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| Jimmy McCracklin |
Friday Blues Fix
Friday, July 3, 2026
Friday Blues Picks (Looking Back)
Friday, June 26, 2026
Friday Blues Picks (6/26/26)
Here are a few recent releases that are well worth any blues fan's time, so be sure to check them out. If you're able, try to buy a physical copy of these artists' music whenever possible. Most of them receive very little from the whole streaming process and if you're like me, you like the liner notes that come with the physical albums and it's just good to hold it in your hands. I know some people like the streaming process and that's fine, too, so support these musicians any way that you can.
A couple of months ago, Dan Penn released his latest album, Smoke Filled Room (The Last Music Company). It's a set of demos that Penn has recorded over the past few years, some of which were later recorded by other artists that you may recognize from their versions.....Irma Thomas, Joe Louis Walker, Dalton Reed, T. Graham Brown.... but truthfully nobody really sings a Dan Penn song as well as the man himself and he certainly delivers on these tunes.The physical album also includes Penn's comments about each song, how they came about, etc.... Penn's collaborators on these tracks include Bucky Lindsey, Carson Whitsett, Gary Nicholson, Charlie Taylor, Swain Schaefer, and Bobby Emmons, most of whom provided musical support on these tracks as well. There are also a couple of gospel tracks and a Christmas song that closes out the disc, but the rest of the tunes fit snugly in the blues, soul, and country genres, as many of Penn's works are apt to do.
Dan Penn is a musical treasure and it's great that he has been able to release several albums over the past few years after focusing on songwriting and production for so many years. Back in May, Penn fell in his shop and broke his hip. He was incapacitated on the floor for about 12 hours before he was found. They performed successful surgery and he was released from rehab last weekend. He's planning to play his August 1 show in Vernon, AL with Spooner Oldham and I plan to be there to see him.
Stone Cold (Overton Music) is Green's latest release and it includes ten original tunes that showcase his nimble harp playing and his soulful vocals. I have to say that it's even better than his debut release. It's chock full of Green's "Hendrixian" harp playing and his songwriting is even stronger this time around. This is a powerful and energetic set of contemporary blues that mixes soul, rock, and even a bit of jazz on a few tracks with his harp playing.
Friday, June 19, 2026
“I do not play no Rock 'n' Roll.”
When Mississippi Fred McDowell was finally recorded by Alan Lomax in 1959, he was in his mid-fifties. That fact was pretty amazing considering how many Mississippi blues artists were recorded in the 1920's and 1930's and somehow, he was overlooked. Born in 1904, he was a few years younger than other Delta blues artists like Charley Patton (1891), Skip James (l902), Son House (1902), and Tommy Johnson (1896) and a few years older than Robert Johnson (1911), Howlin' Wolf (1910), Muddy Waters (1913), and John Lee Hooker (1917).
Like those listed above, he began playing the blues as a youth, around the age of 14 playing for tips at dances and fish fries around town (his parents died when he was young). Unlike those others, he got his start in Rossville, Tennessee, where he was born, not Mississippi.
He got tired of working on the farm and moved to Memphis around the age of 21 in 1926. He worked building railroad cars, working in a cotton oil mill, stacking logs. McDowell had learned guitar in Rossville from a Mississippi native named Raymond Payne and an uncle who played guitar with a slide made from a dried steak bone. McDowell eventually began using a pocketknife for a slide, developing his own unique style and technique.
In 1928, he moved to Mississippi, where he picked cotton and traveled around, learning to play some of Charley Patton's songs directly from Patton. He settled in Como, Mississippi around 1940, where he worked as a farmer during the week and continued to play music on weekends at parties, dances, and picnics in the Como area.
Alan Lomax had already recorded several blues men in the late 30's and early 40's, including Muddy Waters, Big Bill Broonzy, Lead Belly, and Josh White. He had moved to England during the Red Scare, but returned to the states in 1959. He and English folk singer Shirley Collins began traveling through the Southern U.S., hoping to re-record some of their previous artists with better equipment.
One of the artists he re-recorded on this trip (dubbed the Southern Journey) was Blind Sid Hemphill, who lived in Panola County, MS, part of the North Mississippi hill country. Hemphill recommended McDowell, who was still playing parties throughout the area, and Lomax was able to record 14 tracks by McDowell, who played his guitar on his neighbor Lonnie Young's front porch.
These stunning, intimate tracks included solo tracks by McDowell and others with guitarist Miles Pratcher, Fanny Davis (who played tissue paper and comb!), his wife Annie Mae, James Shorty, Sidney Carter, and Rose Hemphill all singing background vocals. Some of the cuts were featured on a four-volume set of those recordings called Sounds of the South in 1960 and later all 14 tracks were compiled by Rounder Records (see below), among others.
Here was a guy who completely missed the 20's and 30's recordings and managed to avoid any attention at all, just working as a farmer and playing music on the side. He was so modest and unassuming as well, just seeming to take all the attention in stride.
McDowell played multiple blues festivals, including the Newport Folk Festival and the American Folk Blues Festival in Europe. He appeared in several documentary films, and soon was influencing many of the up-and-coming blues-rock artists, such as Bonnie Raitt, who recorded several of his songs, and the Rolling Stones, whose version of “You Got To Move” on their Sticky Fingers album is one of their most memorable tracks.
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| McDowell with Bonnie Raitt |
In addition, the 2003 Shout Factory! compilation set Heroes of the Blues: The Very Best of Mississippi Fred McDowell catches what those first two collections missed, plus a few other, mixing blues with spirituals. It's a very fine set and certainly covers his career pretty well. Just about every McDowell tune that you've heard about over the years is included here and, even though he redid many of these over and over again, the versions collected here are all first-rate, so this might be the best starting point for newcomers.
Friday, June 12, 2026
Friday Blues Picks (6/12/26)
Here are a couple more new releases for blues fans to check out. You'll be glad that you did.....there have been a lot of outstanding releases this year and the list of great new albums seems to be picking up with the hot weather approaching.
Last month, John Primer received a marker on the Mississippi Blues Trail near his birthplace in Camden, MS. I was hoping to go and hopefully get a chance to meet him, but things didn't work out. Primer has always released quality music over his years as a solo act and he's really been on a roll in recent years, with several fine albums on Blues House Records and a couple of collaborations with Bob Corritore. I've been a fan since I first heard him with Magic Slim and the Teardrops.I used to regularly attend the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival in the late 80's and early 90's, but have only attended once since Katrina, in 2015. One of the thrills of going each year was discovering not only the new music being played, but the classic tunes that were part of the city's musical history. Well, folks......The Joe Krown Trio + 1 have recaptured that feeling for me with their latest release, Qualified (Sledgehammer Blues).
I first encountered keyboardist extraordinaire Krown as part of Luther "Guitar Junior" Johnson's band on a couple of albums, then several of Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown's albums, plus three collaborative efforts with guitarist Walter "Wolfman" Washington and drummer Russell Batiste, Jr. that mixed blues, jazz, and soul in equal measures. For this release, Krown and his trio (Casandra Faulconer - bass, Eric Boliver - drums) are joined by singer/guitarist Papa Mali, hence the "Trio + 1" tag.
Qualified includes eleven tracks, two originals by Papa Mali and one by Krown, plus covers of eight classic Crescent City tunes associated with Allen Toussaint, Professor Longhair, James Booker, and Dr. John that will have fingers snapping, toes tapping, and booties shaking. There's also a special appearance by Cyril Neville who delivers a masterful vocal on a fresh take of Toussaint's "Fortune Teller." Papa Mali does a fine job on vocals throughout and delivers the guitar goods on a couple of other tracks, while Krown and the Trio have a lot of fun playing these tunes. Joe Krown's albums are always a lot of fun, paying tribute to the past while continuing to create new music that carries the traditions onward, and this one is no exception.
Horton made recordings of his own for Chess Records and Sun Records (leased to Modern/RPM Records) in the late 40's and became one of Chess Records' go-to harp players for various sessions. He also recorded the classic instrumental for Sun Records known as "Easy," and also recorded for Cobra, Jewel, and States Records. His harp can be heard on many Chicago blues classics like Jimmy Rogers' "Walking By Myself," Otis Rush's "I Can't Quit You Baby," and Johnny Shines' "Evening Sun." He also appeared on the Chicago/The Blues/Today series on Vanguard Records before recording this wonderful album with his protege Carey Bell.
By the time, this session was recorded, Bell was not really a protege.....he had already recorded a few times himself. There are eleven tracks here and the two harp masters are backed by the legendary Eddie Taylor on guitar, Joe Harper (who played bass on Bell's albums), and Chicago South Side drummer Frank Swan. Horton and Bell work so well together and to me, it feels like Horton was really inspired on these tracks, both instrumentally and vocally. The interplay with Bell really seems to bring out the best in his performance. In Bruce Iglauer’s book, he tells about Walter’s reluctance to play and how Bell would gently encourage him to play, which really brought him out. Big Walter Horton has always been one of my favorite harmonica players and this album is my favorite of his releases. Thankfully, he was able to record a few more before he passed away in 1981.


















