Bukka White - Memphis Hot Shots (1969) MP3@320

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Bukka White - Memphis Hot Shots (1969) MP3@320

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Torrent info

Name:Bukka White - Memphis Hot Shots (1969) MP3@320

Infohash: 18F37C4EEC3F15D8BFAB358D358397DA48F30A29

Total Size: 95.29 MB

Seeds: 1

Leechers: 0

Stream: Watch Full Movie @ Movie4u

Last Updated: 2022-01-19 20:10:34 (Update Now)

Torrent added: 2014-02-16 13:34:55






Torrent Files List


01 - Bed Spring Blues.mp3 (Size: 95.29 MB) (Files: 12)

 01 - Bed Spring Blues.mp3

6.45 MB

 02 - Mississippi Blues.mp3

7.13 MB

 03 - Drifting Blues.mp3

8.85 MB

 04 - (Brand New) Decoration Blues.mp3

13.61 MB

 05 - Baby Please Don.mp3

5.95 MB

 06 - Give Me An Old Old Lady.mp3

5.71 MB

 07 - Got Sick And Tired.mp3

14.88 MB

 08 - World Boogie.mp3

6.01 MB

 09 - School Learning.mp3

12.72 MB

 10 - Old Man Tom.mp3

5.97 MB

 11 - Gibson Town.mp3

7.97 MB

 Bukka White - Memphis Hot Shots (Front).jpg

37.58 KB
 

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Torrent description

Booker T. Washington Bukka White (November 12, 1909 February 26, 1977)[1] was an American Delta blues guitarist and singer. Bukka is a phonetic spelling of Whites given name, first used by his second (1937) record label (Vocalion).

Born between Aberdeen and Houston, Mississippi, White was a first cousin of B.B. Kings mother (Whites mother and Kings grandmother were sisters).[2] White himself is remembered as a player of National steel guitars. He also played, but was less adept at, the piano.
White started his career playing the fiddle at square dances. He claims to have met Charlie Patton early on, although some doubt has been cast upon this;[3] Regardless, Patton was a large influence on White. White typically played slide guitar, in an open tuning. He was one of the few, along with Skip James, to use a crossnote tuning in E minor, which he may have learned, as James did, from Henry Stuckey.
He first recorded for the Victor Records label in 1930. His recordings for Victor, like those of many other bluesmen, fluctuated between country blues and gospel numbers. Victor published his photograph in 1930. His gospel songs were done in the style of Blind Willie Johnson, with a female singer accentuating the last phrase of each line.[4]
Nine years later, while serving time for assault, he recorded for folklorist John Lomax. The few songs he recorded around this time became his most well-known: Shake Em on Down, and Po Boy.
Bob Dylan covered his song Fixin to Die Blues, which aided a rediscovery of White in 1963 by guitarist John Fahey and ED Denson, which propelled him onto the folk revival scene of the 1960s. White had recorded the song simply because his other songs had not particularly impressed the Victor record producer. It was a studio composition of which White had thought little until it re-emerged thirty years later.[5]
White was at one time managed by experienced blues manager Arne Brogger. Fahey and Denson found White easily enough: Fahey wrote a letter to Bukka White (Old Blues Singer), c/o General Delivery, Aberdeen, Mississippi. Fahey had assumed, given Whites song, Aberdeen, Mississippi, that White still lived there, or nearby. The postcard was forwarded to Memphis, Tennessee, where White worked in a tank factory. Fahey and Denson soon traveled to meet White, and White and Fahey remained friends through the remainder of Whites life.[6] He recorded a new album for Denson and Faheys Takoma Records, whilst Denson became his manager.
White was, later in life, also friends with fellow musician Furry Lewis. The two recorded, mostly in Lewis Memphis apartment, an album together, Furry Lewis, Bukka White Friends: Party! At Home.


Parchman Farm Blues was about the Mississippi State Penitentiary
One of his most famous songs, Parchman Farm Blues, about the Mississippi State Penitentiary (also known as Parchman Farm) in Sunflower County, Mississippi, was released on Harry Smiths fourth volume of the Anthology of American Folk Music, Vol. 4. The song was covered by The Traits/aka Roy Head and the Traits with Johnny Winter in the late 1960s. His 1937 version of the oft-recorded song,[7] Shake Em On Down, is considered definitive, and became a hit while White was serving time in Parchman.[8]
White died in February 1977 from cancer, at the age of 67, in Memphis, Tennessee.[1][9] In 1990 he was posthumously inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame (along with Blind Blake and Lonnie Johnson). On November 21, 2011, The Recording Academy announced that Fixin to Die Blues was to be added to its 2012 list of Grammy Hall of Fame Award recipients.[10]

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