Rating:
Genre:
Blues
Release Date: 03/19/1996
The title of this compilation,
Before the Blues, may be a deceiving one, particularly as it comes from
Yazoo Records, a label that specializes in the earliest music of the genre. While the performances here date back to the first commercial recordings (made during the mid-'20s), the
blues, as a musical form, was probably born a good 20 years earlier, at the turn of the century. Maintaining a looser format than many of their compilations,
Before the Blues follows the music from the juke joint on a Saturday night to church the next morning. Included are tracks from some of the most popular musicians of the period (
Charlie Patton,
Blind Lemon Jefferson,
the Memphis Jug Band, and
Frank Stokes), as well as curios from little-known performers. At one end of the spectrum, there is the raw, earthy mountain music of
Frank Jenkins'
"Roving Cowboy," the violin and vocal performance that closes the collection. At the other is
Tommy McClennan's
"Deep Sea Blues," the song
Muddy Waters and
Jimi Hendrix (among many others) would record as
"Catfish Blues." Though his performance is loose,
McClennan's guitar sounds ripe for
urban electrification. In the process of migrating to the city, the music witnessed the extinction of rural string combos like
the Memphis Jug Band.
"K.C. Moan" is an example of the type of material they recorded before the pressure to adapt brought
jazz influences into their music. By the 1940s, the commercial heyday of this music had come and gone. Never again would companies seek out recordings like
"Cold Morning Shout" (an otherworldly blend of fiddle, banjo, and guitar by
the Southside Trio) or the deep
gospel of slide guitar master
Blind Willie Johnson. Thanks to
Yazoo, the music has been preserved with the best possible fidelity. As always, songs have been arranged according to listenability. Boundaries of style and chronology are ignored, with the gaps filled in by extensive liner notes.
~Nathan Bush, All Music Guide