Pink Anderson - Vol. 1: Carolina Blues Man (Remastered 2025) (2025) Hi-Res

  • 26 Aug, 00:06
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Vol. 1: Carolina Blues Man (Remastered 2025)
Year Of Release: 1984 / 2025
Label: Craft Recordings
Genre: Country Blues, Delta Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-192kHz
Total Time: 37:09
Total Size: 119 / 885 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. My Baby Left Me This Morning (Remastered 2025) (3:42)
02. Baby, Please Don't Go (Remastered 2025) (2:49)
03. Mama Where Did You Stay Last Night (Remastered 2025) (3:50)
04. Big House Blues (Remastered 2025) (4:05)
05. Meet Me In The Bottom (Remastered 2025) (3:33)
06. Weeping Willow Blues (Remastered 2025) (3:56)
07. Baby I'm Going Away (Remastered 2025) (2:59)
08. Thousand Woman Blues (Remastered 2025) (3:49)
09. I Had My Fun (Remastered 2025) (4:39)
10. Every Day In The Week (Remastered 2025) (3:47)

Pink Anderson was never a big name on the blues circuit, yet he was perhaps the most polished and personal of all the rural bluesmen who recorded for Prestige’s Bluesville subsidiary. He was seldom recorded during his long career which began around 1915 with his first of many associations with traveling medicine shows and ended with his death in 1973. He cut three fine albums for Bluesville during the early Sixties, this 1960 date being the first. Anderson, who had a strong influence on folk guitarists Roy Bookbinder and Paul Geremina, specialized in interpretations of blues standards, bringing to each a gentle, uniquely plaintive quality.

A vast majority of the known professional recordings of Piedmont blues legend Pink Anderson were documented during 1961, the notable exception being the platter he split with Rev. Gary Davis -- Gospel, Blues and Street Songs -- which was documented in the spring of 1950. This is the first of three volumes that were cut for the Prestige Records subsidiary Bluesville. Carolina Blues Man finds Anderson performing solo -- with his own acoustic guitar accompaniment -- during a session cut on his home turf of Spartanburg, SC. Much -- if not all -- of the material Anderson plays has been filtered through and tempered by the unspoken blues edict of taking a familiar (read: traditional) standard and individualizing it enough to make it uniquely one's own creation. Anderson's approach is wholly inventive, as is the attention to detail in his vocal inflections, lyrical alterations, and, perhaps more importantly, Anderson's highly sophisticated implementation of tricky fretwork. His trademark style incorporates a combination of picking and strumming chords interchangeably. This nets Anderson an advanced, seemingly electronically enhanced sound. "Baby I'm Going Away" -- with its walkin' blues rhythms -- contains several notable examples of this technique, as does the introduction to "Every Day of the Week." The track also includes some of the most novel chord changes and progressions to be incorporated into the generally simple style of the street singer/minstrel tradition from which Pink Anderson participated in during the first half of the 20th Century. Listeners can practically hear Anderson crack a smile as he weaves an arid humor with overtly sexual connotations into his storytelling -- especially evident on "Try Some of That" and "Mama Where Did You Stay Last Night." Aficionados and most all students of the blues will inevitably consider this release an invaluable primer into the oft-overlooked southern East Coast Piedmont blues.




  • Blackdog52
  •  13:12
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Thank you very much
  • whiskers
  •  20:04
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Many Thanks for HR