Norky's Musical Vertex
19 plays

Old Devil, by Armenter “Bo Carter” Chatmon (1938).

34 plays

The World Is Going Wrong, by The Mississippi Sheiks (1931).

79 plays

Goin’ Down To The River, by Mississippi Fred McDowell. Electric and live.

29 plays

My Mama Don’t Allow Me, by Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup.

29 plays

Don’t Throw Your Love On Me So Strong, by T-Bone Walker (live, 1962).

G.O.P. Offers Delegates Official Tips on Pretending to Like Mitt Romney : The New Yorker

G.O.P. Offers Delegates Official Tips on Pretending to Like Mitt Romney : The New Yorker

29 plays

Birmingham Gambler, by Curley Weaver (1934).

39 plays

Blues Trip Me This Morning, by Tommy McClennan (1942). I’ve blogged a dozen songs now by the underrated McClennan and his friend and “sound-alike,” Robert Petway, since I heard them for the first time a little over a year ago. Tommy’s rough, raspy voice reminds me of Tom Waits. His guitar style, throwing in chord changes when the mood strikes him, recalls Robert Johnson. Honeyboy Edwards once described Tommy’s style in an interview: “He just play the blues. Play straight blues. There wasn’t nothin’ betwixt nothin’. Just straight go.” That’s a good description of McClennan’s music: just straight go!” For more, check these out: It’s Hard To Be Lonesome (2/28/12), Drop Down Mama (1/5/2012), along with the following tunes in 2011: You Can Mistreat Me Here (12/21), Whiskey-Head Woman (7/3), I’m A Guitar King (7/17), My Little Girl (9/12),Cotton Patch Blues (10/28), Travelin’ Highway Man (10/31), Mr. So And So (11/1), Crosscut Saw (11/2), and New Sugar Mama (11/20).

59 plays

John Henry, by Mississippi Fred McDowell. Live and electrified.

49 plays

Worried Life Blues, by Otis Spann (1960).

39 plays

Ashes In My Whiskey, by Walter Davis and Henry Townsend.

29 plays

Old Time Rider, by Clifford Gibson.

39 plays

Alley Boogie, by Lucille Bogan. The more of these 80-year-old blues jams I dig up, the more I’m convinced that rock ‘n’ roll began many years before the generally accepted year of 1955.

60 plays

Police Station Blues, by Peetie Wheatstraw (1902-1941).

29 plays

Papa Tree Top Blues, by Albinia Jones (1947). With Sammy Price on piano and the great Leonard Ware on electric guitar.