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Leroy Carr Vol. 4 (1932-1934)

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Download links and information about Leroy Carr Vol. 4 (1932-1934) by Leroy Carr. This album was released in 1996 and it belongs to Blues genres. It contains 23 tracks with total duration of 01:13:06 minutes.

Artist: Leroy Carr
Release date: 1996
Genre: Blues
Tracks: 23
Duration: 01:13:06
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Gone Mother Blues 3:04
2. Midnight Hour Blues 3:07
3. Moonlight Blues 3:11
4. The Depression Blues 3:05
5. Mean Mistreater Mama (Take 1) 3:07
6. Mean Mistreater Mama (Take 2) 2:57
7. Mean Mistreater Mama No. 2 3:30
8. Court Room Blues 3:14
9. Hurry Down Sunshine 3:37
10. Corn Licker Blues 3:41
11. Hold Them Puppies 3:39
12. Shady Lane Blues 3:44
13. Blues She Gave Me 3:04
14. You Can't Run My Business No More 3:14
15. Blues Before Sunrise (Take 1) 3:35
16. Blues Before Sunrise (Take 2) 3:38
17. I Ain't Got No Money Now 3:11
18. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child 2:45
19. Stormy Night Blues (Take 2) 2:39
20. Take a Walk Around the Corner 3:08
21. Baby, Come Back to Me 2:27
22. Blue Night Blues 2:58
23. My Woman's Gone Wrong 2:31

Details

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People living in the early 21st century would do well to consider complete immersion in more than an hour's worth of vintage Vocalion blues records made during the darkest days of the Great Depression by pianist Leroy Carr and guitarist Scrapper Blackwell. Vol. 4 in Document's Complete Recorded Works of Leroy Carr contains 23 sides dating from March 1932 through August 1934, with three takes of "Mean Mistreatin' Mama" (suffused with a mood that almost certainly inspired Big Maceo's sound) and an extra version of Carr's beautifully straightforward "Blues Before Sunrise." This is not a "get up and shake your butt" kind of collection, and anyone who complains that it isn't has missed the entire point of historic blues appreciation altogether. In order to connect with this music you need to take a few deep breaths and let these men work on your nervous system with songs that hover and contemplate existence in the middle of the night (as in "Midnight Hour Blues"' "when the blues creep up on you and carry your mind away"), sometimes upgrading to the purposeful lope or the brisk walk, depending on what kind of real-life stuff is being processed. "Hold Them Puppies" and "You Can't Run My Business No More" seem to pulse with energy born of the friction that sometimes arises between two people who don't always see eye to eye. "Court Room Blues" is a boogie with complications in the air; "Take a Walk Around the Corner" is a boogie with murder in its eye. "I Ain't Got No Money Now" is a handsome cousin to Clarence "Pinetop" Smith's "Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out." As for "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child," Carr has borrowed the title from the bedrock of African-American spirituals, but the song itself, like "Hurry Down Sunshine," "Moonlight Blues," and more than half the material on this collection, is a slow bluesy rumination on the difficulties of life in the world.