Showing posts with label James Son Thomas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Son Thomas. Show all posts

Sunday, August 25, 2013

James Son Thomas - Mississippi Delta Blues Man - 1981/2001



No one could ever say that James "Son" Thomas didn't have the right to sing the blues. A Mississippi share cropper and grave digger (and later, a furniture store laborer), Thomas lived a hard life that included being shot by his ex-wife, being severely burned by a space heater, surgery for a brain tumor, long battles with emphysema and epilepsy, and the final series of strokes and heart attacks that finally took his life. Along the way he developed into a skilled folk sculptor and a captivating guitarist and singer. He was officially "discovered" in 1967 by folk researcher William Ferris, who featured Thomas as the centerpiece of his book Blues From the Delta as well as several short films, opening the way for Thomas' entry on to the international folk and blues circuit, which led to this album, which was recorded in May 1981 in the Netherlands by Leo Bruin. It features Thomas alone with an acoustic guitar holding forth on fairly traditional Delta blues material in a generally high, near falsetto voice (he drops down in tone for a couple of songs, like "Hard Time Blues"). The hushed intimacy of the setting gives several of these tracks tremendous power, and although Thomas isn't particularly unique or innovative on anything here, his calm sincerity and easy style are immensely affecting. He sounds at times a little like Skip James, particularly on the eerie "Devil Blues," which was probably derived, in part, from James' "Devil Got My Woman." As an intimate glimpse at one of the last true folk-blues musicians from the Delta, this is a valuable historical recording, but also an enjoyable one.-- by Steve Leggett


 Tracklist

1. Big Leg Woman 4:10
2. High Brown 4:45
3. Whiskey Headed Woman 2:26
4. Devil Blues 4:45
5. Take A Little Walk 2:57
6. Cool Water Blues 4:10
7. Lonesome Road Blues 3:54
8. Black Rat 3:18
9. Hard Time Blues 4:22
10. Catfish Blues 4:09
11. My Black Mare 3:43
12. Bull Cow Blues 3:35

Info:
FLAC 254 MB
Password: mississippimoan
http://www.filefactory.com/file/5v5avqw3211t/n/JTMDBM_rar

Thursday, March 31, 2011

James Son Thomas - Beefsteak Blues - Recorded in 1985, Released in 1998.


Review:

Down-and-dirty blues don't get any downer or dirtier than James "Son" Thomas. A former sharecropper and grave digger (as well as an accomplished sculptor) who was shot by an ex-wife, Thomas, to put it mildly, lived the blues life he sang about. Eventually his hard road took him all the way to the White House, where he sang the blues for the Reagans (those noted blues lovers) in 1982. This Evidence collection of early-'80s performances features Thomas accompanying himself on acoustic and electric guitar on a set of blues standards associated with his Mississippi Delta mentors Elmore James, Arthur Crudup, and Sonny Boy Williamson. Compare the two versions of "Catfish Blues" for an example of what "unexpurgated" really means.

Password and Link:
mississippimoan
mp3 256 - 85 Mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b32644d/n/jstbb.rar

James Son Thomas - Son Down the Delta - 1982.


Review:

Son Thomas: Son Down on the Delta is a very good live album recorded in Fort Worth, Texas in 1981. Thomas largely sticks to standards here, but the reason to listen to him is the subtle textures of his guitar and voice, which make these well-known songs come alive.

Password and Link:
mississippimoan
mp3 192 kbps - 50 Mb
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b3269hc/n/jstdotd_rar