The Land Where the Blues Began - Documentary (1979)

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  • Опубликовано: 29 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 216

  • @aureliobrighton1871
    @aureliobrighton1871 7 месяцев назад +13

    I am impressed by the unadorned integrity of this document. Excellent. Thankyou.

    • @hollywoodjoe123
      @hollywoodjoe123 5 месяцев назад +1

      yes indeed a great video documentary -

  • @Joenathan-jf3uj
    @Joenathan-jf3uj 8 месяцев назад +8

    I can feel what their pain and struggle trough their music and voice.

  • @jimjones5872
    @jimjones5872 7 месяцев назад +8

    That man played 12 bar blues with one string. Then he nailed a wire to side of his house, tuned the damn thing played the house blues. He took a straw, tuned into a jazz whistle and blew doors down in his home town. That man got fire inside his heart and soul, born to play any damn thing he get his hands on

    • @aureliobrighton1871
      @aureliobrighton1871 7 месяцев назад

      ... and now as we are flooded with equipment even let robots do the lawn that sweet fire is being traded for a cold chip. There must be a fair weather way in the middle. 🌻

  • @frostyeverclear
    @frostyeverclear 7 месяцев назад +3

    This belongs in the national archives! God bless Lomax and all these gentlemen for doing this!❤

  • @gijsschubert7901
    @gijsschubert7901 3 года назад +88

    Alan Lomax deserves a statue - there is so much this good man has done for the preservation of blues and folk music. This was the guy who asked Muddy Waters in 1941 ""From who have you learned this song", after which Muddy answered "Robert Johnson", not telling that Robert had passed away 3 years earlier. Alan then asked "Who do you reckon is a better blues player: Robert Johnson or Son House?" after which Muddy replied "They're about equal". I have immense respect for Alan.

    • @johnmontalvo3699
      @johnmontalvo3699 3 года назад +2

      Ever heard of Paul Oliver ??

    • @johnmontalvo3699
      @johnmontalvo3699 3 года назад +3

      Like Alan, he risked his live to record the very cor of these blues before they dissapeared alltogether.

    • @wheninroamful
      @wheninroamful 3 года назад +5

      @@johnmontalvo3699 Never heard of Paul Oliver, very thankful for Alan, his father or anyone who preserved this beautiful culture/music.... Ill look up Paul Oliver, but if you have anything else to share about him or what he did, id love to hear, thanks...

    • @africaRBG
      @africaRBG 3 года назад +2

      Alan is a gem. He also recorded a ton of African music that was still surviving in the Caribbean back in 1962. Truly tremendous.

    • @CocoKickz94
      @CocoKickz94 3 года назад +6

      @@wheninroamful check out Lowell Fulson too while you’re at it, he was considered one of the most important people in Blues History second only to T-Bone Walker. I love this stuff man, it’s up to us to pass it on to the next generation just like our grandfathers and fathers before us. We can’t let this amazing part of music history be forgotten.

  • @ariellejade25
    @ariellejade25 10 месяцев назад +7

    his video is a national treasure. They should show this in schools.

  • @TheBluesmanBlue
    @TheBluesmanBlue Год назад +15

    Give Mr John and Alan Lomax family they're Emmy and Grammy award for their hard work and dedication that they gave for education of music in folk and traditional music category that was through the African-American experience this documentary is a very experienced tool for the next generations 🏆

  • @JohnnyRebKy
    @JohnnyRebKy 2 года назад +7

    The blues make this southern white boy move! 😎👍🏻. God bless all them folks who gave us this fantastic music

  • @FlarkusChunswen
    @FlarkusChunswen 11 месяцев назад +6

    125k views after nearly ten years is just criminal.
    Thank you, Lomax Clan. Thank you to the pickers and bluesman. Most of all, thank you to the Delta.

  • @nathanmccloud3572
    @nathanmccloud3572 Год назад +6

    With all we went through our spirit never were broken,we are an Amazing people of high standard

  • @sayerma
    @sayerma 7 лет назад +76

    Ridiculous that this is less than 2000 views at this time - Lomax was CRITICAL to blues and what we know today. Thank god for his work.
    Brilliant vision and sounds captured whilst quite a few of these boys were still around. In the 80's and 90's, most of them had died by then. This is absolute cultural gold.

    • @ellane8441
      @ellane8441 4 года назад +2

      Not AnyMore. WE're the People and WE're Still Here, Hear Us.

    • @j.masonbrown6216
      @j.masonbrown6216 3 года назад +2

      these *men* were around, and women

    • @blackknight295
      @blackknight295 3 года назад

      They didn’t die off in the 80’s and 90’s... they still around in the south, it wasn’t that long ago

    • @donniekingston2154
      @donniekingston2154 2 года назад

      125.000 views on 2022

  • @patriwarner9275
    @patriwarner9275 4 года назад +40

    When you think you know your blues history, along comes Lomax to show you how much you don't know.

  • @jibzy73
    @jibzy73 14 дней назад

    Alan Lomax at the intro who went around the US with his son & recorded music for the library of congress did a fantastic job...this is American history & must be taught to society

  • @markwajdeman7118
    @markwajdeman7118 3 года назад +22

    Documentary was made for the PBS series "American Patchwork," containing music by and interviews with several Delta blues musicians, and is a deeply felt and sympathetic document of the conditions under which many of these blues players lived and which inspired their music.

    • @damongardiner4133
      @damongardiner4133 3 года назад +2

      maybe because PBS is the new BBC and not to be trusted all you have to see is the post-production PBS credits after the documentary and who it was sponsored by 90% socialist org that is destroying western civilization and destroying any real culture replacing it with a matrix illusion of propaganda the media, as well as our own government, has declared war on its own people and using our own culture against us

    • @sherrard5492
      @sherrard5492 2 года назад

      🙄

  • @VanguardSound7
    @VanguardSound7 3 года назад +9

    My Gosh! Joe Savage is the BEST singer I've ever had the pleasure of listening to.
    And I grew up in the South. Generation X.
    My elders were these people. And everyone sang like this.
    Whether in the Church, or Juke Joint Blues. These people had soul!
    I am now taking it upon myself to learn to write and play these traditional styles so I can teach my six year old, half Swedish son what the Blues is. Where it came from, and his personal connection to these amazingly rich people.

    • @lfuhr3905
      @lfuhr3905 Год назад +1

      You go man! Keep this alive!!!

  • @vincentvalle9697
    @vincentvalle9697 3 года назад +8

    thanks for this documentary!! hard to hear some of the cruel things they did to the blacks smh but somehow in that ugly dark time something so beautiful was created by expressing there pain hurt and love that motivated them to keep going!! amazing

  • @daveyjoweaver5183
    @daveyjoweaver5183 4 года назад +8

    It is people like these who have given the world the blues, loved by so many. It is all the cultures of all the peoples, Black, Red, White and Yellow that make this Nation unique and great! Thank You from Heart! DaveyJO in Pennsylvania

    • @jasminepearls1047
      @jasminepearls1047 Год назад +2

      The blues have heavy african/african american roots.

  • @manoelteixeira4936
    @manoelteixeira4936 2 месяца назад

    Um documentário de peso, pois conta a realidade dos bluesman. maneco - Porto Alegre-RS - Brasil.

  • @oldman9843
    @oldman9843 2 года назад +2

    Great documentary Lomax gave us a gift

  • @mauiluido25
    @mauiluido25 7 лет назад +14

    An amazing music, cultural anthropology and a Historian, of of a man who traveled far and near for the origins of the genre's of music he discovered or recorded Thank you, Mr. Bishop I have some of his PBS specials, but this is a TREASURE.

  • @mr.nobody68
    @mr.nobody68 5 лет назад +10

    Thank you for the blues

  • @ingles1a122
    @ingles1a122 3 месяца назад

    Just great!! thanks Lomax!!

  • @ronaldotto534
    @ronaldotto534 10 месяцев назад

    Amazing! I have met folks from rural and I mean rural New Jersey who play an instrument called a 'gut bucket' it was an inverted galvanized pale with a long stick/thin branch and a single string. Our country has a rich history and music has always brought people from different backgrounds together. It is like the arts combine us while other things like politics bifurcate us.

  • @marjovankuik4317
    @marjovankuik4317 Год назад +3

    What a great surprise to find back Jack Owens in this mesmerising video! I met him in the 1990's when he performed at the Blues Estafette in Utrecht (The Netherlands) and I had the honour to shake hands with him 👏👏!! Years later I visited Bentonia Mississipi with my family to remember him and Skip James who lived there!

    • @eleonorevk
      @eleonorevk Год назад

      ❤️🥳

    • @bluesandfriends
      @bluesandfriends Год назад

      Glad to hear!
      I was there too, and I was embarresed because people were talking through his playing and being rude

  • @eastlondonblues
    @eastlondonblues 4 месяца назад

    amazing, amazing. life-changing to watch this.

  • @JAY-lu3cx
    @JAY-lu3cx 2 года назад +6

    I love these guys I was raised in Mississippi now live in NY...when I find myself complaining this remind me how far i came...does anyone has any updates on this????

  • @madleneroulette5371
    @madleneroulette5371 5 месяцев назад

    Love this doc!❤🎉 so enlightening, eduational and inspiring. Thank you

  • @coravisser3846
    @coravisser3846 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for uploading Blues Compartido is real the truth here.Is good to know this,

  • @BKaneNp8
    @BKaneNp8 Год назад

    24:35 Sam Chatmon whoaaaa that’s some heavy stuff! Listening in 2023 for the fist time and I love it

  • @JoyUnderwood
    @JoyUnderwood 7 лет назад +32

    I wouldn't have known about this documentary if it weren't for finding the booklet (which is a transcript and study guide to the film) that goes along with it in a free library, here in my hometown of Crystal Springs, MS. :)

    • @LUCKYB.
      @LUCKYB. 2 года назад

      They care about there History . Hell I I WAS BORN 8N SPOKANE WASHINGTON out on the west co

    • @joshuacasano401
      @joshuacasano401 2 месяца назад

      Is there an online transcript? Send link? please.

  • @enkiabzu5792
    @enkiabzu5792 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing this amazing documentary!
    Hope they preserve this gold mine!

  • @oberonstar6278
    @oberonstar6278 4 года назад +3

    powerfull evocative such real music of soul thanks

  • @StephenGarcia-p6x
    @StephenGarcia-p6x 6 месяцев назад

    Great piece of work.

  • @vintage349
    @vintage349 Год назад +3

    I'love blues .

  • @TheEudaemonicPlague
    @TheEudaemonicPlague 8 месяцев назад +3

    I doubt I'll ever find the answer, but about thirty years ago...well, just over, but I was in the navy, stationed at Great Lakes, and was listening to a Chicago radio station. They played a piece by R. L. Burnside, something about "me and the wolf" or a very similar phrase. Trouble is, I can't find even the slightest reference to anything by him that could possibly be it. I suppose, if I had copies of everything he recorded over thirty years ago, and listened to them all, maybe, just maybe I'll find it. Knowing my luck, it'll turn out I'd confused what the DJ said, and it was some other musician....but it was what introduced me to R. L. Burnside, and that's not nothing.

  • @oceanamoore3564
    @oceanamoore3564 5 лет назад +7

    Thank the Gods for the Goddamn Blues💘💘

  • @paulmayhew2545
    @paulmayhew2545 4 года назад +4

    Amazing! Can't believe I only just found this...some things i never thought about before. Like the irony that its both a music to attract women and to get over women....but of course! Also that expression/culture comes from rootless people but that in turn becomes a rooted culture....

  • @gaca2737
    @gaca2737 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing - an amazing insight... the real deal...

  • @motorbikeray
    @motorbikeray 2 года назад +1

    (54:40) Rudy Ray Moore's character "Dolemite" immediately came to mind with that storytelling.

    • @Number1DriversSeat
      @Number1DriversSeat Год назад +1

      It is called toasting. Toasting is the precursor to what we know today is rapping and hip-hop. This is where it started beeping the south and it spread all over the United States by way of black American migration to the north.

  • @patzimmusic
    @patzimmusic Год назад

    Thank you for posting!

  • @matthawkins8197
    @matthawkins8197 Год назад +2

    I am amazed that there is no recognition of the Mali blues that existed hundreds of years before this music arrived in the states. "Musicologists and music-lovers alike revere Mali as “the birthplace of the blues.” Mali's traditional music draws on the tales of ancient griots, who effectively kept the country's historical record by singing songs of praise about its nobility". Or any mention of the call and response songs that were work songs from Africa that the plantation slaves sang and are the true origin of the blues. It's more about ownership than the accurate history of this music from Africa. Even though in The Robert Johnson biography they recorded that Robert as a child was greatly influenced by the rhythms and singing of these original language songs. No one owns this music today as it is played in every corner of the world. And is constantly evolving.

    • @jenniferd7563
      @jenniferd7563 Год назад +1

      This is about the Mississippi Delta Blues, which is unique and separate from griot traditional music. Mali should have it's own documentary

  • @djhill13j
    @djhill13j 5 лет назад +7

    I’m watching this for class

    • @djhill13j
      @djhill13j 4 года назад

      @@VanderJam it was.

  • @choppacity4348
    @choppacity4348 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for sharing ♥️⚜️

  • @mikekaatman3194
    @mikekaatman3194 3 года назад +6

    How did music go from this...to what is heard mainstream today?
    In my opinion it speaks volumes about the state of society today...

    • @lfuhr3905
      @lfuhr3905 Год назад

      Frightening isnt it!!!

    • @HansLiu23
      @HansLiu23 Год назад

      WAP has it's roots in the blues!!!

    • @paulgordon6949
      @paulgordon6949 Год назад

      ​@HansLiu23 what's WAP?

    • @DockingFreidmanRecords
      @DockingFreidmanRecords 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@HansLiu23 very true

    • @happybeach777
      @happybeach777 6 месяцев назад

      Folkore verses commercialised music, 2 different things. there will always be shitty commercialised music. the problem is our lack of care for the musical study and preservation of the music and passing it to our childern as theirs. Black, white, brown or green, if you are American this is your music.

  • @rustyshackleford3872
    @rustyshackleford3872 3 месяца назад +1

    The man playing the blues fife or flute is named otha Turner

  • @pederlong1784
    @pederlong1784 Год назад +1

    Excellent

  •  6 месяцев назад

    Wow, the flute music is so West African!

  • @mruntamed9635
    @mruntamed9635 Год назад +2

    This is treasure

  • @gayjustinbieber6225
    @gayjustinbieber6225 3 года назад +6

    The best secret to playing a good harp is whiskey on the lips and tongue.

    • @Robert-yk8tx
      @Robert-yk8tx 7 месяцев назад

      Pls explain why that works for you 🤔

  • @TomDenneyArt
    @TomDenneyArt 7 лет назад +5

    This is great

  • @FreeDanielLarson2025
    @FreeDanielLarson2025 3 года назад +2

    Thanks lomax

  • @Tubulous123
    @Tubulous123 Год назад

    Yes!!! Thank you!!! 1Nation4Life

  • @liljimitwofeatherz9735
    @liljimitwofeatherz9735 10 месяцев назад +1

    Guy in the white shirt is my cuzn Harold buuka T Bell...Greenville Mississippi..nelson st ..

  • @hawghawg381
    @hawghawg381 3 года назад +3

    The lady plowing.. I would love to meet her family

  • @joejoe4522
    @joejoe4522 2 года назад +2

    Alan Lomax has founded many historic figures and legends in his documentary. I plan on trying to keep his legacy going as far as trying to find talent in delta blues and delta trap music

  • @Jay-gv9vd
    @Jay-gv9vd Год назад

    Amazing art

  • @ellane8441
    @ellane8441 4 года назад +4

    Who Knew? - I Grew Up In This Way.

  • @narasimhiah
    @narasimhiah 2 года назад

    Excellent excellent

  • @TheTallMan50
    @TheTallMan50 6 лет назад +7

    Gangs of New York ( opening scene) brought me here.

    • @johnhealy6676
      @johnhealy6676 4 года назад +2

      TheTallMan35 Don’t you mean Oh Brother where art thou ?

    • @g.lowenklee2268
      @g.lowenklee2268 4 года назад +2

      @@johnhealy6676 I think he's referring to the fife and drum music at ( 8:35 ) ...and the scene in the beginning of Gangs of New York in which the Dead Rabbits are gathering to fight against Bill the Butcher's nativist gang.

  • @cesarmedina4350
    @cesarmedina4350 Год назад +3

    Africa is the root of all

  • @rustyshackleford3872
    @rustyshackleford3872 3 месяца назад

    The man in the red shirt rocking out in the yard is R.L. Burnside

  • @florindolemos6112
    @florindolemos6112 4 года назад

    en el ano 1962 con trece anos fabriique mí primer ' guitarra 1ro con.cuerdas hilo de algodón luego cambio las cambie por cuerdas de alambre-algo sonaba!

  • @JackTheRabbitMusic
    @JackTheRabbitMusic 5 лет назад +5

    32:02 is where I took my screen name from...🙂

  • @kennethnick3213
    @kennethnick3213 5 месяцев назад

    Alan and John lomax are real heroes.

  • @timshaw7007
    @timshaw7007 Год назад

    The music during the end credits sounds very similar, if not exactly the same as the flute/drum samples used in Gangs of New York..
    Did they perhaps borrow music from this documentary?
    If anyone knows, please comment !

  • @HvnterWade
    @HvnterWade 6 лет назад +6

    Would absolutely love information on the song around 00:26

    • @colinm4042
      @colinm4042 4 года назад +1

      Belton Sutherland - ruclips.net/video/ccn6_60NhJI/видео.html

  • @WaltKurtz1109
    @WaltKurtz1109 4 месяца назад

    GOLD

  • @antoniosergiomiranda1543
    @antoniosergiomiranda1543 Год назад

    Rock'n' Roll Punk Rock!

  • @941lowelife2
    @941lowelife2 4 года назад +5

    Dude rapping before at the end

    • @iansing5278
      @iansing5278 4 года назад +1

      Was that at the end before, or the before at the end?

  • @terryking4380
    @terryking4380 5 лет назад +14

    53:10, rap began

    • @sike228
      @sike228 4 года назад +2

      Terry King I caught that too. immediately

    • @Nleezie33
      @Nleezie33 4 года назад +1

      I see

  • @SilverLoggerhead
    @SilverLoggerhead 2 года назад

    ❤❤❤

  • @ramsayross
    @ramsayross 3 года назад

    Great video .Not enough adverts though. Could have crammed another twenty in at least, to really get the message across.

  • @bigmintsgamer7232
    @bigmintsgamer7232 3 месяца назад

    I play delta blues but it's much more than just sad tails

  • @belovaklebelovak7770
    @belovaklebelovak7770 Год назад

    19:16 For reference that barrel weight 300 pounds (136 kg for us accross the Atlantic) when it's full. It's hard, today, to comprend how hard those jobs where. It takes a man (or a woman) who got the blues to play th blues indeed.

  • @mediageneration
    @mediageneration 3 года назад +2

    Blues Compartido ripped this off from an icky pre-release dupe, the ads are his fucking karma

  • @charles-iii6759
    @charles-iii6759 2 месяца назад

    Lots of people decided they wanted to use the Blue genre as a way to make money and fame because that's how they see the Blue--just another musical genre. And they have done it with no understanding what really the blue is. The blue is a musical expression thru which black people tell their story and experience with pain, sorrow and hardship since we were brought to this land as slaves...something that a guy from a middle class family knows nothing and can't relate to.

  • @vincentmondello2052
    @vincentmondello2052 7 лет назад +2

    Took it off my page after seeing your post, sorry John, great job. Thumbs down for stealing this mans effort.

  • @vanhafford7829
    @vanhafford7829 2 года назад

    I bought the BOOK!

  • @PeterGennaro-lh1yc
    @PeterGennaro-lh1yc 26 дней назад

    If you have not read the book of the same title, do so.

  • @alabamaaboriginal5935
    @alabamaaboriginal5935 3 года назад +2

    American Indian music!!

    • @alphonsojohnson8695
      @alphonsojohnson8695 4 месяца назад

      Hebrew Israelites music and I'm born and raised in the Mississippi Delta. TMH called us Israelites not American Indian. So who's right THE GOD OF ISRAEL or somebody that told you that

  • @MrRX75
    @MrRX75 3 года назад +1

    Guys loved it! Piece of history!
    Btw, what's the song /artist @ 16:07

    • @Odin029
      @Odin029 3 года назад

      Jack Owens doing Hard Time Killing Floor

  • @ZachVance108
    @ZachVance108 7 лет назад +5

    OP give credits to the filmmakers vvvvv

  • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
    @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 3 года назад +1

    17 kids? Holy moly

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 2 года назад

      @Aaron D. Digby, Sr. Wow - I thought 12 was the most I had heard of from anyone I've met in person. So menopause kicks in around 50 or 55 years old? Yeah that's pretty much being pregnant for the whole adult life as puberty ends for females around when? 18 or 19? haha. Thanks for sharing.

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 2 года назад

      @Aaron D. Digby, Sr. For real! I'm about to listen to a spiritual master who grew up in Iowa. He told me his grandmother WALKED from deep south to Iowa. haha. That's serious. His dad was also a serious boxer. This teacher was a kungfu master in the 1960s. He is a real "Morpheus" - you know like the Matrix? haha. thanks

  • @mediageneration
    @mediageneration 7 лет назад +76

    Gee, thanks for stealing my film and putting it on your channel without permission or attribution. What a swell guy you are. You might mention that it was made by Alan Lomax, John Bishop and Worth Long.

    • @_me.Kanika
      @_me.Kanika 7 лет назад +6

      Hi John, my father is in this film. How can I get a copy? Also, I'd love to learn more about how he was selected.

    • @mediageneration
      @mediageneration 7 лет назад +6

      Cool, I made a DVD and will send you a copy if you send your address. Who was your father?

    • @_me.Kanika
      @_me.Kanika 7 лет назад +4

      Wow! Thanks so much! I sent you a message with the information :-)

    • @mediageneration
      @mediageneration 7 лет назад +2

      HI Kanika, I can't find your message. you can text me at 503-349-5383 or email me at john@media-generation.com

    • @JoyUnderwood
      @JoyUnderwood 7 лет назад +2

      Kanika W That's cool! Which one is your father?

  • @carypasseroff3331
    @carypasseroff3331 5 месяцев назад

    REEL?LIFE!

  • @tahzwalker
    @tahzwalker 5 лет назад +6

    John Bishop you might mention that you were only doing a public service. All acknowledgement should go to the artists you documented first. Not feeling the woe is me vibe.

  • @941lowelife2
    @941lowelife2 3 года назад +1

    At 39:00 yessuhh 😆

  • @meevluv
    @meevluv 3 года назад

    10:30 this is what ravers called speaker freakin

  • @florinstanzer5398
    @florinstanzer5398 3 года назад +1

    anybode knows who this is? performing around 3:00

    • @kmpw
      @kmpw 2 года назад

      Got u: ruclips.net/video/meC4pmw5u84/видео.html

    • @Robert-yk8tx
      @Robert-yk8tx 7 месяцев назад

      It's Burnside

    • @shippo36able
      @shippo36able 18 дней назад

      RL Burnside. Hill country blues bard.

  • @patrickbodenham6879
    @patrickbodenham6879 Год назад

    Who is that at 21.06??

  • @cassadyfr
    @cassadyfr 5 лет назад +2

    how about it mr/ mme compartido ? CREDIT WHERE IT IS DUE.

  • @leonblum7898
    @leonblum7898 4 года назад +1

    SERÍA MAS QUE IMPORTANTE SUBTITULAR POR LO MENOS AL''ESPAÑOL''TODAS ÉSTAS OBRAS TAN INTERESANTES DESCONOCIDAS,PERO ESCUCHADAS.-SALUDOS DESDE''BUENOS AIRES C.A.B.A.REP.ARGENTINA''.-

  • @Rennyblue
    @Rennyblue 3 года назад

    I thought this Lomax guy was Dr John

  • @941lowelife2
    @941lowelife2 3 года назад

    And 44:53 love it

  • @PaulTheSkeptic
    @PaulTheSkeptic 2 года назад

    Does anyone what that first guy was playing? On the electric guitar? That riff is SO awesome but I can't figure it out. I think it's a little out of tune for one thing. If you know what he's doing please let me know.

    • @dansullivan172
      @dansullivan172 Год назад +1

      if you are talking bout the fella at 2:50, pretty sure thats R. L. Burnside. buy any of his records and you'll get that groove. thats his bread and butter right there

    • @PaulTheSkeptic
      @PaulTheSkeptic Год назад

      @@dansullivan172 That's exactly who I mean. Man that is SUCH a cool groove. Thanks much.

    • @athitayastirling8259
      @athitayastirling8259 9 месяцев назад

      ​@dansullivan172 that is the great man himself RL Burnside.

  • @deloreswilson1798
    @deloreswilson1798 3 года назад +1

    Trying to out sing each other to take the edge off of "pure hell". Underpaid,heatstroke and destitution..... 🤔

  • @georgepops3138
    @georgepops3138 2 года назад

    This make me think about what my dad told me about the redriver bottoms northeast Texas bowie county texas up around dekalb tx hooks tx redbank tx wamba tx north of texarkana texas Mandeville ar over the state line in miller County arkansas redriver bottoms first old river texarkana Arkansas second old river lost parie the beck bottoms hack and bend bottoms glass hill bottoms on the redriver was northeast of dekalb tx on farm road 992 on 3side farm it was a prison on there also my dad grandfather which is his dad Father that's how he got to dekalb tx around 1901 to 1910 he was lock up in that prison when he was released in 1910 he didn't have no where to go so he stayed on that plantation and the where alot of families who lives on them farms the pops johnson the hooks the Neal's Traylor family Jones galbert family McGowans so he married a McGowan his name was elis pops whe was born in texarkana bowie county texas miller county arkansas area he move to hooks tx 12 miles west of texarkana on highway us 82 he killed somebody around 1901 that's how he got to that prison in dekalb tx 18 miles west on 82 my dad dad didn't meet his father until some time around 1910 my dad dad was from hooks his name was John pops he was born 1900 in hooks tx he was a couple of months old when he dad elis pops went to prison my dad name George pops my name is George Lee pops Jr my Dad married a Ganaway my mother name is Debra ganaway pops her mother name was Helen hooks ganaway my blood line come from the farm my mother's mother mother name was Sally Johnson hooks her husband's name was forrest hooks which is my mother mother's father he was A big time boss his grandfather name was forrest hooks a mixed man who father was Warren hooks the founder of hooks tx so bowie county texas run deep I'm my roots redriver bottoms baby

  • @rosalindhampton24
    @rosalindhampton24 11 месяцев назад

    👩‍💻💭... MY My My

  • @PaulTheSkeptic
    @PaulTheSkeptic 2 года назад

    Come on camera guy. Get the hands.

  • @YasinAlmak
    @YasinAlmak 2 года назад

    18:00 is this woman the mother of Denzel Washington?!