Gus Cannon & Noah Lewis Vol. 2 1929-1930 (1990)
Gus Cannon & Noah Lewis Vol. 2 1929 -1930 (1990)
01 - Last chance blues 02 - Fourth and Beal Cannon And Woods (The Beale Street Boys): Gus Cannon - vocal, banjo Hosea Woods - vocal, guitar 03 - Last chance blues 04 - Tired chicken blues 05 - Going to Germany 06 - Walk right in Cannon's Jug Stompers: Gus Cannon - vocal, banjo, jug Hosea Woods - vocal, banjo Noah Lewis - vocal, harmonica 07 - Chickasaw special 08 - Devil in the woodpile Noah Lewis - harmonica solo 09 - Mule get up in the alley 10 - The rooster`s crowing blues 11 - Jonestown blues 12 - Pretty mama blues 13 - Bring it with you when you come 14 - Wolf River blues Cannon's Jug Stompers: Gus Cannon - vocal, banjo, jug Hosea Woods - vocal, banjo Noah Lewis - vocal, harmonica 15 - Like I want To Be Noah Lewis - harmonica solo 16 - Ticket agent blues 17 - New minglewood blues 18 - Selling the jelly 19 - Bad luck`s my buddy Noah Lewis' Jug Band: Noah Lewis - vocal, harmonica Sleepy John Estes – guitar Yank Rachel – mandolin Ham Lewis – jug Mrs Van Zula Carter Hunt - vocal 20 - Money never runs out 21 - Prison wall blues Cannon's Jug Stompers: Gus Cannon - vocal, banjo, jug Hosea Woods - vocal, banjo Noah Lewis - vocal, harmonica
After Cannon's Jug Stompers recorded in September 1928 it was about a year before Gus next faced the mikes; when he did, it was as one half of "Cannon And Woods" (The Beale Street Boys)", making a disc for Brunswick in breach of his contract with Victor. "Woods" was Hosea Woods, older even than Gus, a splendid singer with a strong falsetto, and about to replace Elijah Avery as the Stompers' second banjoist and guitarist. Gus Cannon is said to play guitar on the Beale Street Boys sides, but as the instruction to "Percolate that banjo!" is given to "Joe" (i.e. Banjo Joe), it seems more likely that Woods is the guitarist.
The Jug Stompers reassembled to record on 1st and 3rd October 1929. On the intervening day, Noah Lewis made his debut as a name artist with three harmonica solos; a white fiddle piece, with Lewis's falsetto whoops replacing the fiddler's pizzicatos; and a meditative blues that admirably demonstrates Noah's masterful breath control. The full jug band started with remakes: Last Chance had been one of the Cannon And Woods numbers, and Tired Chicken Blues was "Heartbreakin' Blues" from the previous year, with a new, ribald last verse. Going To Germany, on the other hand, really is heartbreaking; there are few songs more yearningly sung than this Noah Lewis performance.
The most famous song from this session, though, was undoubtedly Walk Right In, Gus's theme song, which he'd made up with Ashley Thompson around 1910. In the '60s, it was recorded by a white folk group, the Rooftop Singers, and went to No. 1 in the charts.
Cannon's Jug Stompers made their last session in November 1930, adding Wolf River Blues to their list of songs about places around Memphis. Bring It With You When You Come shows a hillbilly influence in its first verse, and Prison Wall Blues marries a pop-influenced, sixteen bar structure to some rather edgy jokes about the Southern prison system.
In their time, they had been the finest jug band in Memphis, bringing emotional depth to their blues, enthusiastic humour to their novelty numbers, and exceptional musicianship to all their songs and instrumentals. --- Chris Smith, document-records.com
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Last Updated (Tuesday, 02 February 2021 21:22)