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'Some These Days I'll Be Gone' CHARLEY PATTON, 1929 Delta Blues Guitar Legend

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Uploaded by on Mar 20, 2009

" Some These Days, I'll Be Gone " (1929)

The " RED HOT BLUES " (1925-1945)
Texas Alexander
Pink Anderson
Kokomo Arnold
Barbecue Bob
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Ed Bell
Blind Blake
Ishman Bracey
Big Bill Broonzy
Richard "Rabbit" Brown
Willie Brown
Bumble Bee Slim
Gus Cannon
Bo Carter
Sam Collins
Floyd Council
Gary Davis
Sleepy John Estes
Blind Boy Fuller
Son House
Peg Leg Howell
Mississippi John Hurt
Papa Charlie Jackson
Jim Jackson
Skip James
Blind Lemon Jefferson
Blind Willie Johnson
Lonnie Johnson
Robert Johnson
Tommy Johnson
Charley Jordan
Luke Jordan
Leadbelly
Furry Lewis
Cripple Clarence Lofton
Tommy McClennan
Robert Lee McCoy
Blind Willie McTell
The Memphis Jug Band
Buddy Moss
Memphis Minnie
Hambone Willie Newbern
Charley Patton
Robert Petway
Jimmie Rodgers
Frank Stokes
Sonny Terry
Henry Thomas
Ramblin Thomas
Curley Weaver
Casey Bill Weldon
Peetie Wheatstraw
Bukka White
Josh White
Robert Wilkins
Big Joe Williams

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Uploader Comments (RagtimeDorianHenry)

  • Très modernes comme musique

  • ah enfin quelqu'un qui aime le blues et qui parle français !

    oui tu as raison, pour moi le blues de Charley Patton et des autres est la base de la musique moderne .

  • j'adore cette chanson

  • moi aussi ..

    merci de tes commentaires !

see all

All Comments (17)

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  • @PeluMaad I'll have to grab that book. Read "Deep Blues" by Robert Palmer. Very interesting. I thought "Some of these days" sounded almost countryish. Kind of like Charlies song "Runnin Wild".

  • @Harmonator1000 ....blues songs tended to share common verses and much like reggae with it's "riddims", there were many variations on standard guitar arrangements but, "Some of These Days" isn't a blues. Read "Escaping the Delta" by Elijah Wald...our conception of a "blues singer" probably didn't exist until the 40s and the birth of electric bands. The degree to which the record industry segregated and categorized American music is surprising.

  • @PeluMaad Ah yes, ok. I getcha. Isn't that how most blues songs were "made"? Just heard by someone then reworked into a slightly different version?

  • @Harmonator1000 .....I'm pretty sure this is Patton's version of a popular song of the day.

  • @PeluMaad Not sure what you mean by that....

  • @PeluMaad Not sure what yo mean by that....

  • @Harmonator1000 ...the Tin Pan Alley song someone had requested.....most likely.

  • Wow, what do you suppose he was thinking of when he wrote, played and sang this song?

  • Actually a number of the old blues musicians didn't do so bad moneywise, or ladywise! The lifestyle and travel often took its toll to shorten careers and lives. Also, music for some was a part time job. Patton did OK and played varied music to please audiences well beyond basic blues. Thanks for another precious piece of culture!

  • I don't see how he got his sound so long ago. I love the great, old Blues Masters. I respect them. I'm angry that they had to live the lives that most had to live...deprivation, almost starvation, lack of recognition for their talent, and much more. Something about Charley Patton reaches down inside me, even more than regular blues does, and makes me feel that I know this man. He feels like a friend. I love him. His voice does all that. It's like he's saying "it's ok honey.' What a great artist.

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