Post Description
Chicago’s Maxwell Street Market was once a hive of mercantile activity from the 1870s until it finally closed and fell silent in 1994. Like Beale Street in Memphis, this was also a home and a birth place for the blues. From Papa Charlie Jackson to Robert Nighthawk, Arvella Gray to John Wrencher, Maxwell Street played host to some of the best and greatest blues musicians and served as a working example where could be found one of the most iconic figures of the blues; the street musician. For many of them, such as Charley Jackson from New Orleans, Arvella Gray from Texas, Maxwell Street was a landing place for the many musicians who migrated from the South to Chicago, bringing with them their music and songs and making them part of the Chicago blues landscape.
In the summer of 1960 blues researchers and historians; Paul Oliver, John Steiner Bjorn Englund and Donald R. Hill took their notebooks and recording equipment to what was then a typical Sunday at the bustling and vibrant Maxwell Street Market.
01 - South Of The Border (Down Mexico Way)
02 - Tennessee Waltz
03 - Old Time Religion
04 - The Monkey & The Baboon
05 - I'm So Glad Good Whiskey's Back
06 - Fannie Mae
07 - Sugar Mama
08 - Good Mornin' Little Schoolgirl
09 - .38 Pistol
10 - 44 Blues
11 - Corinne, Corrina
12 - Have Mercy, Mr. Percy
13 - Railroad Work Songs & John Henry
14 - Have Mercy, Mr. Percy No. 2
15 - Freedom Riders
16 - Freedom Bus
17 - You Are My Dear
18 - Deborah Listen
19 - John Henry
20 - The Walking Blues
Various Artists Blues From Maxwell Street (1960-1965)
Label : Document
Recorded . July 11, 1960 in Chicago,.
Released : 2012
Format : Mp3 320kbps
Daddy Stovepipe (Johnny Watson); vocal, guitar and harmonica.
Blind James Brewer; vocal and guitar.
King David; vocal and harmonica.
Blind Arvella Gray; vocal and National steel guitar.
heel veel luister plezier ermee.
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