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PABL008 - Searching The Desert For The Blues - Blind Willie McTell
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Blind Willie McTell - Vocals, 12-string guitar
McTell was billed as "Blind Sammie" on 8,9,12
and as"Georgia Bill" on 15
With Ruth Willis (vocals) on 14
With Ruby Glaze (vocals) on 18,19,20,21
With Curley Weaver (guitar, some vocals) on 16,17,22,24,26
Restoration and XR remastering by Andrew Rose at Pristine Audio, March 2009
Cover artwork based on a photograph of Blind Wilie McTell
The king of 12-string acoustic blues - 26 of the very best
In astonishing newly XR-remastered sound quality - surely the best ever!
Notes on the recording:
This XR-remastered recording is available in mono and Ambient Stereo. For more information on Ambient Stereo click here.
Like many pre-war Blues artists, Blind Willie McTell recorded for a number of record companies, often at the same time, under a variety of pseudonyms. Fortunately for the lover of vintage blues, none of these was the notorious Paramount record company, and as a result we have a body of work which not only stands up musically, but in terms of recording and pressing quality as well - unlike the recordings of the likes of Charley Patton, Blind Blake and Blind Lemon Jefferson, for example.
In some respects this ought to make the audio restorer's job easier, you might think. Alas, life is rarely that simple - with higher quality originals to begin with, one inevitably aims higher and is less able to settle for anything less than excellence.
In compiling this CD, I initially worked on some 40 tracks by Blind Willie McTell, in many cases from two or three different sources. Each was taken a considerable way along the road of restoration and remastering in order that a judgment could be made (a) between different copies of the same recording, and then (b) between the complete set to narrow it down to a full CD (and I apologise here both for having to leave some excellent material out, and for leaving some rather small gaps between tracks in order to squeeze as much on as possible).
Then comes the painstaking job of "finishing" - a near-forensic examination of each track, looking for individual clicks, surface swishes and other extraneous noises, and attempting to remove or reduce them, one by one, as well as varrying out further final noise and hiss reduction. For a set such as this, which had already taken several weeks to assemble, this finishing work took a further three full days of intensive effort to complete.
What do I hope to achieve with all this effort? The finest-sounding a most representative collection of pre-war recordings by McTell ever assembled. No doubt some will dispute the track selections - especially some are here on musical merit., others on sonic merit - but put together as a whole I do feel this considerably improves on all previous issues of this material that it's been my pleasure to listen to over the years. I hope you'll feel similarly!
Full track listing:
Stole Rider Blues 40309-2
rec. 18.10.1927
Mama, Tain't Long Fo' Day 40310-1
rec. 18.10.1927
Mr. McTell Got The Blues (take 2) 40311-2
rec. 18.10.1927
Three Women Blues 47185-2
rec. 17.10.1928
Dark Night Blues 47186-1
rec. 17.10.1928
Statesboro Blues 47187-3 rec. 17.10.1928
Loving Talking Blues 47188-3
rec. 17.10.1928
Come On Around To My House Mama 19302-2
rec. 30.10.1929
Kind Mama 149319-2
rec. 31.10.1929
Drive Away Blues 56599-1
rec. 26.11.1929
Talkin' To Myself 150257-2
rec. 17.4.1930
Southern Can Is Mine 151904-1
rec. 23.10.1931
Broke Down Engine Blues 151905-1
rec. 23.10.1931
Painful Blues 151907-1
rec. 23.10.1931
Scarey Day Blues 405003-1 rec. 23.10.1931
Low Rider's Blues 405084-1
rec. 31.10.1931
Georgia Rag 405085-1
rec. 31.10.1931
Rollin' Mama Blues 71603 rec. 22.2.1932
Lonesome Day Blues 71604-1
rec. 22.2.1932
Mama, Let Me Scoop For You 71605
rec. 22.2.1932
Searching The Desert For The Blues 71606-1
rec. 22.2.1932
Warm It Up To Me 14008-2 rec. 14.9.1933
Savannah Mama 14035-1
rec. 18.9.1933
Love-Makin' Mama 14045-1
rec. 19.9.1933
Lord, Send Me An Angel 14050-1
rec. 19.9.1933
Lay Some Flowers On My Grave C-9952-A
rec. 25.4.1935
William Samuel McTell, better known as Blind Willie McTell (May 5, 1898 (sometimes reported as 1901 or even 1903) – August 19, 1959), was an influential American blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist. He was a twelve-string finger picking Piedmont blues guitarist, and recorded 149 songs between 1927 and 1956.
Biography
Born William Samuel McTier (or McTear) in Thomson, Georgia, blind in one eye, McTell had lost his remaining vision by late childhood, but became an adept reader of Braille. He showed proficiency in music from an early age and learned to play the six-string guitar as soon as he could. His father left the family when McTell was still young, so when his mother died in the 1920s, he left his hometown and became a wandering busker. He began his recording career in 1927 for Victor Records in Atlanta.
In the years before World War II, he traveled and performed widely, recording for a number of labels under a different name for each one, including Blind Willie McTell (Victor and Decca), Blind Sammie (Columbia), Georgia Bill (Okeh), Hot Shot Willie (Victor), Blind Willie (Vocalion), Red Hot Willie Glaze (Bluebird), Barrelhouse Sammie (Atlantic) and Pig & Whistle Red (Regal). His style was singular: a form of country blues, bridging the gap between the raw blues of the early part of the 20th Century and the more refined East Coast "Piedmont" sound. He took on the less common and more unwieldy 12-string guitar because of its volume. The style is well documented on John Lomax's 1940 recordings of McTell for the Library of Congress, for which McTell earned ten dollars.
In 1934, he married Ruthy Kate Williams (now better known as Kate McTell). She accompanied him on stage and on several recordings, before becoming a nurse in 1939. Most of their marriage from 1942 until his death was spent apart, with her living in Fort Gordon near Augusta, and him working around Atlanta.
Post-war, he recorded for Atlantic Records and Regal Records in 1949, but these recordings met with less commercial success than his previous works. He continued to perform around Atlanta, but his career was cut short by ill health, predominantly diabetes and alcoholism.
In 1956, an Atlanta record store manager, Edward Rhodes, discovered McTell playing in the street for quarters and enticed him into his store with a bottle of corn liquor, where he captured a few final performances on a tape recorder. These were released posthumously on Prestige/Bluesville Records as Blind Willie McTell's Last Session.
McTell died in Milledgeville, Georgia, of a stroke in 1959.
A blues festival in McTell's honor is held annually in his birthplace, Thomson, Georgia. He was inducted into the Blues Foundation's Hall of Fame in 1981
Influence
One of his most famous songs, "Statesboro Blues", has been covered by artists such as Taj Mahal, David Bromberg, and The Allman Brothers Band. Jack White of The White Stripes considers McTell an influence (their 2000 album De Stijl was dedicated to him and featured a cover of his song "Your Southern Can Is Mine"), as did Kurt Cobain of Nirvana. Bob Dylan has paid tribute to McTell on at least four occasions: Firstly in his 1965 song "Highway 61 Revisited" in the second verse, which begins, "Georgia Sam he had a bloody nose," referring to one of Blind Willie McTell's many recording names; later in "Blind Willie McTell" (recorded in 1983 but released on The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 in 1991); then with covers of McTell's "Broke Down Engine" and "Delia" on his 1993 album World Gone Wrong. In his song "Po'Boy", off the 2001 album Love & Theft, Dylan again paid homage to McTell by appropriating the line "had to go to Florida dodging them Georgia laws" directly from the latter's "Kill It Kid".
Notes on the 24-bit download: Please see this page for test files and further information regarding this format. Although restoration work is done at a sample rate of 44.1kHz, we have upsampled the final 24-bit master to 48kHz for additional replay compatibility of our FLAC download.
Our twenty-four bit FLAC downloads can be replayed in full quality using a standard DVD video player, a DVD writer and an inexpensive piece of PC software - see here for more information about replay from Video DVD discs.
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Searching The Desert For The Blues
(Ambient Stereo version)
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