It was originally a traditional West Indies folk song, "The John B. Sails," taken from a collection by Carl Sandburg (1927). Alan Lomax made a field recording of the song in Nassau, 1935, under the title "Histe Up the John B. Sail." This recording appears on the album Bahamas 1935: Chanteys And Anthems From Andros And Cat Island.
@ThePitChannel ~ With all due respect, you are reading waaaay too much into my post. I am one of the estimated 7% of the world's population who are left-handed so I am quite proud of both Dale and Hendrix. I was 15 when I bought my first Dick Dale 45 RPM record in 1962 (Surf Beat) and was so excited that there was a significant left-handed gutiar player. By the time Hendrix came along ('67-'68) people were beginning to realize that lefties could really do it too! They are equals in MY eyes.
Dick didn't do vocals on many of his hits, rather, as a rule, he'd let that Fender Stratocaster, Fender Amp and Lansing speakers do his talking. This man was the King of Surf Gutiars waaaaaaaay before anyone ever thought about such a genre. Jimi Hendrix became a left-handed legend but Dick Dale was blowing people away, playing from the left side of the strings, years and years before Jimi was anybody.
Although what you mentioned is true and well known, please keep in mind that this isn't a bash Hendrix or bash surf music thread. I didn't put up this song to emphesize who was the first left-handed guitarist or who invented the surf sub-genre.
Wicked version, I love it!
It was originally a traditional West Indies folk song, "The John B. Sails," taken from a collection by Carl Sandburg (1927). Alan Lomax made a field recording of the song in Nassau, 1935, under the title "Histe Up the John B. Sail." This recording appears on the album Bahamas 1935: Chanteys And Anthems From Andros And Cat Island.
ld12311231 2 months ago
@ThePitChannel ~ With all due respect, you are reading waaaay too much into my post. I am one of the estimated 7% of the world's population who are left-handed so I am quite proud of both Dale and Hendrix. I was 15 when I bought my first Dick Dale 45 RPM record in 1962 (Surf Beat) and was so excited that there was a significant left-handed gutiar player. By the time Hendrix came along ('67-'68) people were beginning to realize that lefties could really do it too! They are equals in MY eyes.
MrRonnieG 3 months ago
Dick didn't do vocals on many of his hits, rather, as a rule, he'd let that Fender Stratocaster, Fender Amp and Lansing speakers do his talking. This man was the King of Surf Gutiars waaaaaaaay before anyone ever thought about such a genre. Jimi Hendrix became a left-handed legend but Dick Dale was blowing people away, playing from the left side of the strings, years and years before Jimi was anybody.
MrRonnieG 3 months ago
@MrRonnieG
Although what you mentioned is true and well known, please keep in mind that this isn't a bash Hendrix or bash surf music thread. I didn't put up this song to emphesize who was the first left-handed guitarist or who invented the surf sub-genre.
ThePitChannel 3 months ago
Wicked Version
whispperson 3 months ago
What a nice treat! Thanks.
califgirl47 11 months ago
excellent
289cab 1 year ago
@289cab This was from his first album on the deltone label
spacepatrolman 7 months ago