VA - National Downhome Blues Festival, Vol. 1 (1996)

Artist: Various Artists
Title: National Downhome Blues Festival, Vol. 1
Year Of Release: 1996
Label: Southland Records
Genre: Acoustic Blues, Electric Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 70:40
Total Size: 404 MB | 168 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: National Downhome Blues Festival, Vol. 1
Year Of Release: 1996
Label: Southland Records
Genre: Acoustic Blues, Electric Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | MP3 320 kbps
Total Time: 70:40
Total Size: 404 MB | 168 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Lonnie Pitchford - That Train Coming Around The Bend (3:06)
02. Lonnie Pitchford - My Babe (2:19)
03. Lonnie Pitchford - Mary Had A Little Lamb (3:46)
04. Lonnie Pitchford - One-String Boogie (1:48)
05. Lonnie Pitchford - Walking Blues (2:09)
06. Lonnie Pitchford - Last Fair Deal (2:12)
07. Precious Bryant - Baby, Please Come Home To Me (2:22)
08. Precious Bryant - Ain't That Loving You, Baby (3:07)
09. Precious Bryant - Black Rat Swing (3:04)
10. Precious Bryant - You Don't Have To Go (2:26)
11. Precious Bryant - Long Distance Call (2:40)
12. Precious Bryant - Staggering Blues (2:15)
13. Thomas Burt - Hooks In The Water (3:43)
14. Thomas Burt - Hate To See The Evening Sun Go Down (6:22)
15. Thomas Burt - Ain't Got No Loving Baby Now (2:14)
16. Jessie Mae Hemphill - Train, Train (3:43)
17. Junior Kimbrough - All Night Long (3:36)
18. Sunnyland Slim - You Put That Thing On Me (3:22)
19. Sunnyland Slim - She's Got Things Going On (2:46)
20. Frank Edwards - Chicken Raid (3:13)
21. John Cephas & Phil Wiggins - Burning Bridges (4:10)
22. John Cephas & Phil Wiggins - Stagolee (6:07)
Recorded live at the National Downhome Blues Festival in Atlanta, Georgia, October 19-24, 1984.
The National Downhome Blues Festival was a one- time event held in 1984 in Atlanta, GA. Stretching over five days, the festival featured traditional blues artists in a small venue setting, and the shows were recorded, eventually released on four LPs in 1984. Southland has combined the first two of those LPs on a single disc (the second two have also been made into a single disc), and the result is an impressive primer on modern vernacular blues. The opening act, Mississippi's Lonnie Pitchford, steals the show right out of the gate with a wonderful set of six songs, four of which feature Pitchford on a one-string electric guitar (essentially a diddley bow). Blessed with a plaintive, convincing voice, Pitchford gives a glimpse of what traditional blues sounds like stripped of commercial aspirations. Precious Bryant, who follows Pitchford, sounds almost tame by comparison, but she delivers a crowd-pleasing set highlighted by her version of "Black Rat Swing." Jessie Mae Hemphill's rendition of "Train, Train" is another obvious highlight, as is Junior Kimbrough's signature "All Night Long" and Frank Edwards' surreal "Chicken Raid." This is blues that is still in service of its local communities, and the offhand, loose charm of these artists sets them aside from the bluster that usually passes for contemporary blues these days. ~Steve Leggett
The National Downhome Blues Festival was a one- time event held in 1984 in Atlanta, GA. Stretching over five days, the festival featured traditional blues artists in a small venue setting, and the shows were recorded, eventually released on four LPs in 1984. Southland has combined the first two of those LPs on a single disc (the second two have also been made into a single disc), and the result is an impressive primer on modern vernacular blues. The opening act, Mississippi's Lonnie Pitchford, steals the show right out of the gate with a wonderful set of six songs, four of which feature Pitchford on a one-string electric guitar (essentially a diddley bow). Blessed with a plaintive, convincing voice, Pitchford gives a glimpse of what traditional blues sounds like stripped of commercial aspirations. Precious Bryant, who follows Pitchford, sounds almost tame by comparison, but she delivers a crowd-pleasing set highlighted by her version of "Black Rat Swing." Jessie Mae Hemphill's rendition of "Train, Train" is another obvious highlight, as is Junior Kimbrough's signature "All Night Long" and Frank Edwards' surreal "Chicken Raid." This is blues that is still in service of its local communities, and the offhand, loose charm of these artists sets them aside from the bluster that usually passes for contemporary blues these days. ~Steve Leggett