R L Burnside has died at the age of 78, leaving a wife and 12 children. For most of his career, he played raw Delta blues but latterly, under the guidance of the Fat Possum label, produced some fine albums mixing his blues with scratches, beats and loops. The purists hated it, but he made no bones about needing the money.
For the raw Burnside, try First Recordings. Equally raw is his collaboration with the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion Ass Pocket of Whisky. Come On In is one of his "beats and blues" albums and has a fine photograph of R L and his fridge, padlocked and chained to stop his relatives stealing his food. Burnside on Burnside is recorded live, with R L sounding as though he's having the time of his life. A Bothered Mind is mixed, in more ways than one, and I guess the label were scraping the barrel of recorded fragments after R L stopped work, having been "interviewed to death by Europeans" on the festival circuit. Nearly all the albums are available, as CDs and on vinyl (try Diverse Vinyl).
The best, I think, is Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down, for his singing, the blend of old and new styles, and, above all, the material, telling part of the story of R L's life. Which is what it's all about. I hope, in heaven, that they've found him a chair. He deserves it.
4.9.05
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
5 comments:
I bought First Recordings a couple of years ago in the CD shop in Hay on Wye (Tom's Records?)one of my favourite places to buy. Havn't caught up with his later mixes but will now seek them out...
It's just struck me it's been a bad month for the blues with the deaths not only of R L Burnside, but also Little Milton and Clarence Gatemouth Brown....
http://www.littlemilton.com
http://www.gatemouth.com
Isn't it always a bad month for blues? Isn't that the point?
Cue old joke:
Play a blues record backwards and your wife returns to you, your dog comes back from the dead and then you can snuggle down and have a nice long sleep....
Post a Comment