brokedownpalace10
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2022
- Messages
- 2,696
TY I ve never head of thidmovie ,I ll check it out @Zopiclone bandit !And now for some more Son House....Watched the film "Two Trains Runnin" last night all about Skip James & Son House
TY I ve never head of thidmovie ,I ll check it out @Zopiclone bandit !And now for some more Son House....
In my opinion, R.L Burnside´s best album.With some exception I m not a big fan of electric blues in general; Also perfect timing , i was trying to explain to my bandmates why I am so obessed by acoutic blues and the thing is is UNIVERSAL, like no other music will ever be, and is a tool with which you can talk about anything, from Jesus to drugs and booze, and it will ALWAYS work. Today I ve played this one to a guy who has sever depression and does not know a word of english and ...he felt better. And we ve never met, probably will never meet, still we got this connection . Dunno whether is the mix of morphine coke and booze with a xanax to finally go to sleep but there ´s definitely something that the blues has and other bmusic lack. Maybe because , as Alan Lmax said, Poor s boys long away from home described perfectly the general condition of the humanity of the XXI century? Here s trhe song I ve played to the guy (obviously in a simplified version)
Do you guys play any instrument ? Do you have some songs that you love so much that the very idea of playing them in public make you overanxious, like a teen flopping with the girl of gthis dreams? I ve two songs I feel I will never be enough to play as I ld love to, they are not even THAt difficult but they are so amazing that I feel I will never be able to make a decent version of them. One is this :
The first Rev song I heard was Samson and Delilah on a community radio station 20 years ago. Damn near fell out of my chair. I'm no longer a believer but was raised Christian and the story of Samson in the book of Judges was my all time favorite Bible story, which made the song that much more meaningful to me.
I started out on acoustic guitar and recorded 5 solo albums of all original songs, 90% fingerpicking. Transitioned to clawhammer banjo about 7-8 years ago and hardly play guitar anymore. For every 20-30 songs I've written, I have learned maybe one cover. Currently the only covers I can remember all the words to are Dylan's Don't Think Twice and Snake Mountain Blues by Townes Van Zandt. I transcribed both from guitar chords to clawhammer banjo.
As for that one song I can't play in public, maybe 15 years ago I learned to fingerpick Mississippi John Hurt's song Louis Collins note for note. It took me nearly two months to learn and about two weeks to forget. lol. I was so intimidated by the complexity of the song that I never got around to recording it or performing it in public. Looking back the song is actually pretty simple and repetitive but at the time it was like climbing Mount Everest.
I learned Louis Collins from watching this guy's video. I remember the video being longer where he played fast and slow and kind of walked you through the steps. I don't know why he shortened it to be fast only but here it is:
Might be too "jam-y" for ya, but I like this one.
One of my very favorite guitarists is Jorma Kaukonen. He did Gary Davis stuff and sung his praises.
Jelly Roll Morton as well. He is who got me into learning about older stuff.
Are you familiar with Jorma's fingerpicking?Jam music doesn't bother me and I love Billy Strings, he is truly a guitar virtuoso. BS certainly puts his own flavor on the songs he covers, which is pretty cool too. The only thing is that most of what I love about the Rev's music is his fingerpicking. IMHO take away Rev's distinctive picking style and he's just another regular old blues player![]()