Cat Iron - Jimmy Bell - The Blues of Cat Iron (2019)
BAND/ARTIST: Cat Iron
- Title: Jimmy Bell - The Blues of Cat Iron Jimmy Bell - The Blues of Cat Iron
- Year Of Release: 2013/2019
- Label: Big Buzz Productions
- Genre: Acoustic Delta Blues
- Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
- Total Time: 00:26:11
- Total Size: 98 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. Jimmy Bell
02. Old Time Religion
03. Poor Boy a Long Long Way from Home
04. Fix Me Right
05. Tell Me You Didn't Mean Me No Good
06. Got a Girl in Farraday, One in Greenwood
07. Well, I'm in Your Hand
08. When I Lay My Burden Down
09. Don't Your House Look Lonesome
10. I'm Going to Walk Your Log
11. O, the Blood Done Sign My Name
12. When the Saints Go Marching In
Cat Iron, real name William Carradine ['Cat Iron' was not his actual nickname, but a mishearing of his surname by his "rediscoverer"], (c. 1896, Garden City, Louisiana, United States – c. 1958, Natchez, Mississippi) was an African-American blues singer and guitarist.
During the folk and blues revival, "Cat Iron" was "discovered" and recorded in 1957 by Frederic Ramsey Jr.; the recordings were released in the United States in 1958 on the Folkways label, in the United Kingdom in 1969 on the XTRA label. His song, "Jimmy Bell" has been covered by many other musicians, first by Koerner, Ray & Glover on their 1963 album, Blues, Rags and Hollers, later by Stoney & Meatloaf, The Numbers Band, Peter Lang, The Sharks, Tom Doughty and Watermelon Slim.
01. Jimmy Bell
02. Old Time Religion
03. Poor Boy a Long Long Way from Home
04. Fix Me Right
05. Tell Me You Didn't Mean Me No Good
06. Got a Girl in Farraday, One in Greenwood
07. Well, I'm in Your Hand
08. When I Lay My Burden Down
09. Don't Your House Look Lonesome
10. I'm Going to Walk Your Log
11. O, the Blood Done Sign My Name
12. When the Saints Go Marching In
Cat Iron, real name William Carradine ['Cat Iron' was not his actual nickname, but a mishearing of his surname by his "rediscoverer"], (c. 1896, Garden City, Louisiana, United States – c. 1958, Natchez, Mississippi) was an African-American blues singer and guitarist.
During the folk and blues revival, "Cat Iron" was "discovered" and recorded in 1957 by Frederic Ramsey Jr.; the recordings were released in the United States in 1958 on the Folkways label, in the United Kingdom in 1969 on the XTRA label. His song, "Jimmy Bell" has been covered by many other musicians, first by Koerner, Ray & Glover on their 1963 album, Blues, Rags and Hollers, later by Stoney & Meatloaf, The Numbers Band, Peter Lang, The Sharks, Tom Doughty and Watermelon Slim.
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