Even Muddy Waters once said he could never quite get that transition right whenever he would try to cover this song. Bukkha is and always be a legend of Delta blues
@@mikeriley3842 He was born in the Hill Country, but moved to the Delta once he became an adult. He wanted to become as good at the blues as Charley Patton. He was as Delta Blues as they came.
@yogsenforfoth5948 yeah cause even he just idk he has the best of both worlds. He is an anomaly when you think about it. Sort of the same way Robert johnson was as he could play so many styles.
We'll look back at 2021 the same way - when it was just a single politician vaccinating live on stage, with a syringe. (In 2040 will be big business, highly choreographed events).
Still a complete honor that I got to meet this guitar last year. It was so worn in (even after a refinish), the neck had been broken in multiple places and the frets were almost scalloped! If only that guitar could talk....
Never again. They were a product of their time. Playing aside, even voices, and accents such as this are lost now.. guys like this grew up learning to talk around people who were probably slaves on plantations and talked totally different to we do today.. small, isolated communities with now TV to influence our voice development. That unique gravel tone. Like even how he pronounced his name Booker "Bukka". Treasure stuff like this. It's audio gold. Even when this was recorded it was sounds of the past. This was in '67 but in reality it's more like '27 or '37. We are so lucky to have these later recordings of the old bluesmen with even semi decent quality before they were all gone. Just think how much is lost, legends who were never recorded. Some would disagree but this kind of resonator stuff to me is pure definitive delta sound. Even more so than the likes of RJ.
When it was all about the music and musicians worked at an individual sound. That's why people have such trouble replicating it today. Even the guitars had their own unique sound and look! Bukka was a giant physically and artistically!
Aberdeen is my home, but the men don't want me around. Aberdeen is my home, but the men don't want me around. 'Cause they'll come and take their women, I will take them out of town. I was over in Aberdeen on my way to New Orleans. I was over in Aberdeen on my way to New Orleans. Then them Aberdeen women told me they would buy my gasoline. Aberdeen is my home, but the men don't want me around. Aberdeen is my home, but the men don't want me around. 'Cause they know I'll take their women, I will take them out of town. i, i heard, heard somebody's knocking on my door. Oh, i heard some, heard somebody's knocking on my door. Well, I believe that's my woman coming to tell me she don't want me no more. Oh, look over yonder where we used to live. Oh, look over yonder where we used to live. Don't you know it's killing me, baby, we won't live there no more. i, i heard, heard somebody's tipping up to my door. Oh, i heard some, heard somebody's tipping up to my door. Well, I believe that's my woman coming to bring me all of my clothes. She's going out already now.
Country Blues é a alma exalando pura energia... energia em estado bruto. A voz desse cara é como um V8 roncando na estrada em baixa rotação, constante e possante.
Rock n Roll is American music! We get it, but your virtue signalling is uncalled for. Music transcends peoples skin tone, I opened up for RL Burnside and he hated the whole black and white talk in music he despised it, music brings us together he said.
@Matthew-qk1xi theres lost history in music and people don't care. Now you know why music is Ai generated, not humanly created. Now you know why there's no more guitar soloing and invention like Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, and James Brown.
@KyleBillie I've toured and played music and opened for some well known bands, my whole life has been music. You're partially correct, the history has been lost, natural progression of time and societal change but I've seen plenty of young bands that know the history and will be a matter of time when rock will breaks again. There's a reason we'll never see another Morrison Hendrix etc, that kind of talent comes once in a lifetime. The public in general are brain dead musically with pop and rap and fake ass country, the time will come when new great bands will come along and challenge the status quo, however brief.
@Matthew-qk1xi If you type in Google "Who's the real King of Rock n Roll?" Its a black dude. Elvis Presley said in a "Jet Magazine in 1957 Rock n Roll was here before he came along." I've been playing Robert Johnson's songs on guitar since I was 13 and I never put it down. An old man from Chicago didn't congratulate me on self teaching guitar instead. He told me... he seen many young bands know who robert johnson's licks are and they never gave credit. It frustrated him to the point where I'm scared to upload my self-taught Robert Johnson Covers.
Booker T. Washington White, conocido en el blues como Bukka White (Aberdeen, Misisipi, 12 de noviembre de 1906-Memphis, Tennessee, 26 de febrero de 1977) fue un guitarrista, famoso por su estilo slide guitar,[1] compositor, pianista y cantante de blues. Su grabación de «Fixin' to die» (1940) fue incorporada al Grammy Hall of Fame en 2012.
If you want proper hard drivin' slide blues look no further. This is your first stop. True, genuine hard stuff from the MASTER, you can imitate but can't copy..
Is that the same guitar Son House plays in footage from around the same era? Headstock and the scroll cut-outs look similar. E2A: I think it's the same session as the Son House one because the microphone is the same too
Friend of mine who once managed the blues caravan that toured thru the south in the 60s said they were 1st cousins he believes. He does know for a fact that Mr. White gave Mr. BB King his first guitar, a red Stella
I'm not saying I know, but I used to sorta try and copy him years ago and Open D always worked for this for me, but that said I don't know if that's what he was using. However I think I read somewhere that he mostly used Open D and Open G. So I'd guess open D.
@@MicSlapsStrings No worries, friend! As I say, I'm not 100% certain, but from what I can recall, back in the day 10-15 years ago, I used Open D for this. Same tuning as I used for Rory Gallagher's cover of the Tony Joe White song "As The Crow Flies". Give Open D a try anyways, and see how it works for you.
@@yeezet4592 then it's wrong! His name is Booker, when someone wrote his name down (many years ago) they couldn't understand him and they wrote "Bukker" and it stuck.... so respect him and please use his real name of Booker.
Always flawless playing, never once on his live videos do you ever see him slip up or get sloppy. He's a freaking machine
I'm from Aberdeen, Scotland and I can't get enough of this.
Now tell me why I want to listen Bon Scott-era AC/DC after this?
hell yeah
I'm from just up the river from Aberdeen, Mississippi, and we're glad you enjoy it. We don't do much good, but when we do, it's stuff like this
Even Muddy Waters once said he could never quite get that transition right whenever he would try to cover this song. Bukkha is and always be a legend of Delta blues
Hill Country Blues, it ain’t the same.
@@mikeriley3842
He was born in the Hill Country, but moved to the Delta once he became an adult. He wanted to become as good at the blues as Charley Patton. He was as Delta Blues as they came.
@@YogsenForfothI guess you could say he had both influences to create that style.
@@DockingFreidmanRecords
Exactly. I think that’s a big reason why he had such a unique and distinctive sound.
@yogsenforfoth5948 yeah cause even he just idk he has the best of both worlds. He is an anomaly when you think about it. Sort of the same way Robert johnson was as he could play so many styles.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Bukka White performer at
a coffee house in 1966. He
was a joy to be around. His
song ABERDEEN is one of
my favorites.❤❤❤❤❤
No need for a whole band, with a billion dollars invested in production, stage, etc.
Just one person, with a guitar, and a whole lotta soul.
We'll look back at 2021 the same way - when it was just a single politician vaccinating live on stage, with a syringe. (In 2040 will be big business, highly choreographed events).
His right hand is sooo precise...
i practiced that strum on a Natty my mother gave me till my hands were suchi.........worth it.
Still trying to find it, he could wail
Here in jan . /25 just turn 50 . Lovin this hill country blues.
Still a complete honor that I got to meet this guitar last year. It was so worn in (even after a refinish), the neck had been broken in multiple places and the frets were almost scalloped! If only that guitar could talk....
That’s amazing! Where’d you see it?
@@bigbeefscorchoat an auction house
@@Xandermall lol no - sold next day for £110,000
@@Xandermall nope sorry
Eric Bibb had a similar experience and wrote a song about it ruclips.net/video/Q4dWkrHypCQ/видео.html
Wow. The voice, the playing, and that awesome percussion on the guitar, just wow.
Le Blues sera toujours la meilleure musique du monde !!!!!!
This may be the catchiest blues song in history
Can't stop listening to this...so so good..
hell ya ,cruising down the backroads down south with a hound dog in the front seat
@@jenniferbradshaw298 I am but in the backwoods n the hills and glens of Scotland
I am enjoying this in 2024xx❤😊
Aberdeen Baby!
Never seen this version before, brilliant. Nobody's ever going to play or sound like this again
MyFlippinValentine I been trying for the last year and can agree this man had such a unique way of playing
@@EquiNoxM Bukka and Son house had really weird timing thats what makes this sound unique and hard to copy to some extent
Never again. They were a product of their time. Playing aside, even voices, and accents such as this are lost now.. guys like this grew up learning to talk around people who were probably slaves on plantations and talked totally different to we do today.. small, isolated communities with now TV to influence our voice development. That unique gravel tone. Like even how he pronounced his name Booker "Bukka". Treasure stuff like this. It's audio gold. Even when this was recorded it was sounds of the past. This was in '67 but in reality it's more like '27 or '37. We are so lucky to have these later recordings of the old bluesmen with even semi decent quality before they were all gone. Just think how much is lost, legends who were never recorded. Some would disagree but this kind of resonator stuff to me is pure definitive delta sound. Even more so than the likes of RJ.
The name Bukka was actually given to him by record companies and he didn’t like it
@@samarkand_nights So it's really "Booker" then?
When it was all about the music and musicians worked at an individual sound. That's why people have such trouble replicating it today. Even the guitars had their own unique sound and look! Bukka was a giant physically and artistically!
So raw, brutal and honest.
Magnificent piece of art and history of the blues 😎😎
Man, this guy is a one man band! Just him and his guitar is all you need to be entertained! He made it look easy! Straight LEGEND
heaviest sound 1 man can make with a guitar, pure natural raw blues from your soul
Siempre me va a gustar el viejo blues solamente un hombre su guitarra y su corazón
His gravelly vibrato is one of the spookiest things in Blues music
Between his gravelly voice and Skip James's haunting melodies we have history in the making.
Close to Charley Patton!
Gravelly is a good description
Que musica dos deuses! Bukka era uma orquestra formada por um homem só
who is here to enjoy this in 2023
❤❤❤
Gets me thru the morning 🙌🙌🙌
2024... these chops fresh for eternity...
Here to enjoy in 2024
Me in 2024 x🎉
2024 and passing it onto an 80s baby
Thank you for sharing this great music,
Just pure talent
The real experimental music.
I love this sound! It's so soulful & earthy!
An absolute wizard!!
Aberdeen is my home, but the men don't want me around.
Aberdeen is my home, but the men don't want me around.
'Cause they'll come and take their women, I will take them out of town.
I was over in Aberdeen on my way to New Orleans.
I was over in Aberdeen on my way to New Orleans.
Then them Aberdeen women told me they would buy my gasoline.
Aberdeen is my home, but the men don't want me around.
Aberdeen is my home, but the men don't want me around.
'Cause they know I'll take their women, I will take them out of town.
i, i heard, heard somebody's knocking on my door.
Oh, i heard some, heard somebody's knocking on my door.
Well, I believe that's my woman coming to tell me she don't want me no more.
Oh, look over yonder where we used to live.
Oh, look over yonder where we used to live.
Don't you know it's killing me, baby, we won't live there no more.
i, i heard, heard somebody's tipping up to my door.
Oh, i heard some, heard somebody's tipping up to my door.
Well, I believe that's my woman coming to bring me all of my clothes.
She's going out already now.
I love you.
Thank you. Bukka White has a terrific sound.
TY!
Thanks so much
Freight train !!🚂, his father was an engineer, explains that’s percussive momentum 🔥
Absolute pioneer
Great live song Bukka!
2024 Bukka sings on
i've never seen this rendition. thank you,
2024… let’s go!!
For a state so sparsely populated, it is amazing how many great musicians, writers and athletes have come from the Magnolia State!
This is brilliant chapeay for this great legend,Chapeau for this blues of him.For ever in my heart and soul.Thank you for uploading The Charity.
Sweet Jesus it’s done f’n good! I surrender
Country Blues é a alma exalando pura energia... energia em estado bruto. A voz desse cara é como um V8 roncando na estrada em baixa rotação, constante e possante.
This is great!
Blessed be to God. 🌹
You have to live this to play like this
He was BB King's cousin, learned that on a blues documentary lol
Rock n roll is black history. Black history is American History.
Rock n Roll is American music! We get it, but your virtue signalling is uncalled for. Music transcends peoples skin tone, I opened up for RL Burnside and he hated the whole black and white talk in music he despised it, music brings us together he said.
@Matthew-qk1xi theres lost history in music and people don't care.
Now you know why music is Ai generated, not humanly created. Now you know why there's no more guitar soloing and invention like Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, and James Brown.
@KyleBillie I've toured and played music and opened for some well known bands, my whole life has been music. You're partially correct, the history has been lost, natural progression of time and societal change but I've seen plenty of young bands that know the history and will be a matter of time when rock will breaks again. There's a reason we'll never see another Morrison Hendrix etc, that kind of talent comes once in a lifetime. The public in general are brain dead musically with pop and rap and fake ass country, the time will come when new great bands will come along and challenge the status quo, however brief.
@Matthew-qk1xi If you type in Google "Who's the real King of Rock n Roll?"
Its a black dude.
Elvis Presley said in a "Jet Magazine in 1957 Rock n Roll was here before he came along."
I've been playing Robert Johnson's songs on guitar since I was 13 and I never put it down. An old man from Chicago didn't congratulate me on self teaching guitar instead. He told me... he seen many young bands know who robert johnson's licks are and they never gave credit.
It frustrated him to the point where I'm scared to upload my self-taught Robert Johnson Covers.
Bukka is phenominal!
So good.
Awesome! BB's cousin.
Soul on soul on blue........
Great great great stuff
been here a while
impressionante!!!
The rhythm section is wild
love forever
This that shit big up too aberdeen Monroe co.
so sick
Mind blown…
I jusr found out this is my grandpa
Sucks that he passed... Man is a legend!
Just great !!!
Booker T. Washington White, conocido en el blues como Bukka White (Aberdeen, Misisipi, 12 de noviembre de 1906-Memphis, Tennessee, 26 de febrero de 1977) fue un guitarrista, famoso por su estilo slide guitar,[1] compositor, pianista y cantante de blues. Su grabación de «Fixin' to die» (1940) fue incorporada al Grammy Hall of Fame en 2012.
Booker T Washington White, he hated being called 'Bukka', was an older cousin of B.B. King.
Is it odd I only like the old dirty blues. Not a fan of major "blues" artists today, with big bands and clean sound.
I dont think it's odd. Im the same way. The grittier, the better. It's one of the reasons why I love old blues 78s.
@@Hir0-Protagonist i think blues is born to be unrefined
Bluespower
Great
Dynamite
Gods highway
Thank you The Charity.
A genius.
If you want proper hard drivin' slide blues look no further. This is your first stop. True, genuine hard stuff from the MASTER, you can imitate but can't copy..
I try to imitate it all the same
Once read that as young man, he did chaingang prison time in the 1930's. Now THAT was surely tough on his life.
I think i read he shot someone in the thigh
❤
hardest delta blues song to play in histor
History!
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
2024😊here 😊
Quality
Is that the same guitar Son House plays in footage from around the same era? Headstock and the scroll cut-outs look similar.
E2A: I think it's the same session as the Son House one because the microphone is the same too
uncle to BB King...Booker
Cousin
@@larryn2682 uncle actually. Or first cousin once removed, which is an uncle.
Friend of mine who once managed the blues caravan that toured thru the south in the 60s said they were 1st cousins he believes. He does know for a fact that Mr. White gave Mr. BB King his first guitar, a red Stella
Was one of his songs featured in the movie life with eddie murphy?
Anybody know what tuning the song is in?
I'm not saying I know, but I used to sorta try and copy him years ago and Open D always worked for this for me, but that said I don't know if that's what he was using. However I think I read somewhere that he mostly used Open D and Open G. So I'd guess open D.
D A D F# A D
@@Sinnerboy88 I definitely appreciate it
@@MicSlapsStrings No worries, friend! As I say, I'm not 100% certain, but from what I can recall, back in the day 10-15 years ago, I used Open D for this. Same tuning as I used for Rory Gallagher's cover of the Tony Joe White song "As The Crow Flies". Give Open D a try anyways, and see how it works for you.
In this particular recording I believe he is in open F minor. Though find whatever works for your voice.
Bukka learned a lot from Charlie Patton
His name is BOOKER.
thank you
Well, it is usually spelled like this.
@@yeezet4592 then it's wrong! His name is Booker, when someone wrote his name down (many years ago) they couldn't understand him and they wrote "Bukker" and it stuck.... so respect him and please use his real name of Booker.
@@just1bobm793 he went by both Booker and Bukka. Relax.
@@just1bobm793 yeah his full name is Booker T. Washington White respect the name people respect the name
If I had to choose one song to listen to before I went totally deaf it would very likely be this.
👍 - i'll take Parchman Farm blues!
The Heppest Of The Hep.
I was in Aberdeen
On my way to New Aberdour
I was in Aberdeen
On my way to New Aberdour
I was in Aberdeen
On my way to New Aberdour
@@cabbagequeen New Aberdour is only a few tens of miles from Aberdeen. Have a look at a map.
So much feeling!! Amazing performer.
Wer muss das auch für Musik gucken ?
Warscheinlich nur unsere Klasse
I is here I need a national!some body give me a national!
She goin out with ol red now...lmao classic!! Aint that some shit!!
Smells like parchman farm blues
isnt this BB kings cousin?
Uncle to BB King and Lightening Hopkins
Close to Charley Patton vocals!
Why cant THIS be pumped thru wanna be Gs car stereos ?
It's too hard for them. They're a bunch of pussies.
Man his thumb is driving like John Henry's hammer.
If he had a good guitar. 👍 and at the ⏲!
2024 🗿
Edinburgh Dallas Delta
RUclips ruined this with some clean up digital bollox
Hello everyone, if you want to learn how Bukka played this song, here´s the video: ruclips.net/video/v9Yi-pZRLJ0/видео.html
I can barely understand a single word of this song...
Are you from Mississippi.......?
Mississippi folks do!
It's great! Look up the lyrics!
Not a Mississippian ..
But I sure heard the Spirit talk !