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Charley Patton - Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order 1929-1934, Vol. 1-3 (1990) 3CDs

Posted By: Designol
Charley Patton - Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order 1929-1934, Vol. 1-3 (1990) 3CDs

Charley Patton - Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order 1929-1934, Vol. 1-3 (1990) 3CDs
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 630 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 431 Mb | Scans included
Label: Document Records | # DOCD-5009-5011 | Time: 03:06:00
Delta Blues, Country Blues, Gospel Blues, Pre-War Blues

This is a 61-track, three-CD set that encompasses a complete chronological run of Patton's recorded output. All of his solo sides are here, his duets with Bertha Lee and Henry Sims and his backup work behind both of them. All previous incarnations of this material don't sound near as good as they do on these three volumes, all of them given the full deluxe Cedarization noise reduction treatment from the Document folks.

Charley Patton - Complete Recordings 1929-1934 (2008) 5CD Box Set

Posted By: Designol
Charley Patton - Complete Recordings 1929-1934 (2008) 5CD Box Set

Charley Patton - Complete Recordings 1929-1934 (2008) 5CD Box Set
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 698 Mb | Scans included
Label: JSP Records | # JSP7702 | Time: 04:45:23
Delta Blues, Country Blues, Gospel Blues, Pre-War Blues

Charley Patton lived only into his 40s, but he left a large body of recorded work, which reveals a broad repertoire, much self-written. He came to his first recording session - in June 1929, for Paramount - with an established reputation. It was said his voice could be heard 500 yards away. The songs he recorded that day include some he had been honing for 20 years around the Delta. Pony Blues is usually cited as a masterpiece. He cut two versions. Both are good, the first is finer: he growls the lyrics, his guitar lopes and bucks. Patton's rhythms are one of his trademarks - complex, intricate, powerful, his fingering always precise. Listen to his playing on Down The Dirt Road Blues - he puts brilliant guitar phrases at the end of each stanza. Songs like Banty Rooster, with its beautiful slide work, and the idiosyncratic Spoonful represent the essence of Mississippi blues and are typical of Patton fast-and-loose approach to blues structures (there's not a standard 12-bar in Patton's recorded output) and rhythmic conventions. Even those who have studied Patton's lyrics find areas to dispute. The voice is gruff, the phrasing eccentric and his Mississippi accent can be impenetrable. But it's worth paying attention - Patton's songs evoke a world that has vanished.