John Jackson - Don't Let Your Deal Go Down (1992)
BAND/ARTIST: John Jackson
- Title: Don't Let Your Deal Go Down
- Year Of Release: 1992
- Label: Arhoolie Records
- Genre: Country Blues, Piedmont Blues, East Coast Blues
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 72:11
- Total Size: 325 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Going Down In Georgia On A Horn (2:34)
2. Black Snake Moan (2:13)
3. John Henry (3:56)
4. If Hattie Wants To Lu, Let Her Lu Like A Man (2:03)
5. Nobody's Business But Mine (3:02)
6. John's Rag (2:35)
7. Boats Up The River (3:31)
8. Rattlesnakin' Daddy (2:30)
9. Flat Foot & Bug Dance (3:05)
10. Bear Cat Blues (2:41)
11. Reuben (1:51)
12. Rocks And Gravel (3:20)
13. Going Down The Road Feelin' Bad (3:53)
14. Police Dog Blues (3:33)
15. Don't Let Your Deal Go Down (2:07)
16. Muleskinner Blues (3:29)
17. I Bring My Money (2:14)
18. John's Ragtime (1:55)
19. Red River Blues (3:05)
20. Knife Blues (2:14)
21. Trucking Little Baby (3:09)
22. Blind Blake's Rag (2:26)
23. Goodbye Booze (2:04)
24. Graveyard Blues (2:50)
25. Early Morning Blues (3:42)
26. You Ain't No Woman (1:54)
1. Going Down In Georgia On A Horn (2:34)
2. Black Snake Moan (2:13)
3. John Henry (3:56)
4. If Hattie Wants To Lu, Let Her Lu Like A Man (2:03)
5. Nobody's Business But Mine (3:02)
6. John's Rag (2:35)
7. Boats Up The River (3:31)
8. Rattlesnakin' Daddy (2:30)
9. Flat Foot & Bug Dance (3:05)
10. Bear Cat Blues (2:41)
11. Reuben (1:51)
12. Rocks And Gravel (3:20)
13. Going Down The Road Feelin' Bad (3:53)
14. Police Dog Blues (3:33)
15. Don't Let Your Deal Go Down (2:07)
16. Muleskinner Blues (3:29)
17. I Bring My Money (2:14)
18. John's Ragtime (1:55)
19. Red River Blues (3:05)
20. Knife Blues (2:14)
21. Trucking Little Baby (3:09)
22. Blind Blake's Rag (2:26)
23. Goodbye Booze (2:04)
24. Graveyard Blues (2:50)
25. Early Morning Blues (3:42)
26. You Ain't No Woman (1:54)
Banjo, Vocals – John Jackson (4) (tracks: 4); Guitar, Vocals – John Jackson (4) (tracks: 1 to 3, 5 to 26).
Twenty-six tracks running over 70 minutes, recorded by John Jackson between 1965 and 1969 and featuring the rural blues legend at the very top of his form on vocals, guitar, and even banjo on one instrumental ("If Hattie Wants to Lu, Let Her Lu Like a Man"). Jackson's repertory here includes standards like "John Henry" (in one of the most exciting versions ever done, with some killer slide) and "Muleskinner Blues," established parts of other bluesmen's repertories (Blind Boy Fuller's "Rattlesnakin' Daddy," Blind Arthur Blake's "Police Dog Blues" and "Early Morning Blues"), as well as originals, such as the dazzling acoustic pyrotechnic displays on "John's Rag," "Graveyard Blues," and "Knife Blues" (the latter a slide guitar showcase worth the price of the disc by itself), and adaptations of popular songs ("Blind Blake's Rag," which borrows at one point from "Has Anybody Seen My Gal"). Good as his playing is, Jackson's singing is also to be admired, as his baritone voice surges with a quiet power and forcefulness, and a rich tone -- "Boats Up the River," a children's song adapted from various traditional sources, is probably the vocal standout on this collection. The fidelity is excellent, these being modern recordings, and overall this CD is the best single overview of John Jackson's music, its value enhanced by the presence of detailed notes that have been updated to the 1990s. It's records like this that humble lots of young white bluesmen. ~Bruce Eder
Twenty-six tracks running over 70 minutes, recorded by John Jackson between 1965 and 1969 and featuring the rural blues legend at the very top of his form on vocals, guitar, and even banjo on one instrumental ("If Hattie Wants to Lu, Let Her Lu Like a Man"). Jackson's repertory here includes standards like "John Henry" (in one of the most exciting versions ever done, with some killer slide) and "Muleskinner Blues," established parts of other bluesmen's repertories (Blind Boy Fuller's "Rattlesnakin' Daddy," Blind Arthur Blake's "Police Dog Blues" and "Early Morning Blues"), as well as originals, such as the dazzling acoustic pyrotechnic displays on "John's Rag," "Graveyard Blues," and "Knife Blues" (the latter a slide guitar showcase worth the price of the disc by itself), and adaptations of popular songs ("Blind Blake's Rag," which borrows at one point from "Has Anybody Seen My Gal"). Good as his playing is, Jackson's singing is also to be admired, as his baritone voice surges with a quiet power and forcefulness, and a rich tone -- "Boats Up the River," a children's song adapted from various traditional sources, is probably the vocal standout on this collection. The fidelity is excellent, these being modern recordings, and overall this CD is the best single overview of John Jackson's music, its value enhanced by the presence of detailed notes that have been updated to the 1990s. It's records like this that humble lots of young white bluesmen. ~Bruce Eder
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads