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Ma Rainey - Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2 (1924-1925) (CD)

Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2 (1924-1925)
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Album Details: Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2 (1924-1925)

Release Date:01/02/1998
Label:Document
UPC:714298558227

Track List: Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2 (1924-1925)

  1. Booze And Blues
  2. Toad Frog Blues
  3. Jealous Hearted Blues
  4. See See Rider Blues (Take 1)
  5. See See Rider Blues (Take 2)
  6. Jelly Bean Blues
  7. Countin' The Blues (Take 2)
  8. Countin' The Blues (Take 3)
  9. Cell Bound Blues
  10. Army Camp Harmony Blues (Take 1)
  11. Army Camp Harmony Blues (Take 2)
  12. Explaining The Blues (Take 1)
  1. Explaining The blues (Take 2)
  2. Louisiana Hoo Doo Blues
  3. Goodbye Daddy Blues
  4. Stormy Sea Blues
  5. Rough And Tumble Blues
  6. Night Time Blues (Take 1)
  7. Night Time Blues (Take 2)
  8. Levee Camp Moan
  9. Four Day Honory Seat (Take 1)
  10. Four Day Honory Seat (Take 2)
  11. Memphis Bound Blues

Pro Reviews: Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2 (1924-1925)

  • All Music Guide

    Volume two in Document's fivepart complete Ma Rainey edition opens with six recordings dating from October 1924 with instrumental backing by her Georgia Jazz Band, a sextet drawn from the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra. "See See Rider Blues," "Jelly Bean Blues," and "Countin' the Blues" are among the best known and most commonly reissued titles in Rainey's entire discography, largely due to the presence of a 24yearold cornetist from New Orleans named Louis Armstrong. Other Hendersonians on these sides were clarinetists Don Redman and trombonist Big Charlie Green. The sound of Charlie Dixon tracing a simple ascending/descending pattern on his banjo while Rainey sings the chorus of the "Jelly Bean Blues" is one of the great magical moments in all of early 20th century music. Decades later, Louis Armstrong would compare this little record to an aria by Giuseppe Verdi. After a oneshot reunion with Lovie Austin, Tommy Ladnier, and Jimmy O'Bryant for the "Cell Bound Blues," Rainey recorded fou...r titles (and two alternate takes) accompanied by a smaller group, billed as her Georgia Band, with an unidentified and rather shrill kazoo player who doubled on slide whistle; saxophonist George "Hooks" Tilford, either Lil Henderson or Georgia Tom Dorsey at the piano, and a percussionist who was either Cedric Odom or Happy Bolton. The band that backed her on tracks 1623 (recorded in July 1925) had similar personnel, with the addition of a cornetist whose name was either Robert Taylor or Kid Henderson. At this stage in her career, Rainey's voice was deepening in pitch. Her slow and purposeful delivery makes each performance seem as serious as ritual, even when slide whistle and kazoo add an element of the ridiculous. - arwulf arwulf, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Ma Rainey

Ma Rainey wasn't the first blues singer to make records, but by all rights she probably should have been. In an era when women were the marquee names in blues, Ma Rainey was once the most celebrated of all -- the "Mother of the Blues" had been singing the music for more than 20 years before she made her recording debut (Paramount, 1923). With the advent of blues records... Read more