Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Levi Williams - Ain't Pickin' Cotton No More - 1997


During my Memphis days, Levi Williams was one of my favorite local musicians. He was one of the guys I never got tired of listening to, because he always put his all into every set he did. He never phoned it in, even if he was just playing in the park on a cold day for a handful of homeless dudes. It took me a long time to track this CD down. It was recorded in 1997 at a now-defunct studio and was probably mainly sold by Levi himself at gigs. There isn't much current info on Levi online, but I managed to find a guy on Ebay with this CD for sale (signed copy!) and snapped it up immediately. It's a solid set of what I believe are all original tunes, and it definitely deserves to be heard by folks outside of Memphis. Take a listen.

1. Goin' Deep Sea Fishin'
2. You Made A Good Man Out Of Me
3. Ain't Pickin' Cotton No More
4. San Antone
5. Trouble In My Home
6. Travelin' Shoes
7. Fine Lookin' Woman
8. Welfare Check
9. Shotgun
10. Burning Bush

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1GWmrNwrn91dbwzf0guHc1sYKz08gDVgC/view?usp=sharing

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Uncle Ben Perry


If you happened to be on Beale Street, in Memphis, TN, at any time in the last quarter of the 20th century, odds are that you heard Uncle Ben play. If you were a budding musician, you may have sat in with him for a few tunes, and if he liked the way you played, you may even have become one of his many "nephews."

It would be impossible to keep track of the scores of kids who sat in with Uncle Ben under those trees in Handy Park (before they gutted it, put a fence around it and started calling it the "Pepsi Pavillion"). He graciously allowed pretty much anyone to play a tune with him, whether they were seasoned professionals passing through or lily-green amateurs who didn't know a thing about the blues.

Playing the blues, year after year, for the motley assortment of folks who congregated in Handy Park, Uncle Ben had learned a thing or two about how to deal with crowds. For those that came under his tutelage, it was an advanced course, not only in how to handle yourself on the street, but also about how to really make blues your life. Uncle Ben had been down there, banging away on that cheap guitar and hollering those same songs as long as anyone could remember. He was the real deal.

This post collects what is - as far as I know - Uncle Ben's complete recorded output, minus the bit of him that you can see in Robert Palmer's "Deep Blues" film. It includes both his wonderful cassette releases from Bart Pate's Alley Way Records. Much respect and gratitude to Bart for giving us these priceless documents of Ben. It sounds like Bart, like many who have navigated the music business, wound up encountering too much of the darker side of human nature. But I'm sure glad he persisted with these projects before he got out of the business.

I have also included two cuts (recorded live on Beale Street) from the High Water "Deep South Blues" record, and one other song that I found on one of Brad Webb's records.

I heard Ben play these songs hundreds of times, and I'm really glad to have this musical memento of those days. I figured there might be others out there who feel the same way. Amazingly, for a guy who made such a mark on the Memphis music scene, this small handful of tunes is all we have to remember Uncle Ben by. So, I wanted to put them out there for whoever might appreciate it.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1E-YUUKA8VCtAalEiGL0-JmwZO4qvF6l0/view?usp=sharing

Uncle Ben Perry - Memphis Blues (1990)

1. Intro
2. Mama Look At Sis
3. Mean Woman Blues
4. Big City Living
5. Live It Down
6. I'm So Happy
7. Hey B.B.
8. Lies
9. When The Saints Go Marching In
10. Outro

Uncle Ben Perry – guitar, vocals
Clarence Govington – guitar, vocals

Gloria Sitz – bass

Uncle Ben Perry - Boogie Woogie (1992)

1. Boogie Woogie
2. Every Night
3. Shake It Baby
4. Just You Wait and See
5. Uncle Ben’s Theme
6. Gonna Rock Tonight
7. Goin’ To Richmond
8. Saturday Night Party
9. Ain’t It Funny

Uncle Ben Perry – guitar, vocals
Ronnie Morris – guitar
David Cunningham – tenor saxophone
Gloria Sitz – bass
David Workman – harmonica
Fred Ryan – percussion
+
Microwave Dave – slide guitar (4)
Rob Whitson – baritone saxophone (1,3)

Jim McLucky – trumpet (1)

---Mark Carrig and Uncle Ben Perry, Memphis, 1986





---Richard O’Donnell and Uncle Ben Perry, July 1991


https://drive.google.com/file/d/1E-YUUKA8VCtAalEiGL0-JmwZO4qvF6l0/view?usp=sharing

Mississippi Cotton Club - You're the Girl - 1998


Some years ago I found the song "You're the Girl" on some website somewhere and it quickly became one of my favorite tunes. According to info I've gathered here and there on the web, Eddie Cotton Jr. grew up in Mississippi, studied music at Jackson State University, and eventually went on to serve as minister at his father's church. He's made several records over the years and they are all fantastic. This one, which was apparently recorded in a home studio, took me quite awhile to locate, and as far as I can tell, it's not available anywhere. Some fabulous, soulful music that deserves to be heard.

01. Time Will Tell
02. Why Must I Cry
03. What's Wrong With Me
04. You're The Girl
05. Vision Of A True Love
06. All Night Long
07. Love War
08. Don't Give Up On A Love Affair
09. Happy
10. Tell Me

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1XiDk3G1zOJ9B_KKKjbuG7Hq-lZjIqJY4/view?usp=sharing