Cotton Fields ~ Huddie Ledbetter - CCR ~ Cover w/ Gibson Les Paul Custom Classic & Bluesharp video free download


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Duration: 02:06
Uploaded: 2013/03/23

(c)1940 Words & Music Huddie "Leadbelly" Ledbetter

Arr. stagwolf

~~~~~~~~~

When I was a little bitty baby my mama would rock me in the cradle in them old cotton fields back home.

It was down in Louisiana just about a mile from Texarcana in them old cotton fields back home

Oh, when them cotton balls get rotten you canĀ“t pick very much cotton in them old cotton fields back home.

It was down in Louisiana just about a mile from Texarcana in them old cotton fields back home [harp da capo

~~~

Bluesharp key of G

~~~

This much-covered track was written by Huddie "Leadbelly" Ledbetter and recorded by the Blues musician in 1941.

It first entered the folk canon when "the queen of American folk music," Odetta's live interpretation was included on her 1954 album The Tin Angel, which she recorded with Lawrence Mohr.

Her version was entitled "Old Cotton Fields at Home." Harry Belafonte learned the song from Odetta and began singing it in concert as early as 1955 before including it on his 1958 album, Belafonte Sings The Blues. The song became a hit on the Hot 100 for the first time in 1961 when folk group The Highwaymen took it to #13 on the chart.

The best known version is for many the one by The Beach Boys, with Al Jardine on lead vocals.

Dissatisfied with Brian Wilson's arrangement of the song, which led the group's 1969 album 20/20, Jardine later led the group to record a more Country-Rock style version, which became an international hit reaching #1 in Australia, South Africa, Sweden and Norway, but surpassingly failed to make the Billboard Hot 100.

Jardine told Consequence of Sound why he decided they needed to re-record it: "Well, I thought Brian was going to give me another 'Sloop John B,' he said.

We went into the studio, and it just didn't happen. It was quite flat, I thought, and very un-Beach Boy-like. It sounded more like a country thing.

Not even that, it just sounded like a demo. So, I picked up the gauntlet and took the appearance band into the studio, and we re-recorded it with my band, which is much more powerful than the studio guys we were using at the time. And I thought it was great. And Dennis Wilson kind of helped me out. He was, you might say, our spark plug guy; he was our energy guy, and he really believed in it."

"And a couple of new additions," he continued, "one being a steel guitar, kinda gave it a country flavor, which, in hindsight, I wouldn't put on today, but it's there, and that's what it is.

It was a famous guy, a famous steel player named Red Rhodes. But anyway, that's how my production ended up being the single. It was just a good live band recording."

This was the final Beach Boys' single released on Capitol Records, who had been the group's label since 1963, and their last single released in mono.

Other well known recordings of the song include ones by:

Johnny Cash under the title of "In Them Old Cottonfields Back Home" for his 1962 album The Sound Of Johnny Cash.

Creedence Clearwater Revival on their 1969 album Willy and the Poor Boys. Their version hit #1 in Mexico in 1970.

Elvis Presley in his 1970 documentary movie Elvis: That's the Way It Is. His interpretation can be found on the special edition of the film's soundtrack album.

Comments

11 years ago

Tom Sneade

Nice one mate. Always "arty" and colourful vids...and of course great sounds !

11 years ago

alertami

Really nice Wolfgang. Just how many guitars do you have anyway?

11 years ago

CountryFolkAndMore

Very nice! LOVE it :-)

11 years ago

shargram

Well done Tedlam, are you using a voicalist?

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