Big Maceo Merriweather "Eloise" - Fortune Records (rare Detroit blues!) descargar videos gratis


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Subido: 2009/02/10

http://www.myspace.com/fortunerecordsdetroit

Big Maceo Merriweather

"Eloise"

Early '50s Detroit blues, but wasn't released until 1963 on Fortune Records (Detroit).

(Fortune LP3002)

BIO:

Big Maceo (Merriweather)

Big Maceo Merriweather was one of the most prominent blues recording artists of the 1940s, famed not only for his powerful piano work but for his expressive singing on hits such as Worried Life Blues. Although he had only a short career, his music had a strong influence on the Chicago pianists who followed, especially Otis Spann and Little Johnnie Jones.

Born Major Merriweather on March 21, 1905, near Newnan, Georgia, Maceo and his family lived on a farm until they moved to nearby Atlanta in 1920. There the left-handed Maceo took up the piano, developing a pounding style with, naturally, a prominent left hand that would later distinguish his recordings. In 1924 he moved to Detroit, where he began playing the house party circuit which was the bread and butter of piano players in prewar blues. He also worked the night clubs of Detroit and, during the 1940s and 50s, Chicago after he moved to the Windy City.

In Chicago Maceo often teamed with guitarist Tampa Red, both on record and in clubs such as the H&T. Maceo recorded for Bluebird and RCA Victor under the supervision of Lester Melrose from 1941 to 1947, establishing himself as a major name among blues record buyers. The first song he recorded, the poignant Worried Life Blues, is considered such an essential blues work that it was elected to the Blues Hall of Fame in the first year of the Classics of Blues Recording balloting, years before Maceo himself was inducted as a performer. Other highlights of his recorded repertoire include Things Have Changed, a hit on Billboards Race Records jukebox chart in 1945, County Jail Blues and its flip side Cant You Read from 1941, and his 1945 instrumental masterpiece Chicago Breakdown..

A stroke in 1946 cost him the use of his right hand, although he continued to sing and play one-handed, sometimes employing a protégé such as Johnnie Jones or Eddie Boyd to play the keys, or at least the treble notes. He never regained the strength or stature he had once enjoyed, though, and, like a number of top blues recording artists of the era, was never able, even at his peak, to translate his fame into a successful touring career. Blues promoters, agents, and clubs were only beginning to coalesce into what we know as the chittlin circuit, and the big theater circuit was the domain of jazz and swing bands and uptown blues shouters and crooners. Big Maceo made his final records for Specialty in 1949 and Fortune in 1950, in addition to an unissued session for Mercury in 1952 . He died of a heart attack on February 26, 1953, in Chicago.

-- Jim ONeal

http://www.myspace.com/fortunerecordsdetroit

Comentarios

11 years ago

William Smith

This is how you play in color, giving color to the music. It makes it sound unique and real. This is also done in many jazz music as well.

11 years ago

wayoutking

Thank you so much BobSeger1981 for the info and I will do so.

11 years ago

BobSeger1981

You should contact Norton Records in New York City - Billy, one of the owners, is writing a book about the label and is looking for information on all the Fortune artists!

11 years ago

wayoutking

Still listen to my grandfather music to this day. Thank you everyone for listening

11 years ago

TheRealWolfmaniac

Harmonica is not in the right key! But, the song is more than good.

12 years ago

barkwoodrecords

Actually it IS out of tune (the harmonica in particular) but its still better than Kenny Wayne Sheppard. Its blues, its black, its a poor man's music. And if you ever hear the records Maceo made in the 1940s for RCA Bluebird with Tampa Red, they are NOT out of tune -- they are among the best blues ever made. I think this was done after Maceo's stroke so there may be someone else on piano.

12 years ago

BurnsBCoFD

In tune, out of tune, doesn't matter, this is music from the heart, not for the money. What it used to be.

12 years ago

Gaston Hidalgo-Campusano

This guy was a King in his time

12 years ago

blues man

It's important to remember that when alot of these recordings were made, the world was on hard times. And alot of these performers especially the black blues men were lucky to have any place to record at all and were often forced to take what they could get just for the opportunity to sing into the can

13 years ago

Hiu M. Chan

is because the music now adays too out of tunes. poor young generation.

13 years ago

MyWoodstock1

DA HARP PLAYER IS PLAYIN DA WRONG HARP, DATS Y IT SOUNDS OUTTA TUNE

13 years ago

busessuck1

it is hard for a harpist to accompany the piano... jaybird coleman does a better job of it

13 years ago

merryfieldmorgan1

@BobSeger1981 Tell em Bob! This is rich Detroit history and Americana straight from the Delta.

13 years ago

merryfieldmorgan1

I had the good fortune to talk to Devora Brown who cooked hamburgers for Nolan Strong during recordings and owned fortune records with her husband. They say you can hear the burgers sizzling in the background on those recordings. She was the sweetest lady and told me about Nolan living across the street upstairs and his drinking problem.

13 years ago

dirosaga

I'm sorry guys, but I can't stand the harmonica, it just sounds out of tune. Why is it like that?

14 years ago

Ed Garza

this "real" music played by real people,if you want clinical,pristine then you need to tune in to Muzak.

14 years ago

indigenous99

The piano is likely the suspect. You can tune a guitar to the keys but not the harmonica.

14 years ago

TRAINIAC19

That's what makes Fortune so great. Raw!!!!!!

14 years ago

g2og2og2o

did someone overdub harp on this?

14 years ago

BobSeger1981

no, it's not out of tune. go listen to Kenny Wayne, like the douche bag that you are.

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