Mississippi Blues (Official Putumayo Version)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
  • A musical journey down the Mississippi River with classic blues from Memphis to New Orleans. Featuring songs from the original Mississippi Blues collection and 2 bonus tracks from other Putumayo releases.
    Putumayo travels the world in search of exceptional songs from Congo to Cuba, Rome to Rio, New Orleans to Nova Scotia. Putumayo’s meticulously researched and curated musical journeys are “Guaranteed to Make You Feel Good!”
    For a complete track listing and playlist version of the songs featured in this video visit:
    • Mississippi Blues by P...
    Discover more music from around the world at www.putumayo.com
    Listen to official Putumayo playlists: www.putumayo.c...
    Listen to Putumayo on RUclips: / @putumayoworldmusic
    Listen to Putumayo on Spotify: spoti.fi/3hlSkFF
    Listen to Putumayo on Apple Music: apple.co/2DYcLcE
    Subscribe to Putumayo's email list: eepurl.com/xxxo9
    Visit Putumayo T-shirt & Art Print Store: www.putumayost...
    Buy Putumayo Downloads: www.putumayo.c...
    Buy Putumayo CDs: www.putumayo.c...
    Follow Putumayo:
    Website: www.putumayo.com
    Facebook: / putumayo
    Instagram: / putumayo_wo. .
    Spotify: spoti.fi/3hlSkFF
    Apple Music: apple.co/2DYcLcE
    Email list: eepurl.com/xxxo9

Комментарии • 26

  • @PutumayoWorldMusic
    @PutumayoWorldMusic  Год назад +22

    Track Listing:
    1. Luther Allison - “Part Time Love” 0:00
    2. Junior Wells - “Come On In This House” 2:45
    3. Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup - “Mean Ol' Frisco” 8:39
    4. Artie White - “The More You Lie To Me” 11:14
    5. Ike & Tina Turner - “3 O'Clock In The Morning Blues” 14:52
    6. Bobby Bland - “St. James Infirmary” 17:32
    7. Mississippi John Hurt - “Make Me A Pallet On Your Floor” 19:57
    8. Chris Thomas King - “Come On In My Kitchen” 24:30
    9. John Lee Hooker - “Baby Don't Do Me Wrong” 28:53
    10. Memphis Minnie - “I Got To Make A Change Blues” 33:56
    11. Memphis Slim - “Stewball” 36:54
    Bonus Tracks:
    12. Buddy Guy, Junior Wells - “In The Wee Hours” 40:28 from "Putumayo Presents Blues Café" www.putumayo.com/blues-cafe
    13. Lurrie Bell - “Blues In My Soul” 44:14 from "Putumayo Presents Blues Café" www.putumayo.com/blues-cafe

  • @aelrickofoid6733
    @aelrickofoid6733 Год назад +4

    I heard Doc Watson sing this song once in concert. Doc Watson was born as a white man in the segregated south. However he never forgot folk music's roots in blues

    • @aelrickofoid6733
      @aelrickofoid6733 Год назад

      And he performed with many black musicians throughout his career

    • @shawnohale7991
      @shawnohale7991 8 месяцев назад

      Doc Watson was blind from infancy and probably didn't understand skin color or race differences.

  • @SIEMAPA
    @SIEMAPA Год назад +5

    ohh man , never actually been to missisipi but i feel like i was literally sittin there and hanging out with these guys and their dog ;)

  • @krystingrant6292
    @krystingrant6292 10 месяцев назад +2

    Woooo weee 😫😌

  • @samuelgrobstein5232
    @samuelgrobstein5232 Год назад +8

    The Mississippi River is one of Americ's greatest natural and cultural resources, a symbol of commerce and adventure that captures our imagination. The mighty Mississippi has also inspired timeless art, ranging from Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" to a wealth of blues songs such as the ones featured on this collection.
    While it begins in Minnesota, the Mississippi River is most frequently associated with the Deep South and the Mississippi Delta. in the early 20th century, as river towns sprang up amidst the rice and cotton fields, blues music was born. At juke joints, levee camps, and weekend house parties, African-American cast off their hardships and found joy listening to lone troubadours singing driving, rhythmic songs with riveting narratives that captured their hopes and fears.
    Early Delta musical pioneers like Robert Johnson and Charley Patton set the standard, playing slide guitar and singing unaccompanied country blues that didn't need a backing band. Patton and Johnson's ferocious intensity and simultaneous rhythm and lead guitar playing made them one-man bands that kept dance floors packed. Meanwhile, piano players like Pinetop Perkins were accomplishing the same feat, sitting down alone at the ivories and pounding out boogie-woogie and aching slow numbers that kept revelers and lovers alike in rapture.
    It's a place and era now shrouded in myth; Robert Johnson selling his soul to the devil at the crossroads in exchange for his otherworldly skills remains one of the blue's persistent legends. But there's no denying the real proliferation of talented musicians who made their mark. A new breed of musucians made hones indigenous blues music that became part of the cultural fabric of the South - and laid the foundation for rock and roll.
    In the 1940s, large segments of southern African-Americans migrated north, drawn by the promise of fruitful employment and a new way of life in urban centers like Chicago. Mississippi Blues traces this musical journey. Along the way, you'll hear how innovators like Luther Allison and Ike and Tina Turner took the musical legacy of Robert Johnson and incorporated new regional and musical influences, making individual statements of their own. Geographically, the route extends from the electric sounds made in Chicago by Delta natives, to the sophisticated Memphis stylings of Tennessee's Bobby "Blue" Bland, to the river's final destination in Louisiana, where guitarist Chris Thomas King plays his own brand of acoustic blues.
    The pool of artists nurtured by the Mississippi River is as wide and vast as the river itself, an it would be impossible to fit all those artists on a single compact disc. But this cross-section of performers is a distillation of the region's talent, and we hope it leads you on a memorable musical voyage, and inspires a fresh look at the beauty and vitality of Mississippi blues.
    Jacob Edgar 2002

    • @Mayousse
      @Mayousse Год назад +1

      Wow. Thank you for this comment. As I read it, I felt like I was right in front of the singers. 🙏🏽🌷

  • @valeriyblinov1573
    @valeriyblinov1573 Год назад +1

    LOVE LOVE LOVE YOU!!!! VB

  • @alphatman8396
    @alphatman8396 Год назад

    All I can says is BRAVO!!!!!

  • @lauratelechea4404
    @lauratelechea4404 Год назад +2

    Gracias desde Uruguay!

  • @francedoumenjou8001
    @francedoumenjou8001 11 месяцев назад

    J'adore🎶🎸🎼😁💞🙏

  • @mandymckerl4548
    @mandymckerl4548 Год назад +1

    Thank you from Scotland 💙

  • @MarotoDIMAS
    @MarotoDIMAS Год назад +2

    40:28 -
    "Uma doce dose pra fazer por um momento
    desaparecer
    todo seu ressentimento"

  • @AngelekaL
    @AngelekaL Год назад +3

    Wow this is amazing thank you!

  • @robertoortega5688
    @robertoortega5688 Год назад +1

    Súper ❤

  • @Jaco_SportManager
    @Jaco_SportManager 10 месяцев назад

    Pura Candela! Gracias 🤙👑

  • @deville.c
    @deville.c 5 месяцев назад

    Your definitely a rollingstone if your here...turn it up for me...thanks

  • @CarlosEnriqueGuayaraRincón-g1o
    @CarlosEnriqueGuayaraRincón-g1o 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks a Lot, for the Best Music. En verdad, ésta sí que es UNA GENUINA EXPRESIÓN ARTÍSTICA.

  • @Mayousse
    @Mayousse Год назад

    I have to get this cd. Thank as always Putumayo. 🌼🌼🌼

  • @shawnohale7991
    @shawnohale7991 8 месяцев назад +1

    To my mind Mississippi delta blues is generally acoustic and before 1940 and after that you get Chicago blues, which is what this music is. Chicago Blues is generally electrified delta blues with a full band

  • @shamekiacollum
    @shamekiacollum Год назад

    Yes lawd

  • @vidalsepulveda5081
    @vidalsepulveda5081 9 месяцев назад

    100% Real

  • @schmalarm
    @schmalarm Год назад

    👍🍀

  • @reinerstein7565
    @reinerstein7565 Год назад +1

    🎩🪄🐇 NICE Music 💿📀💿

  • @aaadigitalproduction4915
    @aaadigitalproduction4915 Год назад

    ❤অসাধারণ ❤