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Roots of Blues -- Blind Willie McTell „ It's Your Time To Wor

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Uploaded by on Jul 16, 2008

Aufnahme: New York, September 14, 1933
Blind Willie McTell (g)(vcl) Curley Weaver (g)(vcl)

William Samuel McTell, better known as Blind Willie McTell (May 5, 1898 (sometimes reported as 1901) -- August 19, 1959), was an influential American blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist. He was a twelve-string finger picking Piedmont blues guitarist, and recorded 149 songs between 1927 and 1956.
Born William Samuel McTier in Thomson, Georgia, blind in one eye, McTell had lost his remaining vision by late childhood, but became an adept reader of Braille. He showed an inherent proficiency in music from an early age and learned to play the six-string guitar as soon as he could. His father left the family when McTell was still young, so when his mother died in the 1920s, he left his hometown and became a wandering busker. He began his recording career in 1927 for Victor Records in Atlanta[1].
In the years before World War II, he traveled and performed widely, recording for a number of labels under a different name for each one, including Blind Willie McTell (Victor and Decca), Blind Sammie (Columbia), Georgia Bill (Okeh), Hot Shot Willie (Victor), Blind Willie (Vocalion), Red Hot Willie Glaze (Bluebird), Barrelhouse Sammie (Atlantic) and Pig & Whistle Red (Regal). His style was singular: a form of country blues, bridging the gap between the raw blues of the early part of the 20th Century and the more refined East Coast "Piedmont" sound. He took on the less common and more unwieldy 12-string guitar because of its volume. The style is well documented on John Lomax's 1940 recordings of McTell for the Library of Congress, for which McTell earned ten dollars[2].
In 1934, he married Ruthy Kate Williams[3] (now better known as Kate McTell).[4] She accompanied him on stage and on several recordings, before becoming a nurse in 1939. Most of their marriage from 1942 until his death was spent apart, with her living in Fort Gordon near Augusta, and him working around Atlanta.
Post-war, he recorded for Atlantic Records and Regal Records in 1949, but these recordings met with less commercial success than his previous works. He continued to perform around Atlanta, but his career was cut short by ill health, predominantly diabetes and alcoholism.
In 1956, an Atlanta record store manager, Edward Rhodes, discovered McTell playing in the street for quarters and enticed him into his store with a bottle of corn liquor, where he captured a few final performances on a tape recorder. These were released posthumously on Prestige/Bluesville Records as Blind Willie McTell's Last Session.[5]
McTell died in Milledgeville, Georgia of a stroke in 1959.

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Top Comments

  • i dont need a woman cause i got willie

  • I thought I knew all about the blues, howlin wolf, etc., but was I ever glad when I "discovered" Willie!

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All Comments (16)

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  • @apc467

    yeah, Bob Dylan was right... No one can sing the blues like Blind Willie Mctell!

  • anyone have the later recordings of his?

  • no one can sing the blues like blind willie mctell eh??

  • Oops for got to read the box, says right there it is Curley weaver!

  • This is so cool, I love Blind Willie McTell but I have not head this one before, this is one of the tracks where someone else is playing the leads on slide guitar (I think he played with a guy name Curley Weaver or something like that) Thanks so much for posting this!!! So Much feeling in this. People who play the crap they call music now should be forced to listen to stuff like this, if they were smart enough to get how real this is they would be embarrassed for calling what they do music!!

  • he just hits those notes with his voice and it gets to me..

  • I think he was probably an influence to Robert Johnson... got some of that same pure lonesome blues sound.

  • That's correct !!!!!!!!!!

  • all i know is he is one of my Hero's XD

  • He is one of the blues greats however he is not a Delta bluesman at all.

    Willie McTell learned and played the Piedmont Blues style (known also as East Coast Blues)

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