British guitarist analyses 1920's guitar INNOVATOR Mississippi John Hurt!

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • Tonight we're taking a look at Mississippi John Hurt's unique right hand technique while he performs 'You Got to Walk That Lonesome Valley'.
    Original video - • Mississippi John Hurt ...
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Комментарии • 386

  • @wingsofpegasus
    @wingsofpegasus  3 года назад +33

    TIME STAMPS -
    0:45 Performance
    3:35 Analysis Start
    6:25 The Playing (Syncopation)
    9:13 G Chord Movement
    11:01 Second Finger on the Right Hand
    13:41 Vocal Delivery
    15:01 History/Career

    • @mydailybread7
      @mydailybread7 3 года назад +1

      Moving. ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ 🌟

    • @ziggylayneable
      @ziggylayneable 3 года назад +2

      Please do a video on "Dave Van Ronk".I could give you a link,but it's your channel type his name and pick a video.Any will do

    • @keithwigley1256
      @keithwigley1256 3 года назад +2

      And don't forget Bob Brosman dude...

    • @cindypowers4993
      @cindypowers4993 3 года назад

      Fil, I love it when you pick up the guitar and explain the various chords,etc. Makes me appreciate how much goes into playing ♥️

    • @jwlangley7417
      @jwlangley7417 3 года назад +3

      Thank you Fil l for keeping these artists alive

  • @grahampaulkendrick7845
    @grahampaulkendrick7845 3 года назад +135

    Mississippi John was rediscovered in the spring of '63 and passed away in late '66. What a lovely man and musician. God rest his soul!

  • @JR-pr8jb
    @JR-pr8jb Год назад +14

    Remarkable how much we viewers can learn about traditional American music from a young Brit!

    • @patricias5122
      @patricias5122 2 месяца назад

      Yes, but let's recognize that it was Black Americans who created this music, and it has been here all along

  • @Chihome
    @Chihome 3 года назад +151

    During this new day of recycled, mass produced and digitally manufactured music, thank you for continuing to showcase these great artists!

    • @keithwigley1256
      @keithwigley1256 3 года назад +5

      I will second that

    • @johnrife7134
      @johnrife7134 3 года назад +2

      There's still good ernest music out there but you can't just pick it up passively. You have to seek it out and keep your ears open. Always look for new artists and support them.

    • @rottingpotatoes2483
      @rottingpotatoes2483 3 года назад +2

      Recycled, mass produced music has been around for a long time. Great artists still exist today.

    • @samosasosa6684
      @samosasosa6684 2 года назад +1

      way ahead of his time was his trouble. one of the true first great blues players. Also blessed music, nothing gross what a refreshing feeling.

    • @stewartfenton7660
      @stewartfenton7660 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@samosasosa6684John was what was called a songster, one of the last among that tradition I believe. Leadbelly was another. They both had a wide repertoire of songs which included the occasional blues. But they were not blues singers.

  • @jamesupton5601
    @jamesupton5601 3 года назад +33

    I love how his musical start was so isolated from other prevalent styles, that it wasn't blues or gospel, it was his own.

  • @craigmcc1982
    @craigmcc1982 11 месяцев назад +7

    You could set your clock to that right thumb. Overwhelmingly talented but with a genuine humility. One of the greatest.

  • @jimji5116
    @jimji5116 2 года назад +5

    I saw Mississippi John Hurt live at the 1965 Newport Folk music festival!

  • @TheDivayenta
    @TheDivayenta 3 года назад +39

    It brings tears to my eyes when I see brilliant influential artists like this who walked through a lifetime of threatening horror in the Jim Crow South.

    • @Udontsay948
      @Udontsay948 2 года назад +4

      Don’t forget to vote, Baby. Jim Crow picked up friends lately….

    • @TheDivayenta
      @TheDivayenta 2 года назад +2

      @@Udontsay948 I always vote. Even the Dog catcher must be a Dem or Independent !
      Mein Hut es hat drei Ecken!

  • @Dubinvero
    @Dubinvero 3 года назад +77

    This was recorded in 1966 on Pete Seeger’s “Rainbow Quest” program. There are a number of videos of MJH from this program on You Tube.
    Mississippi John inspired many players to take up fingerstyle guitar. Definitely one of the all time greats.

    • @Crunkboy415
      @Crunkboy415 3 года назад +3

      Travis picking was originally from black bluesman like John Hurt, notably Arnold Schulz.

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  3 года назад +5

      Thanks!

    • @icanfartloud
      @icanfartloud 3 года назад +1

      @@Crunkboy415 Looks like what a banjo player does with picks on their fingers, of course, without picks

    • @kedalsj
      @kedalsj 3 года назад +4

      What's really great about Pete Seeger's Rainbow Quest (1965-66) is that you can nearly always see what the players are doing.

    • @robertsmyth4998
      @robertsmyth4998 3 года назад +2

      @@Crunkboy415 Father of bluegrass Bill Monroe cites Arnold Shultz a major influence in his music , Arnold played with Charlie and Bill early thirties ☘️☘️☘️🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧

  • @shaunw9270
    @shaunw9270 3 года назад +28

    Yes Fil ! Brilliant! Mississippi John Hurt, an absolute favourite of mine. Thanks for hopefully bringing him to more people's attention. His recordings from 1928 are stone cold classics and his life story is equally fascinating.

    • @shaunw9270
      @shaunw9270 3 года назад

      @Ronald Raygun I guess it was luck that the original recordings survived the depression in tact. As you know , back then they recorded direct to a master disc rather than magnetic tape and less than half of those recordings of MJH were released as shellac 10" singles. Unfortunately lots of recordings by other artists were destroyed or lost , Robert Johnson being a prime example ,so even some of the best cd's are only as good as the old shellac record they transferred to tape years later .

  • @scottcrosby-art5490
    @scottcrosby-art5490 3 года назад +36

    Ridiculously talented, I listen to his stuff regularly

  • @lornatonack2514
    @lornatonack2514 3 года назад +16

    One of my favourite guitar players of all time. And his singing ... well I’m just lost for words ...beautiful

  • @johnnymossville
    @johnnymossville 3 года назад +42

    I love the humble mastery in both his playing and singing. He makes it all look so easy.

    • @appalachiangunman9589
      @appalachiangunman9589 3 года назад +3

      Singing while playing at this skill level is very impressive. You’re right, he does make it look effortless.

    • @keithwigley1256
      @keithwigley1256 3 года назад +2

      Will second that..

  • @konstantia1607
    @konstantia1607 3 года назад +34

    The head is reeling just trying to sort out how he managed such complicated stuff all at once. And he does look and sound totally relaxed. How ingenious he was! And I only keep marvelling at how you bring out the fascinating things in these performances. Thanks Fil.

  • @sunnihunny
    @sunnihunny 3 года назад +21

    Being a lifelong resident of Mississippi, I am always glad when we get any positive renown. Thank you for this wonderful commentary on a wonderful man. We get a lot of flack about a lot of things but these things can hardly be contested...our musicians, our singers, our blues 😉

    • @cindypowers4993
      @cindypowers4993 3 года назад +4

      Hands down, no contest Barbara..... you speak the truth!! National treasures 👍

    • @sunnihunny
      @sunnihunny 3 года назад +1

      @@cindypowers4993 thank you, Cindy!

    •  3 года назад +1

      mary frances hurt hosts a homecoming festival BBQ weekend in the fall in avalon near greenwood off rte.#7 at the museum site. i've been attending since 2015. try to make it up there sometime if you've never been. what part of of mississippi are you in?

    • @sunnihunny
      @sunnihunny 3 года назад +1

      @ oh my I have been NEEEEDING some good bbq! That sounds like so much fun. Maybe I can make it next fall. It wouldn't be far from me. I'm in northeast Mississippi .

    • @bluesingmusic3443
      @bluesingmusic3443 3 года назад +2

      I lived in Meridian in 1980. Absolutely loved Mississippi. That's a place where I coukd buy all the Blues albums I wanted to.(much to the chagrin of my 1st wife👌) Great, friendly, people as well.

  • @estelleadamski308
    @estelleadamski308 2 года назад +12

    You cannot sing this song properly unless you have indeed "Walked that Lonesome Valley" This is amazing and timeless! This guy walked it !

  • @theesbband
    @theesbband 3 года назад +41

    Well done Fil: this is just astonishing. It's damn' nearly running clawhammer and incredibly accurate: he holds a pattern bassline as well as another instrument: and his amazing voice is an object lesson to us all. It's not hard to see why MJH is/was held in such reverence by the likes of Rory Gallagher, Eric Clapton, Pete Green and the great musicologists of my, ahem, youth. The almighty Robert Johnson managed to get three lines going at once. Magical. Worth 500 hours of fabricated girl/boy "bands." I love this guy and he didn't play a bad note.

    • @patricias5122
      @patricias5122 Год назад +4

      Yes, it's true that: He was much respected by Eric Clapton, Steve Miller, John Philips ... .but he was a masterful and fine Black musician before those White artists discovered him, it must be said. He was very esteemed by Black blues artists all of his life.

  • @suehollar2578
    @suehollar2578 3 года назад +22

    Such a great singer singing such a humble song. I never would have caught the syncopated rhythm and finger style without this video. It gives " a world of hurt" a whole new meaning!

    • @wingsofpegasus
      @wingsofpegasus  3 года назад +1

      😂👍

    • @suehollar2578
      @suehollar2578 3 года назад +1

      @Yes Sir! Whoa, I never expected that. They are both dark. Especially since my name is Sue... "Going to grab my gun and kill ol Susie". Yikes!

    • @ivannovotny4552
      @ivannovotny4552 3 года назад +2

      @@suehollar2578
      And let's not forget Johnny Cash's "Boy named Sue." 🤔

    • @suehollar2578
      @suehollar2578 3 года назад +1

      @@ivannovotny4552 yeah I grew up with that one. My Dad played it all the time

    • @ivannovotny4552
      @ivannovotny4552 3 года назад +1

      @@suehollar2578
      Awesome, i also liked "The Moral Of The Story" of Boy Named Sue. ☺️

  • @stefanschleps8758
    @stefanschleps8758 2 года назад +12

    This is by far my favorite video of yours. Thank you for pointing out the technical skills of John Hurt. I can now appreciate this legend more fully. To a humble fan such as myself he is one of the greatest bluesmen there has ever been.
    Thanks again for his history.
    Peace.

  • @kurtisle
    @kurtisle 3 года назад +11

    Thanks Fil for hitting on my favorite music. The song:
    An old American traditional gospel folk song, dating back to its first known recording in 1927 by old-time musician David Miller.
    That's the history of American Music right there. I have a special place in my heart for the folks like Mississippi John Hurt who pioneered the blues.
    How about some Son House?

  • @jamminwithjambo7729
    @jamminwithjambo7729 3 года назад +3

    Appreciations for your
    discerning eyes and ears.

  • @AndyZach
    @AndyZach 3 года назад +18

    One of my favorite videos of yours. I watched the right hand carefully and noted the first two fingers and thumb playing independently a polyphonic song. I love blues guitar and this was great.

  • @gnpahdc
    @gnpahdc 3 года назад +25

    Thank you for your academic, practical and artistic excellence - and your honoring of and reverence for these greats of the past. Thanks for being a role model on this platform. Peace.

  • @antonkrog843
    @antonkrog843 3 года назад +7

    1:30 I know that feeling! Everytime I listen to his songs I can't help but smile! Such a deeply rooted, kind old man. Never had much, a normal farmhand was how he spent his days earning a harsh living. One can't help but smile and feel the love in his picking!

  • @ursafan40
    @ursafan40 3 года назад +13

    Great find.
    Camera man or director must be a guitar player
    The gentlest of all the old Bluesmen.
    Even his sad songs have an uplifting effect.
    Good job getting the right hand down that well on short notice :-)

    • @toughlikerocks
      @toughlikerocks 6 месяцев назад

      It was from a Pete Seeger show called Rainbow Quest. They had many excellent players on and you could tell the focus was on the musicians so I'm every episode you get a great view of the fretboard and right hand. Shockingly great production values for a public access show from the 60s! They're all on RUclips. Rev. Gary Davis, Roscoe Holcomb, Jonny and June Cash, and many, many more I can't remember. Just a ton of amazing musicians. We are blessed to have access to such historically and musically important footage.

  • @debravirden7130
    @debravirden7130 3 года назад +6

    Bless you for showcasing an American legend. Mr. Hurt illustrates American folk music roots.

  • @89blackcamaro
    @89blackcamaro 2 года назад +2

    Love john hurt heard this hundred times

  • @greghudzik3770
    @greghudzik3770 3 года назад +10

    Thanks to you Fil I could pick up on Mr.Hurt's finger style with the close up on his right hand. I could realize this was something special. Before watching a bunch of your videos I would have said, "Oh, nice tube." and not noticed the absolute skill demonstrated. Thanks again, Fil!

  • @TheOneStoneAngell
    @TheOneStoneAngell 3 года назад +9

    Mr. Fil you are soooo good at breaking it down, and also so kind in doing so. Thank you.

  • @JR-pr8jb
    @JR-pr8jb Год назад +2

    Nice bonus lesson on "Travis picking" going way back in time!

  • @stevenking6129
    @stevenking6129 24 дня назад

    I’ve been listening to Mississippi John for 40 plus years and never, NEVER, realized how difficult that must have been. I just knew it was amazing and sublime.

  • @virginia3619
    @virginia3619 3 года назад +7

    WOW! I love syncopated rhythm. What a beautiful, clear, and interesting demonstration of Hurt's meaningful and unique music. Thank you, Fil. Peace.

  • @startsontime
    @startsontime 3 года назад +3

    your analysis opens my appreciation of music in ways I never would have been capable of otherwise.

  • @cindypowers4993
    @cindypowers4993 3 года назад +5

    Yes, Mississippi John Hurt did play at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965 here in my home state of Rhode Island! Amazing his finger dexterity and coordination. Pure Delta blues 👍🎸

  • @Hasdarubal
    @Hasdarubal Год назад +1

    10:53 "entering a world of Hurt". Nice! Great video thank you.

  • @antt5112
    @antt5112 3 года назад +1

    So glad you covered him

  • @catherinelynnfraser2001
    @catherinelynnfraser2001 3 года назад +3

    Thank you. He was magic❤️

  • @GreenManalishiUSA
    @GreenManalishiUSA 3 года назад +6

    Fil, thank you so much for this analysis video. Mississippi John Hurt was my number one inspiration for picking up the guitar. His gentle singing and intricate guitar picking sounded like nothing else that I had ever heard. His music continues to delight new generations of players and listeners.

  • @MD-km2jw
    @MD-km2jw 3 года назад +9

    Absolute brilliant analysis Fil. I was smiling through the whole video

  • @ivannovotny4552
    @ivannovotny4552 3 года назад +12

    Wow, what a treat! Mississippi John Hurt - and also Pete Seeger and his sister Peggy in that clip. - It doesn't get any better than this. Also as the story goes; when John was rediscovered later on as a farmer - after 35 years hiatus by Tom Hoskins - he didn't own any guitar. (Shame.)
    Thank you Fil for awesome choice for putting spotlight on my very favorite and also your knowledgeable analysis.

    • @chriskeefer629
      @chriskeefer629 3 года назад +2

      That's actually Hadie West, and Fred Van Epps!

  • @michellewilsdon294
    @michellewilsdon294 3 года назад +7

    Thank you so much for this, he inspired my brother, who definitely worked at this finger picking style. Again more music which percolated through my younger days. Blues and Folk, the map for my own "walk of the Lonesome Valley." xxx

  • @petecartwright5211
    @petecartwright5211 3 года назад +9

    MY dad was overseas during Vietnam, twice, and the first time back brought with him a stereo he bought in Hong Kong. He also bought a TEAC reel to reel recorder. The first time I heard John Hurt was a Newport Folk Festival record and I'll never forget listening to "John Henry." I was a fan ever since. Great stuff, Fil!

    • @paulacorreira3943
      @paulacorreira3943 3 года назад

      Wish I had seen him at the Newport Jazz Festival. Somewhere I've heard him singing John Henry and used it in a class. The class was mesmerized.

    • @petecartwright5211
      @petecartwright5211 3 года назад

      @@paulacorreira3943 I'm familiar with the Newport Jazz fest but I'm 98% certain this was a "Folk" festival. It was a long time ago, but I recall some of the other big "Folk" acts. MJH started his set with C.C. Rider. This album must have been released in 67, 68 or 69
      "Evening people, glad for you to see me
      the first little number I'm gonna do is C.C. Rider..."

    • @paulacorreira3943
      @paulacorreira3943 3 года назад

      @@petecartwright5211 Sorry, it's just habit. I live near Newport and I guess old habits die hard. I think The Jazz Festival was instituted a few years or so before the Folk Festival so locals just referred to the festivals as the Jazz Festival because it was first. It could be too that the Folk Festival was suspended for awhile and only the Jazz Festival remained at different times. Yes, I know it's sloppy; today, people are much better at breaking them out correctly. Mea culpa.

    • @petecartwright5211
      @petecartwright5211 3 года назад +1

      @@paulacorreira3943 My dad may still have that album. They retired and left the mainland so, it may have been sold off with other things they didn't want to drag across the ocean.
      If he's still got, it's unplayable. I must have scratched the entire thing. Both sides...

    • @paulacorreira3943
      @paulacorreira3943 3 года назад +1

      @@petecartwright5211 I can picture it, Pete- all scratched up and loved :) But seriously, I found a video of Hurt playing John Henry and used it for an ESL class for adults I was teaching. We read the story of John Henry and then I played the video and everyone was speechless at his performance. Then we looked up Hurt and decided there was no one better to sing the song of John Henry. It was one of those amazing teaching moments.

  • @Karol-ds1qs
    @Karol-ds1qs 2 года назад +5

    There is a deep meaning in the Lonesome Valley song. Who experienced it knows what is this legend signing about...

  • @pflannelly
    @pflannelly 2 года назад +1

    His right-hand positioning is very close to what three-finger "Scruggs" style banjo players use. Anchoring his picking hand to the soundboard with his pinky. alternating thumb on the low strings, pointer finger on the B string, and middle finger on the E punctuated with pinches on the beat. The left hand also employs synchronized slides, hammer-ons, and pull-offs in a way typical of that style too. Very cool. Thanks for posting.

  • @chrissibersky4617
    @chrissibersky4617 3 года назад +2

    What a great review.
    He's such a legend.

  • @alanmaxfield8770
    @alanmaxfield8770 3 года назад +8

    FIL! Thank you so much for all of the hard work and dedication that you put into keeping the lesser known facts and history of our artists alive. If you ever get a chance to visit the Library of Congress in the U.S. you can see recordings of MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT, LEDBELLIE (whose real name was Huddie Ledbetter) and various other artists of this era who were recorded on wax cylinders by a gentleman by the name Alan Lomax. Just a little known fact to be heard and hopefully not forgotten is that Lomax went to ANGOLA State Penitenitary in the state of Louisiana to record LEDBELLIE who was to be released shortely and Lomax ws afraid that he would not be able to track him down upon his release. Thank you once again FIL.

  • @andrevolker
    @andrevolker 3 года назад +16

    I'm glad you discovered Seeger's Rainbow Quest; it's such a treasure trove.
    I've always considered John Hurt the epitome of Delta Blues. Bass and the melody on one guitar, and a real voice on top of that. His voice always touches me, it is so incredibly warm and tender.
    I believe you are now experiencing what people like Clapton, Mayall Beck, Green etc were hit by when they bought some obscure American records in the early sixties ;)

    • @drewpall2598
      @drewpall2598 3 года назад +4

      André Volker
      As You may know all of the 39 episodes of "Rainbow Quest" was at one point on the verge of being lost forever. I am glad to see they have been preserved for future generations.

  • @EmpressMermaid
    @EmpressMermaid 3 года назад +3

    This man and those like him are at the roots of all of the music we love today. I hope everyone appreciates what they did.

  • @HollowayIP
    @HollowayIP 8 месяцев назад +1

    MJH is the only artist I listen to these days, probably everyday, he's in my work shop, on my phone, in my car and in my bedroom, about 60 plus songs I have of his, each one a gem. I also play the guitar myself Mississippi John Hurt alternating bass style.

  • @PaulMcCaffreyfmac
    @PaulMcCaffreyfmac 8 месяцев назад +2

    Mississippi John Hurt is one of my happy places

  • @OldBillOverHill
    @OldBillOverHill 3 года назад +2

    So cool watching you demo.

  • @cguzelli1
    @cguzelli1 3 года назад +9

    Hi Fil: thanks for showcasing one of my favorite "pre-war" blues artists. If you can call him "blues" as he was unique in that his style was so different than his contemporaries. John recorded all his sides for OKeh in 1928 and as you mentioned went back to Avalon, MS. I traveled around America for my job. A side benefit of travel was getting opportunities to visit places of musical interest while doing business. One of my first trips to Mississippi took me to Avalon where if I had a screwdriver with me, I would had taken the 'Avalon" sign. I located the approximate place where John may have lived according to a local and was able to pick cotton from the same field that John did as a sharecropper. It sits on my mantle. That same trip took me to Grenada, MS where I thought John was laid to rest. Subsequent trips took me to the Crossroads on 61 and Indianola, MS, where B.B. King was born and grew up. John's style makes you smile. A friend at work heard my CD of John Hurt's OKeh sessions. The guy never played guitar before and at 36 years old, he bought a 1929 National Resonator and taught himself to do the alternating bass and finger picking. It took months for him to master the alternating bass with thumb while working in the other fingers. Drove his wife nuts! There's a lot of video out there due to John's return to performing and this particular performance was from 1965. Glad to see he got his dues. As the saying goes - better late than never. Great video!

    • @carlosreira413
      @carlosreira413 Год назад +2

      Thanks for that story. Somewhere I saw a picture of his grave, humble little stone in the weeds. Just as it should be. A priceless secret to those who know.

    • @cguzelli1
      @cguzelli1 Год назад

      @@carlosreira413 - It did take some time as no one in Avalon seemed to know of John. Stopped in a store and the old man directed me to Saint James Cemetary. Without his help, I'd never had found it.

    • @carlosreira413
      @carlosreira413 Год назад

      @@cguzelli1 Amazing. It would lovely to do a mini documentary if you have photos. I'll never forget the first time my brother put on the Rounder Records (I think) "MIssippi John Hurt Today." He, being a good guitarist, learned all the numbers, but in open tuning, which worked quite well. But John seems to have mostly played in the key of C in standard tuning. The sound was the cotton fields, the suffering, the hope of some essentially American things. And even the Candyman came off holy, I don't know how.

    • @cguzelli1
      @cguzelli1 Год назад

      @@carlosreira413 - what a true documentary of "Country Blues" would be to feature all the great artists of this style who came long before Robert Johnson. Don't get me wrong, I like Johnson's songs a lot, but to call him the father of "Country Blues" is a disservice to all those who played it long before he did in 1936. Nor is there one style of country blues. Johnson had the advantage of Columbia Records in the early 1960's by rereleasing his works on LP which is where Clapton probably heard his music for the first time. Other artists who recorded on Black Patti, Black Swan, Paramount, etc., never got the same exposure.

    • @carlosreira413
      @carlosreira413 Год назад

      @@cguzelli1 Thanks for that reply. Amazing American history. Some of this might have been touched on in the Country Music doc done by Burns, but only scratching the surface of the African American experience. What connection was there to ragtime? Had to be quite a bit. Also the rise of the guitar over the banjo as a minstrel instrument has to coincide with the availability of guitars as consumer objects. Here we would look at Martin and Gibson, especially their lower cost models, and other competitors. We all know that slide guitar was often a necessity on instruments with unplayable action. Lots to cover. I'm waiting for it!

  • @CatsInHats-S.CrouchingTiger
    @CatsInHats-S.CrouchingTiger 3 года назад +1

    An incredible story & analysis, so fascinating.

  • @goldsman
    @goldsman 2 года назад +3

    Great analysis!

  • @georgemanos754
    @georgemanos754 2 года назад +1

    Great video Fil! I'm a huge fan of John Hurt since 1981. Thanx!

  • @tortoisedreams6369
    @tortoisedreams6369 3 года назад +4

    Just lovely. One of my favorites. Thanks! You did him proud.

  • @gaoyoude
    @gaoyoude 3 года назад +3

    Fil, from a non-musician thanks for the enlightening commentary on MJH’s guitar artistry as well as your enthusiastic account of his life and times!

  • @pickerdad8402
    @pickerdad8402 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks Fil! You're doing a great service by spreading the word about John Hurt, his songs, and his playing style. It's familiar territory to those of us lucky enough to live where John plied his trade, but it hasn't always been known or so clearly explained to those outside of Canada and USA.

  • @jimthompson606
    @jimthompson606 2 года назад +1

    John made some famous records in the 1920's but got out of music and returned to farming in Mississippi. His early work was discovered during the folk music revival but nobody knew where he lived. But he had mentioned his hometown Avalon on one of his songs. Somebody went there to find him and there he was sharecropping near Avalon Mississippi.

  • @peppers1587
    @peppers1587 3 года назад +6

    So glad you did him. I have been love listening to John Hurt when I have been hiking. Especially this 🎶 song.

  • @brianf9615
    @brianf9615 3 года назад +4

    John Hurt was a gem. John had the ability to sing the blues with such restraint.

  • @wenbren
    @wenbren 3 года назад +4

    So pure!

  • @Tungadunger
    @Tungadunger 3 года назад +2

    I love Mississippi John Hurt! Thanks for this.

  • @susantownsend8397
    @susantownsend8397 Год назад +1

    Oh, wow! I love that you go back to such a wide variety of musical styles. I don’t play guitar but I love this music and your vids enhance my enjoyment by helping me understand it.
    I’m thinking about how Southern Gospel influenced Paul Simon at one point.

  • @dalem8332
    @dalem8332 3 года назад +4

    Masterful bluesy beautiful playing . LOVE this performance. I've heard John Hurt before and have so much respect for the man. Amazing. Great analysis and demo Fil! ♥️🎼🎶🇨🇦

  • @robfisher8638
    @robfisher8638 3 года назад +3

    So cool for you to take on this long time gone national treasure. Love it

  • @woodLG
    @woodLG Год назад +1

    Like what you said about how hard this song is to learn, how brilliant and intimate it is and natural. I been playing a long time, and this song is forcing me to rethink and relearn my right hand approach. It’s wild!

  • @andrewmair7371
    @andrewmair7371 Год назад +1

    Beautifully analysed & documented as always Fil… 👍😊

  • @stoneyascension7250
    @stoneyascension7250 Год назад +1

    Just beautiful!

  • @richardmooney6800
    @richardmooney6800 3 года назад +2

    God Bless America and all the blues that this young country has given to the world black and white plus the spectrum of the universe

  • @barn_ninny
    @barn_ninny 3 дня назад

    Mr. Hurt (I can't call him anything else) was such an original. He's the classic example of somebody who grew up with few influences, just figuring it out by himself, and developed a style unique to him. I find him immensely inspiring.

  • @randyodom3804
    @randyodom3804 3 года назад +3

    He was born March 8, 1892 in Teoc, Mississippi.

  • @severma22
    @severma22 3 года назад +1

    He makes this sound so simple- when it’s incredibly complex. Thanks.

  • @Udontsay948
    @Udontsay948 2 года назад +1

    Love you with all my heart, Fil. This is how my grandparents sounded.

  • @BOOMNERD51
    @BOOMNERD51 3 года назад +2

    Thanks, Fil. Last night my internet kept dropping out, so I missed this great video!

  • @barriepotter3753
    @barriepotter3753 Год назад +1

    I’ve just got to hear the opening chords of any song played by Mississippi John Hurt and I start smiling, and then when I hear his voice -It’s ear to ear!

  • @bobwallace1880
    @bobwallace1880 3 года назад +2

    Wonderful Fil. You provide so much enjoyment. Your research is spot on. Thanks again.

  • @mariorabottini5687
    @mariorabottini5687 3 года назад +3

    Just amazing Fil! John’s guitar brilliance is incredible. His right hand picking is just beautiful to watch! A real pleasure just sitting and relaxing watching and listening to this talented man! Cheers Mario! 😀👌👍

  • @fernandooliveiralino
    @fernandooliveiralino 11 месяцев назад +1

    Terrific video. Thank you so much.

  • @dulichion
    @dulichion 3 года назад +2

    damn such lovely music.

  • @jeffreysturgill7668
    @jeffreysturgill7668 2 года назад +1

    Love Mississippi John Hurt

  • @rrondaa1967
    @rrondaa1967 3 года назад +6

    😍Love me some good ol'true Blues! 💡Haven't seen a Razorlight video yet 💭
    🕊 PEACE 💜 BLESSINGS 👼

  • @marypulley6512
    @marypulley6512 3 года назад +1

    Thank you Fil, my son has a big collection of this old music, very timeliness and BEYOND VALUABLE ,I LOVE IT.

  • @georgemanos754
    @georgemanos754 Год назад +1

    A guy had commented below this video : “They use John’s thumb to adjust the world atomic clock” Absolutely right! Solid as a rock! Fil, I'm so happy to find out that you make videos about this kind of musicians. Thanx!.

  • @eazyrider6122
    @eazyrider6122 3 года назад +2

    Brilliant review. I love his music, Thanks for the history lesson as well.

  • @markforster2794
    @markforster2794 3 года назад +2

    Excellent video. Who cannot love John Hurt?

  • @GrindstoneCowboy357
    @GrindstoneCowboy357 2 года назад +1

    Great Lesson!

  • @glamgal7106
    @glamgal7106 3 года назад +3

    As you eloquently put it in the title, Mississippi John Hurt was a guitar innovator indeed. I appreciated your analysis of his musicianship and guitar demonstration--even the most experienced musician has to practice, practice, practice to get it right. From watching you play, I can see that this style of playing is not easy. Though my main instrument is the piano/keyboard, I've taken guitar lessons which included picking styles--because of the slight carpal tunnel on my left hand(not my dominant hand), I have to go slowly on the guitar playing and not rush in. Anyway, thanks again for keeping 'em coming, Fil!

  • @mysteriowc
    @mysteriowc 3 года назад +3

    Man, I love your videos!! You are so great in breaking them down.

  • @Dre9six
    @Dre9six 3 года назад +3

    I stumbled acorss MJH's music about a year or 2 ago and it's been a real pleasure to be able to learn some of his songs on guitar, his music is almost literally the only thing I play these days!

  • @kyotocoversjimanderson782
    @kyotocoversjimanderson782 3 года назад +3

    That was indeed some cool guitar playing, and a great analysis.

  • @jeffhuggins5483
    @jeffhuggins5483 3 года назад +1

    Original stuff 🎵 music and soul blues rock and guitar players legends original one of the beginning's of it all, natural talent and putting it all together and it's Great guitar, player and singer and all thanks 👍 Again.

  • @ftlauderdaleborn1098
    @ftlauderdaleborn1098 3 года назад +2

    What an amazing life story! Learned so much , thank you 👍😀

  • @tnmoppylaura5476
    @tnmoppylaura5476 3 года назад +3

    Have always loved this song. Performances like John’s are so special. Thanks for this one Fil.

  • @jamesrusso2523
    @jamesrusso2523 3 года назад +5

    H was discovered when he was an old man. Great bluesman/ picker

  • @Johncooke215
    @Johncooke215 3 года назад +5

    Awesome stuff, thanks for this one! Would love to see you analyze some more country blues legends. Mississippi Fred McDowell performing Shake Em on Down and RL Burnside performing Jumper on the Line, would be amazing! Cheers.

  • @visitur4914
    @visitur4914 3 года назад +1

    One of my favorite guitar players, if not my favorite! Love this performance.

  • @brianherres94
    @brianherres94 3 года назад +1

    Thanks Fil! John is one of my favorites. I really appreciate you focusing on him.

  • @86Sporty86
    @86Sporty86 3 года назад +3

    I learned Johns songs back in the 70s, this set me up for all the fingerstyle I enjoy to this day. I'm 62 now and I still get goosebumps when I listen to him. If you want to learn this style, check out Stefan Grosman. Thank you for your channel!!

  • @Blue_3rd
    @Blue_3rd Месяц назад

    A wonderful musician. Great music to study!