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The Best of Charlie Patton

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Download links and information about The Best of Charlie Patton by Charley Patton. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Blues, Country, Acoustic genres. It contains 23 tracks with total duration of 01:11:27 minutes.

Artist: Charley Patton
Release date: 2003
Genre: Blues, Country, Acoustic
Tracks: 23
Duration: 01:11:27
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Down the Dirt Road Blues 2:56
2. It Won't Be Long 3:22
3. High Water Everywhere Pt. 1 3:06
4. High Sheriff Blues 3:10
5. Mississippi Bo Weavil Blues 3:08
6. Lord I'm Discouraged 3:08
7. Shake It and Break It 3:10
8. Rattlesnake Blues 2:47
9. Screamin' and Hollerin' the Blues 3:06
10. A Spoonful Blues 3:13
11. Pony Blues 3:00
12. Magnolia Blues 3:11
13. Moon Going Down 3:16
14. I'm Goin' Home 3:05
15. Elder Green Blues 3:02
16. Jim Lee Blues Pt. 1 3:04
17. Banty Rooster Blues 3:04
18. Jersey Bull Blues 3:09
19. I Shall Not Be Moved 3:05
20. Going To Move To Alabama 3:02
21. Pea Vine Blues 3:05
22. Green River Blues 3:09
23. Bird Nest Bound 3:09

Details

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Were Charley Patton alive today, he'd most likely be pleasantly surprised by the durability of his records. Who could've imagined that the musings of a Delta guitarist, recorded for Paramount in the late 1920s and early 1930s, would be treated as relics of art 60 and 70 years later? The Best of Charley Patton includes 23 cuts, 70 minutes of music, and offers an excellent introduction to those not quite ready to spend the big bucks on the available box sets. There's "High Sheriff Blues," a song recalling Patton's arrest in Belzoni, Mississippi for drunkenness, and "Pony Blues," his signature song that dated back to the beginning of his career in 1910. He's joined by fiddler Henry "Son" Sims on "Going to Move to Alabama," and plays some mean bottleneck guitar on "Mississippi Bo Weavil." Yazoo reserved a paragraph of the liner notes to address the problems of transferring Patton's music from worn-out 78s. A certain level of noise, it seems, is a fact of life with these recordings. Yazoo achieves a balance here, cutting down as much surface noise as possible without sapping the dynamics of the performance. The cleanest cuts comprise the first half of the album and two cuts, "High Sheriff" and "Jersey Bull," appear at their proper speed for the first time on this collection. The Best of Charley Patton is a fine, one-stop collection by the "King of the Delta Blues." ~ Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr., Rovi