|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Big Bill Broonzy Sings Folk Songs

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (78 ratings)
Big Bill Broonzy Sings Folk Songs album cover
01
Backwater Blues
2:50 $0.99
02
This Train
3:00 $0.99
03
I Don't Want No Woman (To Try To Be My Boss)
3:08 $0.99
04
Martha
5:00 $0.99
05
Tell Me Who
3:41 $0.99
06
Bill Bailey
1:57 $0.99
07
Alberta
2:13 $0.99
08
Goin' Down This Road
2:22 $0.99
09
Tell Me What Kind Of Man Jesus Is
2:16 $0.99
10
John Henry
4:44 $0.99
11
Glory Of Love
3:23 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 34:34

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Yancey Strickler

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
The chugging sound of locomotive blues.
Label: Smithsonian Folkways

On this 1956 recording, the Chicago-born bluesman Big Bill Broonzy provides arguably the greatest performance of "John Henry" ever. Broonzy, a Carnegie Hall performer and favorite of the legendary John Hammond, absolutely steamrolls this traditional, hammering at his six strings so ferociously that they sound industrial, its 4/4 gait chugging like a locomotive, his voice — which changes in volume as his picking sends him reeling from the microphone — soaring and insatiable. Halfway through the pace accelerates as a banjo arrives like a flash flood, the song's inherent momentum impossible to stop.

Write a Review 3 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Big Bill Broonzy Sings Folk Songs

zaw333

BIG BILL AND THIS TRAIN, can I say more?

user avatar

Born in Mississippi

kjc

Friendly reminder - He was born in Scott, Mississippi on the banks of the Mississippi River. He moved to Chicago after his service in the Army, and Chicago was his home, but he was born elsewhere. Feel free to remove this "review" after someone, hopefully, makes the correction in above eMusic review. Otherwise, love the collection.

user avatar

Big Bill'f Folk Years

RayC

Big Bill carried the blues to the white folks during the folk years it seems. I've been hunting for something of this quality for years, subsisting on Mickey Baker's renditions of Bill's songs. It's a pleasure to hear the clear tuff voice of the big guy.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

If You Like Paul McCartney

By eMusic Editorial Staff, eMusic Contributor

Of course downloading Paul McCartney's new album, Memory Almost Full, is a no brainer. But what do you download after that? Here we bring you 24 recommendations, from the well-known (the top section) to the not-so-well known (the middle section) to the downright obscure (the bottom). All of these titles pay heed to Macca's incredible sense of melody and tunesmanship, and all will be excellent additions to your library. more »

0

An intro to Smithsonian Folkways Recordings

By Administrator, eMusic Contributor

Moses Asch, the son of a Yiddish novelist, began releasing "people's music," as he dubbed it, in 1948, when he founded Folkways Records. Under the Folkways name, Asch documented all facets of sound — be it human, animal, junkyard or office — eventually releasing more than 2,000 albums. In the '50s and '60s, Folkways became synonymous with the folk music that Asch helped popularize, perhaps in part because its aim was so similar to his own:… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Often ranked with such blues greats as Robert Johnson, Son House, and Elmore James, Big Bill Broonzy was for many years the last surviving practitioner of the “Delta” style of blues. This record, cut for Smithsonian Folkways in 1956, captures Broonzy late in his career but still during the peak of his power. Indeed, a more magisterial performance could not be imagined. While born and raised on the Mississippi, Broonzy takes this opportunity to demonstrate the range of musical influences he’s successfully mastered over the course of his career. Proving to be equally at home in both country-folk and straight blues idioms, Broonzy offers sparkling renditions of both “Alberta” and “John Henry,” where Broonzy sings an interesting set of uncommon lyrics, bending the melody with an inspired blues shift. On “This Train,” Broonzy works the call and response with a gospel choir and scathingly delivers the line, “This train carries both white and black now.” Perhaps simply to prove a point, he closes with the slightly more contemporary standard “Glory of Love,” sweetly inflecting the chorus with a tender bit of jazz lyricism. While this is not considered “the” Broonzy album to own, it is, nonetheless, a very good one, and has the obvious advantage of being kept continuously in print by Smithsonian Folkways. – Brian Whitener

more »