Blues The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/3533.html Thu, 18 Apr 2024 02:34:39 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb K.C. Douglas – Mercury Blues (1998) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/3533-kc-douglas/17640-kc-douglas-mercury-blues-1998.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/3533-kc-douglas/17640-kc-douglas-mercury-blues-1998.html K.C. Douglas – Mercury Blues (1998)

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1 	Mercury Blues 	2:40
2 	My Mind's Going Back To 1929 	5:10
3 	Catfish Blues 	4:00
4 	High Water Rising 	4:55
5 	Woke Up This Morning 	4:15
6 	Somebody Done Stole My Gal 	4:43
7 	Fanny Lou 	3:05
8 	I Don't Want No Woman To Love Me 	3:54
9 	Married Woman Blues 	3:33
10 	Black Cat Bone 	3:25
11 	Good Looking Women 	3:11
12 	Richard's Ride 	3:08
13 	Hear Me Howling 	3:48
14 	I'm Gonna Build Me A Web 	3:55
15 	Make Your Coffee 	4:15
16 	Night Shirt Blues 	3:40
17 	Canned Heat 	1:23
18 	Your Crying Won't Make Me Stay 	2:44
19 	Country Girl 	3:00
20 	Black Cat Bone 	2:30
21 	Good Looking Women 	3:00
22 	Fanny Lou 	2:50

K.C. Douglas - Composer, Guitar, Vocals
Richard Riggins - harmonica
Jim Marshall - Drums
Ron Thompson 	- Guitar

 

Spare electric blues from 1973-74 with a juke-joint feel, including a version of "Mercury Blues," tcovered by Steve Miller and Alan Jackson. Originally released on LP on Arhoolie 1073, the CD reissue adds a dozen previously unissued bonus cuts, taken from sessions in 1960, 1963, 1973, and 1974. It's competent but unexceptional country-blues with added electricity and a rhythm section, and pretty similar-sounding most of the way through. "I'm Gonna Build Me a Web," the 1963 track, stands out here as the piano and sax add some needed texture; the three 1960 songs are solo acoustic performances. --- Richie Unterberger, allmusic.com

 

“...the real highpoint of this album is the high-energy exchanges between Douglas' guitar and vocals and the spirited harmonica playing of Richard Riggins. It's old time country blues ‚ guitar, harmonica bass and drums ‚ that on songs like his covers of Tommy Johnson's 'Canned Heat' and 'Catfish Blues,' give testimony to the accomplishments of a very talented, and much underappreciated, blues artist.” --- Kirk Robertson, arhoolie.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) K.C. Douglas Mon, 20 Apr 2015 16:37:46 +0000
K.C. Douglas - Early Sessions & Odd Tracks 1948-1967 http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/3533-kc-douglas/13560-kc-douglas-early-sessions-a-odd-tracks-1948-1967.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/blues/3533-kc-douglas/13560-kc-douglas-early-sessions-a-odd-tracks-1948-1967.html K.C. Douglas - Early Sessions & Odd Tracks 1948-1967

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01. Mercury boogie
02. Lonely blues
03. K.C. boogie
04. Canned heat
05. Catfish
06. Big road blues
07. Kansas City
08. I got the key to the highway
09. Kassie Jones
10. Mercury blues
11. Blues
12. I met the blues this morning
13. I have my woman
14. Had I money
15. Big road blues
16. Night shirt blues #1
17. Night shirt blues #2
18. Mercury blues
19. Blues and trouble
20. Make your coffee
21. Canned heat
22. I'm gonna build me a web
23. The things I'd do for you
24. The little green house

K.C. Douglas, vocals, guitar; Sidney Maiden, harmonica. 1948 (Track: 1)
K.C. Douglas, vocals, guitar; Mercy Dee Walton, piano; bass; drums. 1954 (Tracks: 2-3)
K.C. Douglas, vocals, guitar. 1956 (Tracks: 4-14)
K.C. Douglas, vocals, guitar; Sidney Maiden, harmonica; Bruce Bratton, bass. 1960 (Tracks: 15-21)
K.C. Douglas, vocals, guitar; Clarence Van Hook, tenor sax; George Hurst, piano; bass; Jimmy Raney, drums. 1963 (Track: 22)
K.C. Douglas, vocals, guitar; Richard Riggins (Harmonica Slim), harmonica; Lionel Hewitt, piano; bass; drums. 1967 (Tracks: 23-24)

 

One of the last great rural blues stylists in the San Francisco/Oakland area, K.C. Douglas produced a blues classic when he recorded "Mercury Boogie" in 1949. The tune, which paid homage to the American automobile, was later renamed "Mercury Blues" and covered by Steve Miller and David Lindley. Country superstar Alan Jackson had a number one hit when he recorded the tune in 1992. Rights to the song were purchased by the Ford Motor Company, which used it for a television commercial for Ford trucks.

Born and raised on a family farm near Sharon, MS, Douglas was deeply influenced by the 1920s recordings of Delta bluesman Tommy Johnson. Although he left home in 1934 to work outside of music in the Mississippi towns of Grenada and Carthage, he launched his music career after meeting Johnson two years later. After Douglas impressed Johnson with his baritone vocals and skillful guitar playing, the two musicians began performing together on street corners and parties.

Relocating to Vallejo, CA, in 1945, Douglas found employment in the naval shipyards. Within a couple of years, he gravitated to the San Francisco/Oakland blues scene, forming a band, the Lumberjacks, in 1947. His first recordings were issued on the Oakland-based Downtown label in 1948. Although he continued to perform at dances and small clubs, occasionally with Jesse Fuller, throughout the 1950s and '60s, Douglas supplemented his meager income from music with a variety of jobs. He worked for the public works department in Berkeley from 1963 until the mid-'70s.

While he recorded such songs as "Born in the Country," "Catfish Blues," "Fanny Lou," "Hear Me Howlin'," "K.C.'s Doctor Blues," and "Wake Up Workin' Woman" for Bluesville in 1960 and Fantasy in 1967, Douglas didn't reach his peak until the 1970s. After performing at the Berkeley Blues Festival in 1970, he formed a quartet and became a frequent performer at coffeehouses, clubs, and bars in the East Bay/Modesto/Stockton area and recorded several tracks for the Arhoolie label between 1973 and 1974.

Succumbing to a fatal heart attack on October 17, 1975, Douglas was buried in the Pleasant Green Cemetery in Sharon, MS. --- Craig Harris, allmusic.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) K.C. Douglas Mon, 28 Jan 2013 18:23:28 +0000