Hurt, John Smith

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[[Image:John-hurt.jpg|thumb|Mississippi John Hurt.]]
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'''"Mississippi" John Smith Hurt''' (1892 <ref>There is confusion about his date of birth, but the [http://www.cr.nps.gov/delta/blues/sites/ms_sites.htm#mjh_grave grave] mentions this date.</ref>, [[Mississippi|Teoc]], [[Carroll County, Mississippi|Carroll County]], [[Mississippi]] - November 2, 1966, [[Grenada, Mississippi|Grenada]], [[Mississippi]]) was an influential [[blues]] singer and [[guitar]]ist.  
+
'''"Mississippi" John Smith Hurt''' (1892 &ndash; November 2, 1966) was an influential American [[blues]] singer and [[guitar]]ist. Born in rural [[Mississippi]], he learned guitar at an early age and performed at local dances until he was discovered by [[OKeh Records]] in 1928. After two recording sessions in [[Memphis]] and [[New York]], he returned home and disappeared from the recording business for almost 35 years. He was then rediscovered in 1963 and enjoyed a brief period of great popularity during the [[folk music]] revival of the 1960s until his death in 1966.
 +
{{toc}}
 +
Hurt's musical style was light-hearted and entertaining, and his later popularity eclipsed that of other rediscovered bluesmen who had enjoyed much greater earlier success. He recorded several albums before his death, and both his singing and guitar skills remained undiminished to the end. Young guitarists of several generations have been influenced by his melodic style of [[finger-picking]], and a number of his songs have remained popular in the folk music genre. A gentle and unassuming man, Hurt also earned a reputation as an unpretentious person liked by all who met him.
  
 
==Early years==
 
==Early years==
  
Hurt was born in Teoc, Mississippi and was the eighth of ten children. His parrents were Paul Hurt and Mae Jane Smith. Hurt learned to appreciate guitar music from William H Carson, boyfriend of his teacher at the St. James School, in Avalon, Mississippi. He began learning the guitar at the age of nine. Hurt stated, "I wasn't allowed to bother Mr. Carson's guitar. I would wait until he feel asleep at my house, then I would slip his guitar into my room and try to play... After that, my mother bought me a second hand guitar at the price of $1.50." <ref> [http://www.msjohnhurtmuseum.com/mjhbio.html Biography of Mississippi John Hurt]. ''www.msjohnhurtmuseum.com''. Retrieved April 26, 2007.</ref>
+
Hurt was born in Teoc, Mississippi and was the eighth of ten children. His parents were Paul Hurt and Mae Jane Smith. Hurt began learning the guitar at the age of nine after learning to appreciate guitar music from William H, Carson, a visitor at the Hurt home in Avalon. Hurt stated, "I wasn't allowed to bother Mr. Carson's guitar. I would wait until he feel asleep at my house, then I would slip his guitar into my room and try to play... After that, my mother bought me a second hand guitar at the price of $1.50." <ref> [http://www.msjohnhurtmuseum.com/mjhbio.html Biography of Mississippi John Hurt] ''www.msjohnhurtmuseum.com''. Retrieved September 1, 2007.</ref>
  
He spent much of his youth playing [[old time music]] for friends and dances. In 1916, he married Gertrude Hoskins. They had two children: T.C. (born April 1, 1919) and Ida Mae (born June 26, 1921). John and Gertrude separated shortly after the birth of Ida Mae. Later, John became the father of another child John William, with his common law wife, Jesse Lee Cole.
+
Hurt spent much of his youth playing [[old time music]] for friends and dances. In 1916, still in his early teens, he married Gertrude Hoskins. They had two children&mdash;T.C. (born April 1, 1919) and Ida Mae (born June 26, 1921). John and Gertrude separated shortly after the birth of Ida Mae. Later, John became the father of another child, John William, with his common law wife, Jesse Lee Cole.
  
Although her earned a living as a farm hand into the 1920s, Hurt continued playing for dances in his spare time, usually partnering with fiddle player Shell Smith. In 1923 he also played often with the [[violin|fiddle]] player Willie Narmour. When Narmour got a chance to record for [[OKeh Records]] in reward for winning first place in a 1928 fiddle contest, Narmour recommended Hurt to OKeh producer Tommy Rockwell. After auditioning "Monday Morning Blues" at his home, Hurt took part in two recording sessions. The first, in [[Memphis, Tennessee|Memphis]], recorded eight sides, only two of which were release. The "Mississippi" tag was added to his name around this time by OKeh. The second session took place in [[New York City]] and included several of the songs for which Hurt later became well known, such as "Candy Man," and "Spike Driver Blues." (See Discography below). The resulting recordings, howeer, did not sell well, and OKeh records soon went out of business during the depression.
+
Earning his living as a [[farm]] hand and occasional [[railroad]] worker into the 1920s, Hurt continued playing for dances in his spare time, usually partnering with fiddler Shell Smith. In 1923 he also played often with [[violin|fiddle]] player Willie Narmour. When Narmour got a chance to record for [[OKeh Records]] in reward for winning first place in a 1928 fiddle contest, he recommended Hurt to OKeh producer Tommy Rockwell.
 +
 
 +
After auditioning "Monday Morning Blues" at his home, Hurt took part in two recording sessions. The first, in [[Memphis, Tennessee|Memphis]], recorded eight sides, only two of which were released. The "[[Mississippi]]" tag was added to his name around this time by OKeh. The second session took place in [[New York City]] and included several of the songs for which Hurt later became well known, such as the risque [[ragtime]] number "Candy Man," and "Spike Driver Blues"&mdash;Hurt's unique version of the legend of [[John Henry]]. The resulting recordings, however, did not sell well, and OKeh soon went out of business during the [[Great Depression]].
  
 
Hurt returned to Avalon and obscurity, working as a [[sharecropper]] and playing local parties and dances. It would be more than three decades before he would record again.
 
Hurt returned to Avalon and obscurity, working as a [[sharecropper]] and playing local parties and dances. It would be more than three decades before he would record again.
  
 
==Comeback==
 
==Comeback==
In 1963, a [[folk music|folk]] musicologist Tom Hoskins, inspired by the OKeh recordings, was able to locate John Hurt near Avalon, Mississippi. He was not easy to find. Hoskins noticed that Hurt sang of "Avalon, my home town," but was not able to locate the tiny town until he found it on an old atlas. At 71 years of age, Hurt's his guitar playing skills still intact, and his voice was as charming as ever. Hoskins encouraged Hurt to move to [[Washington, DC]], and begin performing on a wider stage.
+
In 1963, [[folk music|folk]] musicologist Tom Hoskins, inspired by the OKeh recordings, was able to locate Hurt near Avalon. He was not easy to find. Hoskins noticed that Hurt sang of "Avalon, my home town," but was not able to locate the tiny town until he found it on an old atlas. Remarkably, at 71 years of age, Hurt's guitar skills were still intact, and his mellow voice was as charming as ever. Hoskins encouraged Hurt to move to [[Washington, DC]] and begin performing on a wider stage.
 
 
Whereas his first releases had coincided with the [[Great Depression]], Hurt's new career could hardly have been better timed. A stellar performance at the 1963 [[Newport Folk Festival]] saw his star rise among the new "folk revival" audience, and Hurt soon was busy playing at colleges, concert halls, coffee houses, and even on the [[Tonight Show]] with [[Johnny Carson]]/
 
  
For three years until his death, Mississippi John Hurt was a star after a lifetime of toil as a manual laborer.
+
Whereas his first releases had coincided with the [[Great Depression]], Hurt's new career could hardly have been better timed. A stellar performance at the 1963 [[Newport Folk Festival]] (see "external links" for video link) saw his star rise among the new "folk revival" audience, and Hurt soon was busy playing at colleges, concert halls, coffee houses, and even on the [[Tonight Show]] with [[Johnny Carson]]. For three years until his death, Mississippi John Hurt was a star, after a lifetime of toil as a manual laborer.
  
Vanguard released a new album, ''Today!'' in 1966. A impressive live recording of a concert at Oberlin College in April of 1965 was released under the title ''The Best of Mississippi John Hurt'' featuring 21 songs. ''The Immortal Mississippi John Hurt'', was released posthumously, as was the ''Last Sessions'' album. To the end, Hurt's voice and guitar and guitar playing remained remarkably strong.
+
[[Vanguard Records]] released a new album, ''Today!'' in 1966. An impressive live recording of a concert at Oberlin College in April 1965 was released under the title ''The Best of Mississippi John Hurt'', featuring 21 songs. ''The Immortal Mississippi John Hurt'', was released posthumously, as was the ''Last Sessions'' album. Several later albums were released on the Piedmont label. To the end, Hurt's voice and guitar and guitar playing remained remarkably strong.
  
 
==Style==
 
==Style==
John Hurt's guitar and singing style was atypical of the usual Mississippi bluesman. Both his guitar play and his voice expressed a sweet, melodic quality, and he was as comfortable with rag-time and religious songs as with traditional blues. Unlike some blues players, his vocalization wre clearly enunciated and melodic. In many ways, he was a throw-back to the earliest days of southern music when black and white musicians played together in bands for whomever cared to listen and dance, as evidenced, for example by his early career partnering with fiddlers.  
+
John Hurt's guitar and singing style was atypical of Mississippi bluesman in its melodic character and almost whimsical tone. Both his guitar playing and his voice expressed a sweet, mellow quality, and he was as comfortable with rag-time and religious songs as with blues. In fact his use of traditional 12-bar blues forms was relatively rare. In many ways he was a throw-back to the early days of southern music when black and white musicians played together in bands for whomever cared to listen and dance. Unlike many blues players, his vocalizations were clearly enunciated and highly melodic.  
  
Hurt's guitar playing is particularly accessible to young players because of its clarity and emphasis on melody. He tended to play full, ringing, individual notes rather than damping his chords for rhymic effects or using a slide. His solo to "Candy Man" is a classic, which has been mastered and imitated by thousands of young finger-pickers. Country-folk master Doc Watson brought Hurt's style to wide audiences when he covered "Spike Driver Blues" and other Hurt songs.  
+
Hurt's guitar playing is particularly accessible to young players because of its clarity and emphasis on melody. He tended to play full, ringing, individual notes rather than damping his chords for rhymic effect or using a slide. His solo to "Candy Man" is a classic, which has been imitated by thousands of young finger-pickers. Country-folk master [[Doc Watson]] brought Hurt's style to wide audiences when, in the mid 1960s, he covered "Spike Driver Blues" and other Hurt songs.
  
 
==Legacy==
 
==Legacy==
  
Mississippi John Hurt left a legacy of character as well as music. In his trademark bowler hat, was a soft-spoken, humble man whose wrinkled face lit up when he smiled. Unlike many bluesmen, his music was often uplifting and light-hearted, even when he was singing about toiling on a railroad or grabbing "a gun and shoot my Susie." After his rediscovery, he became more popular that of the other "new" old bluemen, included stars that had easily eclipsed him in the old days such as [[Son House]] and [[Skip James]]. He had never been particularly ambitious, and he accepted fame and adultation with remarkable grace.
+
Mississippi John Hurt left a legacy of character as well as music. In his trademark bowler hat, he was a soft-spoken, humble man whose wrinkled face lit up when he smiled. Unlike many bluesmen, his music was often uplifting and light-hearted, even when he was singing about toiling on a railroad or grabbing "a gun and shoot my Susie." After his come-back, he became more popular than other rediscovered bluesmen, including stars that had easily eclipsed him in the old days, such as [[Son House]] and [[Skip James]]. He had never been particularly ambitious, and he accepted fame and adulation with remarkable grace.
  
Part of his later popularity stemmed from the universality of his music, which was never stricly limited to the blues. However, equally important was who he was as a person, warm, unpretentious, and liked by all. Hurt's influence spans several music genres including blues, [[country music|country]], [[bluegrass]], folk and contemporary [[rock music|rock and roll]]. A soft-spoken man, his nature was reflected in the work, which remained a mellow mix of country, blues and old time music to the end.
+
Part of his later popularity stemmed from the universality of his music, which was never strictly limited to the blues and appealed to white audiences in part because it seemed less alien and primitive than true "Delta" style blues. However, equally important was who he was as a person&mdash;warm, unpretentious, and liked by all. Hurt's influence spans several music genres including blues, [[country music|country]], folk, and contemporary [[rock music|rock and roll]]. A soft-spoken man, his nature was reflected in his work, which remained a mellow mix of country, blues, spirituals, and old time music to the end.
  
 
==Media==
 
==Media==
Line 64: Line 66:
 
*Spike Driver Blues
 
*Spike Driver Blues
 
|}
 
|}
 
====Last Sessions - 1966====
 
(Vanguard)
 
{|width="100%"
 
|-
 
|
 
*Long Ways From Home
 
*Boys, You're Welcome
 
*Joe Turner Blues
 
*First Shot Missed Him
 
*Farther Along
 
*Funky Butt
 
*Spider, Spider
 
*Waiting For You
 
*Shortnin' Bread
 
|
 
*Trouble, I've Had It All My Days
 
*Let The Mermaids Flirt With Me
 
*Good Morning, Carrie
 
*Nobody Cares For Me
 
*All Night Long
 
*Hey, Honey, Right Away
 
*You've Got To Die
 
*Goodnight Irene
 
|}
 
 
====Worried Blues====
 
(Piedmont PLP 13161)
 
{|width="100%"
 
|-
 
|
 
*Lazy Blues
 
*Farther along
 
*Sliding delta
 
*Nobody cares for me
 
*Cow hooking blues
 
|
 
*Talkin’ Casey Jones
 
*Weeping and wailing
 
*Worried blues
 
*Oh Mary don’t you weep
 
*I been cryin’ since you been gone
 
|}
 
 
 
====Mississippi John Hurt Today====
 
====Mississippi John Hurt Today====
(Vanguard VSD-79220)
+
(Vanguard VSD-79220)
 
{|width="100%"
 
{|width="100%"
 
|-
 
|-
Line 118: Line 76:
 
* Make me a pallet on the floor
 
* Make me a pallet on the floor
 
* Talkin’ Casey Jones
 
* Talkin’ Casey Jones
* Corrinna, Corrinna
+
* Corinna, Corinna
 
|
 
|
 
* Coffee blues
 
* Coffee blues
Line 127: Line 85:
 
* Beulah land
 
* Beulah land
 
|}
 
|}
 
====Mississippi John Hurt Last Sessions====
 
(Vanguard VSD-79327)
 
{|width="100%"
 
|-
 
|
 
* Poor boy long ways from home
 
* Boys, you’re welcome
 
* Joe Turner blues
 
* First shot missed him
 
* Farther along
 
* Spider, spider
 
* Waiting for you
 
* Shortnin’ bread
 
|
 
* Trouble, I’ve had it all my days
 
* Let the mermaids flirt with me
 
* Good mornin’, Carrie
 
* Nobody cares for me
 
* All night long
 
* Hey, Honey, right away
 
* You’ve got to die
 
* Goodnight, Irene
 
|}
 
 
 
====The Best of Mississippi John Hurt====
 
====The Best of Mississippi John Hurt====
 
(Vanguard VSD-19/20)
 
(Vanguard VSD-19/20)
Line 177: Line 110:
 
* CC rider
 
* CC rider
 
* Spanish Fandango
 
* Spanish Fandango
* Talking casey
+
* Talking Casey
 
* Chicken
 
* Chicken
 
* You are my sunshine
 
* You are my sunshine
 
|}
 
|}
 +
 +
==== The Immortal====
 +
(Vanguard)
 +
{|width="100%"
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
*Since I've Laid My Burden Down
 +
*Moaning The Blues 
 +
*Stocktime (Buck Dance) 
 +
*Lazy Blues 
 +
*Richland Woman Blues 
 +
*Wise And Foolish Virgins
 +
*Hop Joint
 +
 +
*Monday Morning Blues 
 +
*I Can't Be Satisfied 
 +
*Keep On Knocking
 +
*The Chicken 
 +
*Stagolee 
 +
*Nearer My God To Thee
 +
|}
 +
 +
====Last Sessions====
 +
(Vanguard)
 +
{|width="100%"
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
*Long Ways From Home
 +
*Boys, You're Welcome
 +
*Joe Turner Blues
 +
*First Shot Missed Him
 +
*Farther Along
 +
*Funky Butt
 +
*Spider, Spider
 +
*Waiting For You
 +
*Shortnin' Bread
 +
|
 +
*Trouble, I've Had It All My Days
 +
*Let The Mermaids Flirt With Me
 +
*Good Morning, Carrie
 +
*Nobody Cares For Me
 +
*All Night Long
 +
*Hey, Honey, Right Away
 +
*You've Got To Die
 +
*Goodnight Irene
 +
|}
 +
 +
====Worried Blues====
 +
(Piedmont PLP 13161)
 +
{|width="100%"
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
*Lazy Blues
 +
*Farther along
 +
*Sliding delta
 +
*Nobody cares for me
 +
*Cow hooking blues
 +
|
 +
*Talkin’ Casey Jones
 +
*Weeping and wailing
 +
*Worried blues
 +
*Oh Mary don’t you weep
 +
*I been cryin’ since you been gone
 +
|}
 +
 
====The Candy Man====
 
====The Candy Man====
 
(Quicksilver QS 5042)
 
(Quicksilver QS 5042)
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|}
 
|}
  
====Folk Songs and Blues===
+
====Folk Songs and Blues====
 
(Piedmont PLP 13757)  
 
(Piedmont PLP 13757)  
 
{|width="100%"
 
{|width="100%"
Line 230: Line 228:
 
* Salty dog
 
* Salty dog
 
* Cow hooking blues
 
* Cow hooking blues
* Spanish Fandang
+
* Spanish Fandango
 
|
 
|
 
* Casey Jones
 
* Casey Jones
Line 243: Line 241:
 
<references />
 
<references />
  
 +
==References==
 +
*Dicaire, David L. ''Blues Singers: Biographies of 50 Legendary Artists of the Early 20th Century''. McFarland & Company, 1999. ISBN 978-0786406067
 +
*Grossman, Stefan. ''Mississippi John Hurt''. Alfred Publishing, 2007. ISBN 978-0739043301
 +
*Ochs, Max. ''With Mississippi John Hurt''. Arkady Book Company, 2005. ISBN 0972683410
  
==External links==
+
[[category:Musicians]]
* [http://www.msjohnhurtmuseum.com Mississippi John Hurt Museum]
 
* [http://www.wirz.de/music/hurt.htm Illustrated Mississippi John Hurt discography]
 
* [http://www.vanguardrecords.com/Hurt/home-m.html Vanguard Record's] short biography of Mississippi John Hurt
 
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PW76uNH58ik Video of John Hurt's Gravesite]
 
 
 
[[category:history and biography]]
 
[[category:Music]]
 
  
 
{{credit|108031240}}
 
{{credit|108031240}}

Latest revision as of 15:07, 10 October 2018

"Mississippi" John Smith Hurt (1892 – November 2, 1966) was an influential American blues singer and guitarist. Born in rural Mississippi, he learned guitar at an early age and performed at local dances until he was discovered by OKeh Records in 1928. After two recording sessions in Memphis and New York, he returned home and disappeared from the recording business for almost 35 years. He was then rediscovered in 1963 and enjoyed a brief period of great popularity during the folk music revival of the 1960s until his death in 1966.

Hurt's musical style was light-hearted and entertaining, and his later popularity eclipsed that of other rediscovered bluesmen who had enjoyed much greater earlier success. He recorded several albums before his death, and both his singing and guitar skills remained undiminished to the end. Young guitarists of several generations have been influenced by his melodic style of finger-picking, and a number of his songs have remained popular in the folk music genre. A gentle and unassuming man, Hurt also earned a reputation as an unpretentious person liked by all who met him.

Early years

Hurt was born in Teoc, Mississippi and was the eighth of ten children. His parents were Paul Hurt and Mae Jane Smith. Hurt began learning the guitar at the age of nine after learning to appreciate guitar music from William H, Carson, a visitor at the Hurt home in Avalon. Hurt stated, "I wasn't allowed to bother Mr. Carson's guitar. I would wait until he feel asleep at my house, then I would slip his guitar into my room and try to play... After that, my mother bought me a second hand guitar at the price of $1.50." [1]

Hurt spent much of his youth playing old time music for friends and dances. In 1916, still in his early teens, he married Gertrude Hoskins. They had two children—T.C. (born April 1, 1919) and Ida Mae (born June 26, 1921). John and Gertrude separated shortly after the birth of Ida Mae. Later, John became the father of another child, John William, with his common law wife, Jesse Lee Cole.

Earning his living as a farm hand and occasional railroad worker into the 1920s, Hurt continued playing for dances in his spare time, usually partnering with fiddler Shell Smith. In 1923 he also played often with fiddle player Willie Narmour. When Narmour got a chance to record for OKeh Records in reward for winning first place in a 1928 fiddle contest, he recommended Hurt to OKeh producer Tommy Rockwell.

After auditioning "Monday Morning Blues" at his home, Hurt took part in two recording sessions. The first, in Memphis, recorded eight sides, only two of which were released. The "Mississippi" tag was added to his name around this time by OKeh. The second session took place in New York City and included several of the songs for which Hurt later became well known, such as the risque ragtime number "Candy Man," and "Spike Driver Blues"—Hurt's unique version of the legend of John Henry. The resulting recordings, however, did not sell well, and OKeh soon went out of business during the Great Depression.

Hurt returned to Avalon and obscurity, working as a sharecropper and playing local parties and dances. It would be more than three decades before he would record again.

Comeback

In 1963, folk musicologist Tom Hoskins, inspired by the OKeh recordings, was able to locate Hurt near Avalon. He was not easy to find. Hoskins noticed that Hurt sang of "Avalon, my home town," but was not able to locate the tiny town until he found it on an old atlas. Remarkably, at 71 years of age, Hurt's guitar skills were still intact, and his mellow voice was as charming as ever. Hoskins encouraged Hurt to move to Washington, DC and begin performing on a wider stage.

Whereas his first releases had coincided with the Great Depression, Hurt's new career could hardly have been better timed. A stellar performance at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival (see "external links" for video link) saw his star rise among the new "folk revival" audience, and Hurt soon was busy playing at colleges, concert halls, coffee houses, and even on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. For three years until his death, Mississippi John Hurt was a star, after a lifetime of toil as a manual laborer.

Vanguard Records released a new album, Today! in 1966. An impressive live recording of a concert at Oberlin College in April 1965 was released under the title The Best of Mississippi John Hurt, featuring 21 songs. The Immortal Mississippi John Hurt, was released posthumously, as was the Last Sessions album. Several later albums were released on the Piedmont label. To the end, Hurt's voice and guitar and guitar playing remained remarkably strong.

Style

John Hurt's guitar and singing style was atypical of Mississippi bluesman in its melodic character and almost whimsical tone. Both his guitar playing and his voice expressed a sweet, mellow quality, and he was as comfortable with rag-time and religious songs as with blues. In fact his use of traditional 12-bar blues forms was relatively rare. In many ways he was a throw-back to the early days of southern music when black and white musicians played together in bands for whomever cared to listen and dance. Unlike many blues players, his vocalizations were clearly enunciated and highly melodic.

Hurt's guitar playing is particularly accessible to young players because of its clarity and emphasis on melody. He tended to play full, ringing, individual notes rather than damping his chords for rhymic effect or using a slide. His solo to "Candy Man" is a classic, which has been imitated by thousands of young finger-pickers. Country-folk master Doc Watson brought Hurt's style to wide audiences when, in the mid 1960s, he covered "Spike Driver Blues" and other Hurt songs.

Legacy

Mississippi John Hurt left a legacy of character as well as music. In his trademark bowler hat, he was a soft-spoken, humble man whose wrinkled face lit up when he smiled. Unlike many bluesmen, his music was often uplifting and light-hearted, even when he was singing about toiling on a railroad or grabbing "a gun and shoot my Susie." After his come-back, he became more popular than other rediscovered bluesmen, including stars that had easily eclipsed him in the old days, such as Son House and Skip James. He had never been particularly ambitious, and he accepted fame and adulation with remarkable grace.

Part of his later popularity stemmed from the universality of his music, which was never strictly limited to the blues and appealed to white audiences in part because it seemed less alien and primitive than true "Delta" style blues. However, equally important was who he was as a person—warm, unpretentious, and liked by all. Hurt's influence spans several music genres including blues, country, folk, and contemporary rock and roll. A soft-spoken man, his nature was reflected in his work, which remained a mellow mix of country, blues, spirituals, and old time music to the end.

Media

(audio)
Nobody's Dirty Business (file info)
Louis Collins (file info)
Problems listening to the files? See media help.


Discography

Avalon Blues

The Complete 1928 OKEH Recordings (Columbia Roots N' Blues reissue)

Also released as Mississippi John Hurt: 1928 Sessions (Yazoo 1065, Yazoo Records)
  • Frankie
  • Nobody's Dirty Business
  • Ain't No Tellin'
  • Louis Collins
  • Avalon Blues
  • Big Leg Blues
  • Stack O' Lee
  • Candy Man Blues
  • Got The Blues (Can't Be Satisfied)
  • Blessed Be The Name
  • Praying On The Old Camp Ground
  • Blue Harvest Blues
  • Spike Driver Blues

Mississippi John Hurt Today

(Vanguard VSD-79220)

  • Payday
  • I’m satisfied
  • Candy man
  • Make me a pallet on the floor
  • Talkin’ Casey Jones
  • Corinna, Corinna
  • Coffee blues
  • Louis Collins
  • Hot time in the old town tonight
  • If you don’t want me. Baby
  • Spike driver blues
  • Beulah land

The Best of Mississippi John Hurt

(Vanguard VSD-19/20) Recorded live at Oberlin College April 15, 1965

  • Here I am, Oh Lord, send me
  • I shall not be moved
  • Nearer my God to thee
  • Baby what’s wrong with you
  • It ain’t nobody’s business
  • Salty dog blues
  • Coffee blues
  • Avalon, my home town
  • Make me a pallet on the floor
  • Since I’ve laid this burden down
  • Sliding delta
  • Monday morning blues
  • Richland women blues
  • Candy man
  • Stagolee
  • My creole belle
  • CC rider
  • Spanish Fandango
  • Talking Casey
  • Chicken
  • You are my sunshine

The Immortal

(Vanguard)

  • Since I've Laid My Burden Down
  • Moaning The Blues
  • Stocktime (Buck Dance)
  • Lazy Blues
  • Richland Woman Blues
  • Wise And Foolish Virgins
  • Hop Joint
  • Monday Morning Blues
  • I Can't Be Satisfied
  • Keep On Knocking
  • The Chicken
  • Stagolee
  • Nearer My God To Thee

Last Sessions

(Vanguard)

  • Long Ways From Home
  • Boys, You're Welcome
  • Joe Turner Blues
  • First Shot Missed Him
  • Farther Along
  • Funky Butt
  • Spider, Spider
  • Waiting For You
  • Shortnin' Bread
  • Trouble, I've Had It All My Days
  • Let The Mermaids Flirt With Me
  • Good Morning, Carrie
  • Nobody Cares For Me
  • All Night Long
  • Hey, Honey, Right Away
  • You've Got To Die
  • Goodnight Irene

Worried Blues

(Piedmont PLP 13161)

  • Lazy Blues
  • Farther along
  • Sliding delta
  • Nobody cares for me
  • Cow hooking blues
  • Talkin’ Casey Jones
  • Weeping and wailing
  • Worried blues
  • Oh Mary don’t you weep
  • I been cryin’ since you been gone

The Candy Man

(Quicksilver QS 5042)

  • Richland women blues
  • Trouble, I’ve had it all my days
  • Chicken
  • Coffee blues
  • Monday morning blues
  • Frankie and Albert
  • Talking Casey
  • Here I am, Oh Lord, send me
  • Hard time in the old town tonight
  • Spike driver blues

Volume One of a Legacy

(Piedmont CLPS 1068)

  • Trouble, I’ve had it all my days
  • Pera Lee
  • See See rider
  • Louis Collins
  • Coffee blues
  • Nobody’s dirty business
  • Do Lord remember
  • Monday morning blues
  • Let the mermaids flirt with me
  • Payday
  • Stack-o-lee blues
  • Casey Jones
  • Frankie and Albert

Folk Songs and Blues

(Piedmont PLP 13757)

  • Avalon blues
  • Richland woman blues
  • Spike driver blues
  • Salty dog
  • Cow hooking blues
  • Spanish Fandango
  • Casey Jones
  • Louis Collins
  • Candy Man Blues
  • My Creole belle
  • Liza Jane – God’s unchanging hand
  • Joe Turner blues

Notes

  1. Biography of Mississippi John Hurt www.msjohnhurtmuseum.com. Retrieved September 1, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Dicaire, David L. Blues Singers: Biographies of 50 Legendary Artists of the Early 20th Century. McFarland & Company, 1999. ISBN 978-0786406067
  • Grossman, Stefan. Mississippi John Hurt. Alfred Publishing, 2007. ISBN 978-0739043301
  • Ochs, Max. With Mississippi John Hurt. Arkady Book Company, 2005. ISBN 0972683410

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