Howlin' Wolf defines the Blues
while slamming Son House,
then performs "Meet Me In The Bottom"
with the help of his Band.
Mississippi John Hurt & Skip James
on WTBS-FM 1964

while slamming Son House,
then performs "Meet Me In The Bottom"
with the help of his Band.
Howlin' Wolf defines the Blues while slamming Son House, then performs "Meet Me In The Bottom" with the help of his Band. It's not apparent What sets Wolf off, as Son House is off mic and inaudible, but I speculate that Son may have interrupted Wolf's oration with his own famous assessment of the Blues; "Ain't but one kind of Blues..., and that consists between male and female that's in love". Howlin' Wolf's take on the Blues, as stated in this clip, echoes, at least in part, two of the Four Noble Truths of Buddhism. I'm not going into that here, I just thought it was an interesting point to throw out there. We who love the Blues, in this form or that, all have our own sense of what the Blues is..., but none of us who love the Blues, in this form or that, is perplexed by the fact that this relatively simple, yet highly expressive style of music endures. The Blues is inextricable from the human condition because, to paraphrase Henry Wadsworth Long fellow, "Into every life, a little rain must fall".
Mississippi John Hurt & Skip James
on WTBS-FM 1964
Mississippi John Hurt (with guest Al Wilson) and Skip James each play a few songs and talk with Phil Spiro on WTBS-FM (Cambridge, MA) c. October 1964...followed by an ad for the 1964 elections!応援ポチっ頼んます。だあけみ

PR