Blind Willie McTell -Statesboro Blues - The Early Years 1927-1935

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Blind Willie McTell -Statesboro Blues - The Early Years 1927-1935 album cover
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Total Tracks: 74   Total Length: 223:12

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Dion

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Even Pope John Paul II had the blues…
2005 | Label: Document Records / The Orchard

I did "Statesboro Blues" on Bronx in Blue. If you listen to every verse of that song, it's just incredible. He had a way with words. There's a funny thing in there — he's talking about the blues and he says, "My sister got 'em, daddy got 'em, brother got 'em, friends got 'em, I got 'em . . . I looked in the corner and Grandma and Grandpa had 'em, too." The point is, you don't have to be a young black guy in the '30s walking down a dark road to have the blues. It's universal. I mean, Pope John Paul II had the blues. But the thing about the blues is, you can also express love and passion and joy, and Blind Willie McTell did that, too.

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Get it NOW! NOW! NOW!

mr. mark

Awesome! "Razor Ball" is matchless, and this amazing collection has this classic in pretty good fidelity. BUT WAIT--THERE'S MORE! Check out "Georgia Rag", three (count 'em, three) versions of "Broke Down Engine", the incredible, politically incorrect "Southern Can Is Mine", and all the rest. And for no added cost, we throw in a third fantastic disc, with tunes ranging from "Ain't It Grand To Be A Christian" to "Let Me Play With Yo Yo-Yo". Do it for Dion! Do it for Dylan! Do it for duty, honor, and country! Push the button to get it all-Now Now Now!!!

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Dylan's endorsement

RevScreamin'BenJenkins

When Bob sang "no one can sing the blues like Blind Willie McTell" He wrote a better review than I or 1,000 critics could. This man was a helluva musician, and this set is a must for all blues fans. Blind, playing his 12 string, often accompanied by his wife-McTell was a phenom!

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he was blind all right

PeterBonde

and he went to a blind school... He was a top notch performer with some immotal recordings. Listen just to Statesboro Blues, and Mamma, Tain't Long Fo' Day - it's blues at it's very very best

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White Stripes be warned!

SongStrumpet

If the White Stripes and M. Ward haven't run across this cat, then my grandpappy didn't invent the cotton gin. This is the real thing, with unusual time changes. But was he truly blind?

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They Say All Music Guide

Blind Willie McTell is unique among country bluesmen in having a 30-year recording career while remaining essentially an itinerant musician, and during his lifetime he was a familiar sight on the streets of Atlanta and other Southern cities as he performed his varied repertoire of blues, rags, and vaudeville pieces on his 12-string guitar. This three-disc collection assembles all of his commercial 78s (as well as alternate takes) from Victor, Columbia, OKeh, and Vocalion, including his signature tune, the magnificent “Statesboro Blues.” Whether McTell actually wrote a lot of these songs (or merely adapted them) is unclear, but there is a sharp writer’s eye at work here, as evidenced by lines like “Mother died and left me reckless/Daddy died and left me wild” (from “Statesboro Blues”) or “I got the blues so bad/I can feel them in the dark” (from “Dark Night Blues”). These recordings feature the early McTell, when his voice was a high and expressive tenor — that voice deepened and grew rougher as a lifetime of street singing began to take its toll, and by the time Alan Lomax recorded him in the 1940s, McTell had slowed the pace of his songs down considerably as well. All three of the discs included here have been available as individual sets from Document, but having them all together in one package brings the full sweep of McTell’s commercial career into focus. Few country bluesmen of his day could boast as varied a repertoire, one that embraced deep blues, Piedmont, and hokum styles, as well as religious and gospel pieces, and he was a remarkably consistent performer in all of these guises. There are multiple takes of some songs that might irritate some casual listeners, and since the set unfolds chronologically, the pacing at times bogs down, but as the lion’s share of his life’s work, these recordings show why artists like Bob Dylan hold Blind Willie McTell in such high regard. – Steve Leggett

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