Complete Plantation Recordings

Complete Plantation Recordings

Complete Plantation Recordings

ASIN: B0001XANUS

Track Listings
 
1. Dallas
2. Heart You Left Behind
3. She Had Everything
4. Tonight I Think I'm Gonna Go Downtown
5. Waiting for a Train
6. Rose from the Mountain
7. You've Never Seen Me Cry
8. Jole Blon
9. Bhagavan Decreed
10. Keeper of the Mountain
11. Hello Stranger
12. Down in My Hometown
13. One Road More
14. One Day at a Time
15. Stars in My Life
16. Not So Long Ago
17. I Know You

Complete Plantation Recordings,The Flatlanders,Varese Records,Alternative Country-Rock,Americana,Country,Pop,Progressive Country,Singer/Songwriter,United States of America
The Complete Plantation Recordings
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Indispensable Early Work of a Blues Genius
  • Muddy's Delta Blues
  • Muddy's Real Real Folk Blues
  • Muddy Waters' first recordings
  • The birth of a legend of the 20the century
The Complete Plantation Recordings
Muddy Waters
Manufacturer: Chess
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

Chicago BluesChicago Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
Delta BluesDelta Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Blues | Styles | Music
Traditional BluesTraditional Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
Electric Blues GuitarElectric Blues Guitar | Blues | Styles | Music
Acoustic BluesAcoustic Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
Slide GuitarSlide Guitar | Blues | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Traditional Country | Country | Styles | Music
$7.99 and Under$7.99 and Under | Blowout Music | Stores | Music
CountryCountry | Styles | Blowout Music | Stores | Music
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ASIN: B000002OC1
Release Date: 1993-06-08

Tracks:

  1. Country Blues (Number One)
  2. Interview #1 (Previously Unissued)
  3. I Be's Troubled
  4. Interview #2 (Previously Unissued)
  5. Burr Clover Farm Blues (Previously Unissued)
  6. Interview #3 (Previously Unissued)
  7. Ramblin' Kid Blues (Partial. Previously Unissued)
  8. Ramblin' Kid Blues
  9. Rosalie
  10. Joe Turner (Vocal: Percy Thomas)
  11. Pearlie May Blues (Vocal: Percy Thomas)
  12. Take A Walk With Me (Second Guitar: Son Simms)
  13. Burr Clover Blues (Second Guitar: Son Simms)
  14. Interview #4 (Previously Unrelaeased)
  15. I Be Bound To Write To You
  16. I Be Bound To Write To You (Second Version, Second Guitar: Charles Berry, Previously Unissued)
  17. You're Gonna Miss Me When I'm Gone (Number One)
  18. You Got To Take Sick & Die Some Of These Days
  19. Why Don't You Live So God Can Use You
  20. Country Blues
  21. You're Gonna Miss Me When I'm Gone
  22. 32-20 Blues

Amazon.com essential recording

This is a treasure trove--for the Muddy Waters fan, for the blues historian, for the country-blues enthusiast. Alan Lomax, searching for Robert Johnson (recently deceased), came through and recorded a young McKinley Morganfield. The rest is history. Early versions of future classics can be found on these field recordings from 1941-42, and the guitar and voice that would have unimaginable influence on blues and rock & roll. There's no Chicago yet in these often-scratchy recordings, but if you listen, you can hear where it came from. --Genevieve Williams

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Indispensable Early Work of a Blues Genius.......2006-10-01

This is where the legend of the one and only, tremendous Muddy Waters starts. Few people have ever impacted any artform as much as Muddy has American music. Though he is accompanied on some songs, Muddy is also solo on many and performs some future classics w/ just an acoustic and his powerful voice. When Muddy heard the playback after "Country Blues" he knew that he had what it took to be a blues professional... possibly the greatest that there ever was. If you've never heard Muddy play acoustic, you are in for a shock; I believe my jaw dropped to the floor when I heard the amazing, full-bodied, vibrant sound that he got out of just a guitar and his voice on songs such as the first cut and "I Be's Troubled" (later recorded as "I Can't Be Satisfied." This is indispensable and essential listening, not just some study in the roots of American music.

4 out of 5 stars Muddy's Delta Blues.......2005-04-13

Most Blues fans have heard a lot of chicago blues. Most fans have a lot of Muddy Waters chicago blues. But not alot of Muddy Waters fans would have heard Muddy sing the delta blues. This CD is very intersting because it shows Muddy playing the first blues he ever heard, The Delta Blues. Much like the sounds of Son House, Robert Johnson and Skip JAmes this cd is all acoustic blues. It is great to be able to hear a very young Muddy sing delta blues because once he went to Chicago he abandoned the delta sound and went electric. Muddy does several Robert Johnson songs on this cd quite well, and there are some interesting interviews with Muddy explaining what life was like in the delta and why he made songs out of his experiences. For those who like the old delta blues this cd is a must have, on no other cd do we hear Muddy singing blues like these.

5 out of 5 stars Muddy's Real Real Folk Blues.......2004-01-16

When Muddy Waters made the first recordings here, he was 26 or 27 and had not been playing regularly. He didnt own a guitar and had to borrow Alan Lomax's Martin. You see here your basic Delta and Mississippi blues in full blossom, by a man who was a great player if he could sound like this when he wasn't in practice. People look at Mississippi blues with a distorted mind thinking of it only through the stream of Robert Johnson, when the music and the tradition was much broader.


In the interviews on this recording you can see how lame and ignorant at times the folklorists were, both white and black, Lomax and Work. But you also see a testament to Son House who taught Robert Johnson, Muddy, and a whole layer of bluesmen and who was such a great artist even in his revival 1960s that Muddy would make his band members keep quiet and play close attention when House performed with them at Newport and elsewhere.

However, you also see his roots beyond this. We get to hear a good string band performance with Muddy Playing with fiddler Son Sims and a mandolin player in a blues fiddle band that was typical of what was going on at the time. Muddy explains his decision to start playing music was inspired by Sims and the string band with Sims and the mandolin player was the band he performed with when he got work. Neither Waters nor the liner notes let you know that Waters also played mandolin, and that when Muddy was a teenager in the 1930s, his favorite blues group was the fiddle band The Mississippi Sheiks. Years later, Muddy would explain he walked all day just to hear the Sheiks.

Despite all this history, this is some good blues music to listen to,. More relaxed,and less intense, and of course less masterful than the Chess masterpieces Muddy began putting out in Chicago in the 1940s, but this is still a CD I put on my player with it set to keep replaying it because I want to hear it.

4 out of 5 stars Muddy Waters' first recordings.......2003-07-29

If your idea of what a Muddy Waters tune should sound like is the cut-and-shuffle of "Hoochie Coochie Man" or the hard-hitting "I've Got My Mojo Working", the music on this album may come as a surprise to you. This is strictly acoustic stuff, split between solo performances and recordings with the Son Simms Four string band, and the style (if not the voice) recalls Waters' self-professed mentor, the legendary Eddie "Son" House.

Stil, if you're interested in country blues, this is an important and interesting document, showcasing the great Muddy Waters before he truly found a style of his own. The 1941 recording of "I Be's Troubled" (later redubbed "I Can't Be Satisfied") shows signs of things to come, but most of what is on here owes a huge debt to Son House first and William "Big Bill" Broonzy second. Waters' heavy-handed slide guitar attack is strongly reminiscent of House, whom Waters mentions several times during the four interview snippets spread across the record.

According to legend, listening to himself on acetate for the first time made Muddy Waters believe in himself and his abilities as a recording artist ("I didn't know I sang like that!"), and he eventually made it north to Chicago where his re-working of "I Be's Troubled" became a major local hit in 1948).

Among the highlights on this album are the House-esque "Country Blues", "I Be's Troubled", and "Rosalie", which is a virtual blueprint for Waters' later approach. Also listen to "You're Gonna Miss Me When I'm Gone" and the Charley Patton-like "You Got To Take Sick And Die Some Of These Days".

Again, this is NOT the kind of hard-rocking blues and deep grooves that made Muddy Waters the king of Chicago blues in the 50s (well, alongside Howlin' Wolf), but if you are interested in the developement of one of the most important post-war blues musicians, it is well worth picking up. And the music is good, too!

5 out of 5 stars The birth of a legend of the 20the century.......2002-05-24

THis is the beginning of a colossal history: the history of McKinley Morganfield, aka Muddy Waters, born April 4,1915,in Rolling Fork (Sharkey Co),MS.Born on Kroger Plantation,he went to Clarksdale,MS,in 1918,after his mother's death,and lived with his grandmother.He taught playing harp at 9, and guitar around 1932.Nine years later,he waxed his first tunes,and the legend could begin.One of the greatest musicians of the century was born.
Of course, this cd is essential.Even if there are some imperfections,even if the violin of Henry Sims on four tracks isn't very good.Muddy Waters' music is already here,with strong influences from Son House,Charley Patton,Willie Brown,Robert Johnson and even Blind Lemon Jefferson."Country blues" and "I be's troubled" are masterful solo pieces,recorded at Stovall's Plantation,August 1941."I be bound to write to you" will later be named "I can't be satisfied",and it features great slide playing."You got to take sick and die..." shows Muddy imitating (with great skill) the outstanding Blind Willie Johnson;you know,the guy who recorded "dark was the night,cold was the ground",one of the most extraordinary pieces in the history of american black music."Why don't you live..." is the same ."mean red spider" features a pianist that sounds like Sunnyland Slim."I'm gonna cut your head" is more in Big Maceo's mood,because of James Clark's piano playing;so are "atomic bomb blues" ,"tomorrow will be too late","Jitterbug blues","hard day blues","burryin' ground blues","come to me baby" and "you can't make the grade".It seems funny and strange to find Muddy playing the role of Tampa Red.However,there are great tunes,with great piano support;Muddy loved this kind of piano players,and some years later he will play with the immense Otis Spann (1930-1970),a "son" of Big Maceo.Finally,the terrific,outstanding,amazing,superb "rollin' and tumblin'",recorded in two parts,with Little Walter,harp,and Babyface Leroy Foster,dms and vcl.This tune became one of Muddy's anthems,and was first recorded by an obscure but very talented guy at the end of the twenties,Hambone Willie Newbern;this man recorded a few tracks,and died killed by cops who stroke him to death.You can find the "complete recorded works" of Willie Newbern on Document Records.Muddy's version of "rollin' and tumblin'" is one of the most ferocious things I ever heard;the very young Little Walter (Marion Jacobs,1930-1968),plays harp like mad here.A little bit more than five minutes of the greatest blues playing.If you're addicted to Muddy Waters' music,you have to discover this little known side of his music.
Complete Plantation Recordings
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Complete Plantation Recordings
    The Flatlanders
    Manufacturer: Varese Sarabande
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    Alt-Country & AmericanaAlt-Country & Americana | Country | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Country | Styles | Music
    Outlaw & Progressive CountryOutlaw & Progressive Country | Country | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Contemporary Folk | Folk | Styles | Music
    Singer-SongwritersSinger-Songwriters | Pop | Styles | Music
    ASIN: B0001XANUS
    Release Date: 2004-04-13

    Tracks:

    1. Dallas
    2. Heart You Left Behind
    3. She Had Everything
    4. Tonight I Think I'm Gonna Go Downtown
    5. Waiting for a Train
    6. Rose from the Mountain
    7. You've Never Seen Me Cry
    8. Jole Blon
    9. Bhagavan Decreed
    10. Keeper of the Mountain
    11. Hello Stranger
    12. Down in My Hometown
    13. One Road More
    14. One Day at a Time
    15. Stars in My Life
    16. Not So Long Ago
    17. I Know You

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