Sonny Terry & His Mouth Harp Sonny Terry

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CD

  • Release Date: 07/20/1999
  • Sales Rank: 125,690
  • Label: OBC
  • UPC: 025218058926
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Sonny Terry & His Mouth Harp

1LISTENIn the Evening 2:30
2LISTENMove to Kansas City 2:28
3LISTENJohn Henry 3:08
4LISTENThe Fox Chase (aka Hound Dog Holler) 2:17
5LISTENLouise 2:49
6LISTENRed River 2:24
7LISTENGoodbye Leadbelly 3:02
8LISTENCustard Pie 2:30
9LISTENI Woke up This Morning and I Could Hardly See 3:05
10LISTENOld Woman Blues 2:44
11LISTENTalkin' About the Blues 3:05
12LISTENChange the Lock on My Door 2:52
13LISTENMoanin' and Mournin' 3:18
14LISTENBaby Baby 2:45

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

This rare December 1953 session (reissued on CD in 1999) was unusual for Terry in that his guitar accompanist was not Brownie McGhee, but Alec Seward, who had previously recorded as Guitar Slim in a duo with "Fat Boy Hayes" (aka Jelly Belly). It's unusual only in the personnel, however. It sounds like typical Sonny Terry, as he works his way through original material, including standards like "John Henry" and other blues tunes like "In the Evening" (the song that would provide much of the basis for Robert Johnson's "Love in Vain"). You'd have to say that it's usually more interesting to hear Terry with his longtime partner McGhee than it is to hear him with Seward, but it's not terribly different. The trademark vocal and harmonica whoops, and hollers are in gear and running throughout the album, sometimes to exhilarating effect, as on the rapid "The Fox Chase (aka Hound Dog Holler)." His lyrics get uncommonly specific on "Goodbye Leadbelly," a tribute to the then-recently deceased folk-blues legend, composed by "writer unknown." The recording engineer on the session, incidentally, was a young Jac Holzman, who had just started Elektra Records. Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

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