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Thread: Son House

  1. #1
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    Oct 2007
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    Son House

    In my humble opinion, the greatest blues guitarist ever. Listen to "Death Letter"

  2. #2
    stinkythejokedog Guest
    My Head's In Mississippi

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
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    An unreal talent. The man with a slide. His music has always struck me as kind of eerie and almost supernatural, but a lot of the old Delta blues makes me feel like that, like there's ghosts in the music. I could listen to him for hours and not get bored.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jN5vqEyV7g

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TG86smScoaA

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgJ8Q...eature=related
    The most dangerous woman of all is the one who refuses to rely on your sword to save her because she carries her own.

    - R.H. Sin

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
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    157
    I was (and still am) a huge fan of his music. Although I heard he lost his mind towards the end of his life, I must say that I was bummed out that I never tried to visit him as he lived only about 20 minutes from me.

  5. #5
    ozzysmom Guest
    haha, thought this was the "sober house" thread. Man, I am loosing it today,,,LOL

  6. #6
    Guest Guest
    Never heard of him! Biography anyone?

  7. #7
    Join Date
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    Amazon has a zillion books about the history of Delta blues. I couldn't tell you which ones are the best to read.






    Eddie James "Son" House, Jr. (March 21, 1902[1][2] – October 19, 1988) was an American blues singer and guitarist. House pioneered an innovative style featuring strong, repetitive rhythms, often played with the aid of slide guitar, and his singing often incorporated elements of southern gospel and spiritual music.
    House was an important influence on Muddy Waters and also on Robert Johnson. A seminal Delta blues figure, he remains influential today, with his music being covered by blues-rock groups such as The White Stripes.[3]

    The middle of three brothers, House was born in Riverton, two miles from Clarksdale, Mississippi. Around age seven or eight, he was brought by his mother to Tallulah, Louisiana, after his parents separated. The young Son House was determined to become a Baptist preacher, and at age 15 began his preaching career. Despite the church's firm stand against blues music and the sinful world which revolved around it, House became attracted to it and taught himself guitar in his mid 20s, after moving back to the Clarksdale area, inspired by the work of Willie Wilson. He began playing alongside Charley Patton, Willie Brown, Robert Johnson and Fiddlin' Joe Martin around Robinsonville, Mississippi, and north to Memphis, Tennessee, until 1942.
    After killing a man, allegedly in self-defense, he spent time at Parchman Farm in 1928 and 1929. The official story on the killing is that sometime around 1927 or 1928, he was playing in a juke joint when a man went on a shooting spree. Son was wounded in the leg, and shot the man dead. He received a 15-year sentence at Parchman Farm prison.[4]
    Son House recorded for Paramount Records in 1930 and for Alan Lomax from the Library of Congress in 1941 and 1942. He then faded from public view until the country blues revival in the 1960s when, after a long search of the Mississippi Delta region by Nick Perls, Dick Waterman and Phil Spiro, he was "re-discovered" in June 1964 in Rochester, New York, where he had lived since 1943; House had been retired from the music business for many years, working for the New York Central Railroad, and was completely unaware of the international revival of enthusiasm for his early recordings. He subsequently toured extensively in the US and Europe and recorded for CBS records. Like Mississippi John Hurt he was welcomed into the music scene of the 1960s and played at Newport Folk Festival in 1964, the New York Folk Festival in July 1965, and the October 1967 European tour of the American Folk Festival along with Skip James and Bukka White. Son House can be seen in the documentry "The Howling Wolf Story". House and Wolf had been close early in Wolf's career. However, in the documentry, when Wolf was performing a show during the 60's, House was drunk and making a lot of noise during Wolf's set. This angered Wolf who started telling House, from the stage, that all he cared about was wiskey and that he had had a chance to do something with his life but threw it away, to paraphrase Wolf. In the summer of 1970, House toured Europe once again, including an appearance at the Montreux Jazz Festival; a recording of his London concerts was released by Liberty Records.
    Ill health plagued his later years and in 1974 he retired once again, and later moved to Detroit, Michigan, where he remained until his death from cancer of the larynx. He was buried at the Mt. Hazel Cemetery. Members of the Detroit Blues Society raised money through benefit concerts to put a fitting monument on his grave. He had been married five times.

    House's innovative style featured strong, repetitive rhythms, often played with the aid of a bottleneck, coupled with singing that owed more than a nod to the hollers of the chain gangs. The music of Son House, in contrast to that of, say, Blind Lemon Jefferson, was emphatically a dance music, meant to be heard in the noisy atmosphere of a barrelhouse or other dance hall. House was the primary influence on Muddy Waters and also an important influence on Robert Johnson, who would later take his music to new levels. It was House who, speaking to awe-struck young blues fans in the 1960s, spread the legend that Johnson had sold his soul to the Devil in exchange for his musical powers.

    Describing House's 1967 appearance at the De Montfort Hall in Leicester, England, Bob Groom wrote in Blues World magazine:
    "It is difficult to describe the transformation that took place as this smiling, friendly man hunched over his guitar and launched himself, bodily it seemed, into his music. The blues possessed him like a 'lowdown shaking chill' and the spellbound audience saw the very incarnation of the blues as, head thrown back, he hollered and groaned the disturbing lyrics and flailed the guitar, snapping the strings back against the fingerboard to accentuate the agonized rhythm. Son's music is the centre of the blues experience and when he performs it is a corporeal thing, audience and singer become as one."

    The most dangerous woman of all is the one who refuses to rely on your sword to save her because she carries her own.

    - R.H. Sin

  8. #8
    Guest Guest
    Thanks for the info Nessa

  9. #9
    Long Gone Day Guest
    Son House is one of he best Delta blues guitar players, ever. Rory Block,
    played in N.Y. often and I had seen her many times in the late 70's and
    early 80's, and plays an awesome tribute to him called, "Blues Walkin' Like
    A Man."

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