 2:32
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Leola B. Wilson

15    Leola B. Wilson–    Black Biting Bee Blues 2:45
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Leola B. Wilson

16    Leola B. Wilson–    Wilson Dam 2:34
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Leola B. Wilson

17    Blind Blake With His Kazoo Band–    Buck-Town Blues 2:53
Guitar – Blind Blake
Kazoo [possibly] – Dad Nelson

18    Blind Blake–    Black Dog Blues 2:47
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
19    Blind Blake–    One Time Blues 2:36
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
20    Blind Blake–    Bad Feeling Blues 2:26
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
21    Blind Blake–    Dry Bone Shuffle 2:40
Bones [Rattlebones] – Unknown Artist
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake

22    Blind Blake–    That Will Never Happen No More 3:02
Bones [Rattlebones] – Unknown Artist
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake

23    Blind Blake–    Brownskin Mama Blues 2:36
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
24    Blind Blake–    Hard Road Blues 2:36
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
25    Blind Blake–    Hey, Hey, Daddy Blues 3:09
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
26    Blind Blake–    Sea Board Stomp 3:01
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake

BLIND BLAKE — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 2 : 1927-1928 | DOCD-5025 (1991) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Guitarist/singer Blind Blake's entire recorded output has been made available on four Document CDs. Vol. 2 covers a busy seven-month period and features Blake in several different diverse but equally rewarding settings. He performs solo; backs singers Elzadie Robinson, Bertha Henderson, and Daniel Brown; and holds his own with clarinetist Johnny Dodds and percussionist/xylophonist JImmy Bertrand in a jazz set. There are many memorable numbers among the 25 songs on this CD, including "Southern Rag," "He's in the Jailhouse Now," "Hot Potatoes" (an exuberant instrumental with Dodds), "Southbound Rag," and "No Dough Blues." Blind Blake at his best, but get all four volumes. Scott Yanow

Blind Blake’s guitar brilliance shines in this collection, featuring collaborations with top jazz and blues talents. His mastery of “ragtime guitar” dazzles on “Southern Rag”, where he blends African rhythms, Gullah influences, and sharp chord changes. This track reflects his roots and pioneering style. Blake’s versatility is evident in his accompaniment of artists like Elzadie Robinson and Bertha Henderson, where he switches effortlessly between guitar and piano. His one-man band approach on “Panther Squall”, using harmonica and guitar simultaneously, showcases his ingenuity. Blind Blake Complete Recorded Works Vol 2  Highlights include:

    Johnny Dodds: Clarinet brilliance on “Hot Potatoes” and “Southbound Rag”
    Jimmy Bertrand: Slide whistle and xylophone adding texture
    Bertha Henderson: Vocals complemented by Blake’s piano on “Let Your Love Come Down”
    Elzadie Robinson: Energetic performance on “Pay Day Daddy”

This volume captures Blake’s unique blend of blues, ragtime, and early jazz, solidifying his place as a guitar legend. DOCD-5025
Tracklist :
1    Blind Blake–    You Gonna Quit Me Blues 2:43
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
2    Blind Blake–    Steel Mill Blues 3:10
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
3    Blind Blake–    Southern Rag 2:50
Guitar, Speech – Blind Blake
4    Blind Blake–    He's In The Jailhouse Now 2:42
Banjo – Gus Cannon
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake

5    Blind Blake–    Wabash Rag 2:51
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
6    Blind Blake–    Doggin' Me Mama Blues 3:11
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
Xylophone, Vocals, Speech – Jimmy Bertrand

7    Blind Blake–    C.C. Pill Blues 3:11
Clarinet – Johnny Dodds
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
Slide Whistle – Jimmy Bertrand

8    Blind Blake–    Hot Potatoes 3:01
Clarinet – Johnny Dodds
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
Slide Whistle, Wood Block, Vocals, Speech – Jimmy Bertrand

9    Blind Blake–    Southbound Rag 3:19
Clarinet – Johnny Dodds
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
Xylophone – Jimmy Bertrand

10    Elzadie Robinson–    Pay Day Daddy Blues 2:51
Clarinet – Johnny Dodds
Guitar, Whistle – Blind Blake
Vocals – Elzadie Robinson
Xylophone – Jimmy Bertrand

11    Elzadie Robinson–    Elzadie's Policy Blues 3:10
Clarinet – Johnny Dodds
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Elzadie Robinson
Xylophone – Jimmy Bertrand

12    Blind Blake–    Goodbye Mama Moan 2:46
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
13    Blind Blake–    Tootie Blues 2:59
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
14    Blind Blake–    That Lovin' I Crave 2:40
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
15    Bertha Henderson–    That Lonesome Rave 3:09
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Bertha Henderson

16    Bertha Henderson–    Terrible Murder Blues 2:58
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Bertha Henderson

17    Bertha Henderson–    Leavin' Gal Blues 2:49
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Bertha Henderson

18    Blind Blake–    No Dough Blues 2:52
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
19    Bertha Henderson–    Lead Hearted Blues 2:33
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Bertha Henderson

20    Bertha Henderson–    Let Your Love Come Down 2:27
Piano – Blind Blake
Vocals – Bertha Henderson

21    Blind Blake–    Rumblin' And Ramblin' Boa Constrictor Blues 2:49
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
22    Blind Blake–    Bootleg Rum Dum Blues 2:54
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
23    Blind Blake–    Detroit Bound Blues 3:06
Guitar, Vocals – Blind Blake
24    Daniel Brown –    Beulah Land 3:08
Guitar – Blind Blake
Piano – Tiny Parham
Vocals – Daniel Brown
Washboard – Unknown Artist

25    Blind Blake–    Panther Squall Blues 2:52
Guitar, Vocals, Harmonica [possibly] – Blind Blake
Harmonica [possibly] – George "Bullet" Williams

BLIND BLAKE — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 3 : 1928-1929 | DOCD-5026 (1991) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The third volume in the series opens with a pair of mid-1928 tracks featuring Blind Blake in the role of sideman, lending his brilliant guitar leads in support of Elzadie Robinson on "Elzadie's Policy Blues" and "Pay Day Daddy Blues." Blake's next session, from later that same year, returns him to the fore, yielding the mesmerizing "Notoriety Woman," one of the most menacingly violent tracks he ever cut; the same date also produced the comparatively lighthearted "Sweet Papa Low Down," a seeming attempt to cash in on the Charleston dance craze. The real jewel of the set, however, is a 1929 session teaming him with pianist Charlie Spand; "Hastings St." is a lively, swinging guitar and piano duet, while "Police Dog Blues" is among Blake's most vividly lyrical efforts, further galvanized by his haunting instrumental work. Jason Ankeny

Abridged from this album’s original booklet notes. Blind Blake, one of the top blues guitarists and singers of the 1920s, is a mystery figure whose birth and death dates are not definitively known. He recorded 84 selections in six years (1926-1932), and all have been reissued on four Document albums (DOCD-5024, DOCD-5025, DOCD-5026, DOCD-5027). By 1928 Blind Blake had gathered a faithful following, his appeal probably being due to the scope of his material, his popularity rivaling that of Blind Lemon Jefferson. The third volume in the series opens featuring Blake in the role of sideman, lending his brilliant guitar leads in support of Elzadie Robinson on Elzadie’s Policy Blues and Pay Day Daddy Blues. Returning to recording under his own name, a session, or sessions, held during September 1928 seemed to find Blake obsessed by women and the problems they were causing him, at times sounding lachrymal and despondent Search Warrant, Back Door, desperate Walkin’ Across The Country and positively violent as in Notoriety Woman, “To keep her quiet I knocked her teeth out her mouth, that notoriety woman is known all over the south”. The final number recorded that month, Sweet Papa Low Down, with its cornet, piano and xylophone accompaniment, evoke the kind of bouncy tune popular with practitioners of the Charleston dance craze. It was to be a further nine months before Blake recorded again, this time in company with pianist Alex Robinson. The five titles cut were of a far less suicidal nature than previous and on one number in particular, Doin’ A Stretch, his approach owed much to the style of Leroy Carr. There then followed a session in August 1929 which teamed him with Detroit pianist Charlie Spand that was to produce some of Blind Blake’s most vital and memorable recordings of his career. Hastings St., a swinging, boogie based piano and guitar duet, is primarily a showcase for the talents of Spand with the vocal banter between the pair celebrating the good times to be found in Detroit’s Black Bottom, “Out on Hastings Street doing the boogie, umm, umm, very woogie” in much the same manner as John Lee Hooker did in “Boogie Chillun” twenty years later. One of the best known mythical themes in black folklore is that of Diddie Wa Diddie, a kind of heaven on earth, a utopia of no work, no worries and all the food one could wish for. Blind Blake, while playing some mesmerising guitar, pokes fun at the idea, claiming that as far as he’s concerned it’s a “great big mystery”, his Diddie Wa Diddie is one for sexual gratification. The following year he cynically accepted the meaning (see Document DOCD-5027). The theme was taken up by in the 5Os by popular R&B singer, Bo Diddley. The unmistakable resonance of the steel-bodied National guitar introduces Police Dog Blues, one of Blake’s most lyrical songs and is notable for his use of the harmonics during the instrumental breaks, where he makes the guitar sound “most like a piano” (to borrow Leadbelly’s description of the technique). The haunting melody of Georgia Bound is common to the blues having been used by Charlie Patton (“Tom Rushen” – Document DOCD- 5009), Big Bill Broonzy (“Shelby County Blues” – document DOCD-5051) and Robert Johnson (“From Four Till Late”), to name but some, the sentiments of the song bearing an air of weary resignation suggesting that Blind Blake had more than just a passing acquaintance with the State. Despite the onset of the Depression, Blake went on recording, albeit sporadically, until 1932, lasting longer than many others as demonstrated in the final Document album of his work, Volume 4 (DOCD-5027). DOCD-5026
Tracklist :
1    Elzadie Robinson–    Elzadie's Policy Blues 3:12
Clarinet – Johnny Dodds
Guitar, Whistle – Blind Blake
Vocals – Elzadie Robinson
Xylophone – Jimmy Bertrand

2    Elzadie Robinson–    Pay Day Daddy Blues 3:07
Clarinet – Johnny Dodds
Guitar – Blind Blake
Vocals – Elzadie Robinson
Xylophone – Jimmy Bertrand

3    Blind Blake–    Walkin' Across The Country 3:06
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
4    Blind Blake–    Search Warrant Blues 2:59
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
5    Blind Blake–    Ramblin' Mama Blues 2:48
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
6    Blind Blake–    New Style Of Loving 2:37
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
7    Blind Blake–    Back Door Slam Blues 2:45
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
8    Blind Blake–    Notoriety Woman Blues 2:45
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
9    Blind Blake–    Cold Hearted Mama Blues 2:50
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
10    Blind Blake–    Low Down Loving Gal 3:09
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
11    Blind Blake–    Sweet Papa Low Down 3:13
Cornet, Piano – Unknown Artist
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
Xylophone – Jimmy Bertrand

12    Blind Blake–    Poker Woman Blues 2:40
Piano [possibly] – Alex Robinson
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake

13    Blind Blake–    Doing A Stretch 2:36
Piano [possibly] – Alex Robinson
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake

14    Blind Blake–    Fightin' The Jug 2:53
Piano [possibly] – Alex Robinson
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake

15    Blind Blake–    Hookworm Blues 2:54
Piano [possibly] – Alex Robinson
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake

16    Blind Blake–    Slippery Rag 2:44
Guitar, Speech [probably] – Blind Blake
Piano [possibly] – Alex Robinson

17    Blind Blake–    Hastings St. 3:12
Guitar, Speech – Blind Blake
Piano – Charlie Spand

18    Blind Blake–    Diddie Wa Diddie 2:56
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
19    Blind Blake–    Too Tight Blues, No. 2 2:54
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
20    Blind Blake–    Chump Man Blues 2:49
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
21    Blind Blake–    Ice Man Blues 3:09
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
22    Blind Blake–    Police Dog Blues 2:50
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
23    The Hokum Boys –    I Was Afraid Of That -- Part 2 3:14
Piano [possibly] – Aletha Dickerson
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake

24    Blind Blake–    Georgia Bound 3:20
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake
25    Blind Blake–    Keep It Home
Vocals, Guitar – Blind Blake

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

JOSEPH GABRIEL RHEINBERGER : Organ Works • 5 (Wolfgang Rübsam) (2003) The Organ Encyclopedia Series | Two Version | WV (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless

Although Rheinberger was successful during his lifetime in a variety of genres, he is remembered today largely for his demanding organ works...