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When the Sun
Goes Down Vol. 1
Walk Right In
label: RCA
released: 08.20.02
our score: 5.0 out of 5.0
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This first
disc in the When the Sun Goes Down set is supposed to
cover all the "early blues styles" that would later
turn into all the other forms of music of the 20th century. That
doesn't mean that it is chronologically earlier than any other
When the Sun Goes Down discs; this set doesn't work like
that. What it means is that Walk Right In is the set's
rough overview of the full spectrum of blues music in the 1920s
and 1930s, when it was first being recorded.
And don't go around thinking you know what "the
blues" means, either. This disc may start out with the archetypical
blues pieces "Catfish Blues" and "Baby, Please
Don't Go," but quickly branches out to cover work chants
(Leadbelly's "Ham an' Eggs"), Cajun stylings ("Les
Blues de Voyage," by Amédé Ardoin and Denus
McGee), country-folk (The Carter Family rendition of "Worried
Man Blues"), jug bands, preachers, and more. Put side to
side like this, it's pretty easy to see the influences of blues
music on these other genres, and even to see some of the back-influences
too.
It's easy
to make too much of "Here is the birthplace of the blues"
with each new song, so don't do it. Mostly what you get here are
wonderful singles that still sound great today. Not that they'd
actually get played on the radio or anything—they're too
raw and out-there for that. There's no way that Julius Daniels
would get on TRL with his acoustic "Ninety-Nine Year Blues":
"On Monday I was arrested / On Tuesday I was tried / And
the judge found me guilty / And I hung my head and cried,"
no matter how much passion and sadness and resilience are poured
into his performance. Poor Bessie Tucker wouldn't get any play,
despite her tough-ass gangsta style and real-life prison experience:
"I got cut all to pieces / About a man I loved / I'm gonna
get that woman / Just as sure as the skies above." And as
important and influential as Paul Robeson was in his life and
in his operatic baritone vocals, his version of "Sometimes
I Feel Like a Motherless Child" wouldn't make it past the
one-minute mark at the Apollo Amateur Hour.
But if our
modern tastes aren't in tune with these songs, it's our fault
rather than anything wrong with them. In fact, a good case could
be made that music gets worse the further it strays from the blues.
If today's wimp/shriek nu-metal groups or hard-time rappers had
any idea that their shtick had already been done before by Big
Bill Broonzy in "Mississippi River Blues" or Tommy Johnson
in "Cool Drink of Water Blues" (with its excellent "I
asked her for water / She gave me gasoline" line, still classic
after 74 years), they'd suck less and mean more. And anyone who
dares to criticize blues music as defeatist and hampered by "slave
mentality" would do well to check out the fiery black pride
of the sermon by Rev. J.M. Gates called "Somebody's Been
Stealin'," in which he decries slavery and makes a great
case for African-American pride…in 1928. Awesome.
This is a compilation based on Victor and Bluebird
material, so it's not the definitive overview of all blues people
ever—there's no Robert Johnson, for instance, nor do Bessie
Smith or Billie Holiday make appearances. But this first disc
demonstrates that this one company did more to help rhythm and
blues and rock & roll and country and all their many children
and cousins than just about anything else.
18-Sep-2002 7:25 PM

If you
liked Walk Right In...
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Tracklist:
1. Catfish Blues -
Robert Petway
2. Baby, Please Don't Go - Big Joe Williams
3. Ham an' Eggs - Leadbelly
4. Mississippi River Blues - Big Bill Broonzy
5. Just A Good Woman Through With The Blues
- Trixie Butler
6. Garbage Man Blues - Milton Brown & His
Musical Brownies
7. The Panama Limited - Bukka "Washington"
White
8. Cool Drink of Water Blues - Tommy Johnson
9. The Midnight Special - Leadbelly
10. Worried Man Blues - Carter Family
11. Les Blues de Voyage - Amede Ardoin &
Denus McGee
12. K. C. Railroad Blues - Andrew & Jim
Baxter
13. Somebody's Been Stealin' - Rev. J. M. Gates
14. Beale Street Blues - Alberta Hunter
15. Devil In The Wood Pile - Noah Lewis
16. Walk Right In - Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers
17. Ninety-Nine Year Blues - Julius Daniels
18. Got Cut All to Pieces - Bessie Tucker
19. Feather Bed - Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers
20. Can't Put a Bridle on That Mule This Morning
- Julius Daniels
21. Davidson County Blues - DeFord Bailey
22. Frankie and Johnny - Frank Crumit
23. Dixie Bo-Bo - Taskiana Four
24. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
- Paul Robeson
25. St. Louis Blues - The Hall Johnson Choir
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