Muddy Waters - The Complete Plantation Recordings (22 tracks) +Album Reviews swapacd.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from swapacd.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Charley Patton
Mississippi Boweavil Blues
Down the Dirt Road Blues
Pony Blues
Pea Vine Blues
Prayer of Death, Pt. 1 - Charley Patton, Traditional
Prayer of Death, Pt. 2 - Charley Patton, Traditional
Lord, I m Discouraged
Elder Greene Blues - Charley Patton, Patton
Circle Round the Moon
Mean Black Cat Blues
Some These Days I ll Be Gone
Green River Blues
Magnolia Blues
Heart Like Railroad Steel
Jim Lee Blues, Pt. 1
Kim Lee Blues, Pt. 2 - Charley Patton,
High Water Everywhere, Pt. 1
High Water Everywhere, Pt. 2
Jesue Is a Dying-Bed Maker - Charley Patton,
I Shall Not Be Moved - Charley Patton, Parth, Johnny
by Johnny Punish
So recently, my poetic son wrote and shared some new amazing lyrics with me, To me, they rang of oppression, racism, and poverty. I said, “hey let me put those words into music”. As I developed the song, it started to become clear to me that was about a forgotten man; you know, that man who lived during the Depression Era of the 1930s?
That forgotten man, a returned World War I Veteran who was down and out on his luck, was expressed like no other in the classic film
Goldiggers of 1933 whereby the last scene is called “Remember My Forgotten Man” sung by Joan Blondell and Etta Moten. This song turns that movie into an unforgettable everlasting homage to the reality of that terrible poverty-stricken era in America; a classic that should be on your list of 100 movies to see before you die. So if you have NOT seen this movie, go watch it. It’s amazing! Anyways….
Music at Home: Behind the British Invasion
Music at Home: Behind the British Invasion
10 classic songs by black artists that were covered by British Invasion bands, from the Beatles to the Stones
Angie Martoccio, provided by
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When the British Invasion arrived in America in the mid-1960s, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and other bands introduced songs like “Little Red Rooster” and “Road Runner” to American teenagers who assumed they were originals. In fact, those bands’ catalogs were full of American R&B and blues classics from years in the past, originally written and recorded by black musicians such as Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Bo Diddley, and others. Singers like John Lennon and Mick Jagger took more interest in this music than many listeners had at the time, covering classic songs that had been largely ignored by white Americans in the previous decade. While some of the artists they covered benefited from the publicity boost, others remain
Billy Gibbons sort un clip pour le classique Rollin and Tumblin rtbf.be - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rtbf.be Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.