Last Session

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Last Session album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 35:37

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no, they're wrong

itazura

I know it's the blues, but damn, Blind Willie makes me smile. All this business about McTell's later recordings being sloppy, his voice being worn, etc. are very much off the mark, in my opinion. This is Blind Willie poised, confident, making references to his broad repetoire, and sure, maybe drunk, but this is the real deal...and as good as it gets. This recording and the also underappreciated 'Atlanta Twelve String' (unfortunately not available here) present the pinnacle of Blind Willie's development as a story teller and musician. Don't buy the hype about him being past his prime here -- this is an absolute gem -- among the best acoustic blues on record.

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Not the best way to go

KevinP

This was Blind Willie's last recording, as the title states. The only reason to get it is for completeness. Willie's voice on this recording is often noted for sounded old, but he was drinking throughout the session, so who's to say whether age or liquor or the combination of the two was the culprit? The last recording before this was nine years earler and he sounded very vibrant there. Although there are a few songs not done elsewhere, most of them are versions of songs that exist on other recordings in better versions. Incidentally, a deluxe box set containing, among many other things, the complete final session is being released in the near future, deamnding a very high asking price (US$179), though it's safe to say it won't be available on E-music.

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They Say All Music Guide

This recording has a less-than-stellar reputation, principally because it was done so late in McTell’s career, and it is true that he lacks some of the edge, especially in his singing, that he showed on his other postwar recordings. On the other hand, his 12-string playing is about as nimble as ever and a real treat. McTell cut these sides for record store owner Ed Rhodes, who had begun taping local bluesmen at his shop in Atlanta in the hope of releasing some of it — McTell took to the idea of recording only slowly, then turned up one night and played for the microphone and anyone who happened to be listening, finishing a pint of bourbon in the process — the result was a pricelessly intimate document, some of the words slurred here and there, but brilliantly expressive and stunningly played. No apologies are needed for “The Dyin’ Crapshooter’s Blues,” “Don’t Forget It,” or “Salty Dog,” however. McTell lived a few more years but never recorded again, which is a pity because based on this tape he still had a lot to show people. Rhodes never did anything with the tapes, and might’ve junked them if he hadn’t remembered how important the McTell material was — they turned out to be the only tapes he saved, out of all he’d recorded. – Bruce Eder

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