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Rev. Blind Gary Davis 1935 - 1949

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Download links and information about Rev. Blind Gary Davis 1935 - 1949 by Rev. Gary Davis. This album was released in 1994 and it belongs to Blues, Gospel, Country, Acoustic genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 57:36 minutes.

Artist: Rev. Gary Davis
Release date: 1994
Genre: Blues, Gospel, Country, Acoustic
Tracks: 18
Duration: 57:36
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. I'm Throwin' Up My Hands 2:49
2. Cross and Evil Woman Blues 3:02
3. I Am the True Vine 3:14
4. I Am the Light of the World 3:10
5. O Lord, Search My Heart 3:04
6. I Saw the Light 3:04
7. You Can Go Home 3:07
8. Twelve Gates to the City 3:07
9. Have More Faith In Jesus 3:02
10. You Got to Go Down 3:16
11. I Belong to the Band - Hallelujah! 3:12
12. The Great Change In Me 3:17
13. Lord, I Wish I Could See 3:03
14. Lord, Stand By Me 3:07
15. The Angel's Message to Me 3:07
16. Civil War March 5:26
17. I Cannot Bear My Burden By Myself 2:50
18. I'm Gonna Meet You At the Station 2:39

Details

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Reverend Blind Gary Davis really wasn't a blues player, and although many of his advocates like to call what he played "holy blues," he seldom used the form, and when he did, it was in the guise of an evangelistic street performer who needed something secular to occasionally hold a crowd. What he was, as these early 78s show, was a skilled, and at times breath-taking, guitar player with a strict fundamentalist approach to spiritual matters, making him, literally, a guitarist for God. These are his earliest recordings, most of them recorded in New York in 1935 for ARC Records (Blind Boy Fuller also made his recording debut at these sessions), when he was using a metal-bodied National resonator guitar, and the rest from the mid- to late- '40s, when he was playing a standard acoustic. There are only a couple of blues pieces here (including the stately "I'm Throwing Up My Hands," which opens the sequence), with most of the sides being skilled re-workings of church hymns and folk pieces. While it is tempting to call this material "gospel-blues," and that is an accurate term to some degree, the truth is that these generally aren't blues progressions at all, and it might help to think of Davis' guitar work as an attempt to fill in where a piano or organ might normally be. Whatever you call it, Davis could play, and his easy dexterity on guitar is everywhere evident here. Highlights include a heartfelt version of Georgia Tom Dorsey's "Lord, Stand By Me," the hoarse and moving "You Can Go Home," the guest vocal by Bull City Red (aka George "Bull City Red" Washington) on "I Saw the Light," and the simply bizarre mid- '40s instrumental called "Civil War March," which sounds like the possible source for much of John Fahey's unique acoustic guitar vision. Originally issued on CD by Document Records in 1991, these tracks were re-mastered and released again with slightly better sound by Document in 2004.