A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H   I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z
William Samuel McTell Biografija Muzicari/grupe Albumi Kompilacije
Datum rodjenja
May 5, 1901 in Thomson, GA
Datum smrti
Aug 19, 1959 in Milledgeville, GA
Aktivno svirao
20's, 30's, 40's, 50's.
Vrsta muzike
-Blues
Stil
-Acoustic Blues
-Country Blues
-Prewar Country Blues
-Piedmont Blues
-East Coast Blues
-Songster
Instrumenti
Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar, Harmonica, Vocals
Bio clan benda
-
Naslovna

Willie Samuel McTell was one of the blues' greatest guitarists, and also one of the finest singers ever to work in blues. A major figure with a local following in Atlanta from the 1920s onward, he recorded dozens of sides throughout the 1930s under a multitude of names — all the better to juggle "exclusive" relationships with many different record labels at once — including Blind Willie, Blind Sammie, Hot Shot Willie, and Georgia Bill, as a backup musician to Ruth Mary Willis. And those may not have been all of his pseudonyms — we don't even know what he chose to call himself, although "Blind Willie" was his preferred choice among friends. Much of what we do know about him was learned only years after his death, from family members and acquaintances. His family name was, so far as we know, McTier or McTear, and the origins of the "McTell" name are unclear. What is clear is that he was born into a family filled with musicians — his mother and his father both played guitar, as did one of his uncles, and he was also related to Georgia Tom Dorsey, who later became the Reverend Thomas Dorsey.

McTell was born in Thomson, Georgia, near Augusta, and raised near Statesboro. Willie was probably born blind, although early in his life he could perceive light in one eye. His blindness never became a major impediment, however, and it was said that his sense of hearing and touch were extraordinary. His first instruments were the harmonica and the accordion, but as soon as he was big enough he took up the guitar and showed immediate aptitude on the new instrument. He played a standard six-string acoustic until the mid-'20s, and never entirely abandoned the instrument, but from the beginning of his recording career, he used a 12-string acoustic in the studio almost exclusively. Willie's technique on the 12-string instrument was unique. Unlike virtually every other bluesman who used one, he relied not on its resonances as a rhythm instrument, but, instead, displayed a nimble, elegant slide and finger-picking style that made it sound like more than one guitar at any given moment. He studied at a number of schools for the blind, in Georgia, New York, and Michigan, during the early '20s, and probably picked up some formal musical knowledge. He worked medicine shows, carnivals, and other outdoor venues, and was a popular attraction, owing to his sheer dexterity and a nasal singing voice that could sound either pleasant or mournful, and incorporated some of the characteristics normally associated with White hillbilly singers.

Willie's recording career began in late 1927 with two sessions for Victor records, eight sides including "Statesboro Blues." McTell's earliest sides were superb examples of storytelling in music, coupled with dazzling guitar work. All of McTell's music showed extraordinary power, some of it delightfully raucous ragtime, other examples evoking darker, lonelier sides of the blues, all of it displaying astonishingly rich guitar work.

McTell worked under a variety of names, and with a multitude of partners, including his one time wife Ruthy Kate Williams (who recorded with him under the name Ruby Glaze), and also Buddy Moss and Curley Weaver. McTell cut some of his best songs more than once in his career. Like many bluesmen, he recorded under different names simultaneously, and was even signed to Columbia and Okeh Records, two companies that ended up merged at the end of the 1930s, at the same time under two names. His recording career never gave Willie quite as much success as he had hoped, partly due to the fact that some of his best work appeared during the depths of the Depression. He was uniquely popular in Atlanta, where he continued to live and work throughout most of his career, and, in fact, was the only blues guitarist of any note from the city to remain active in the city until well after World War II.

Willie was well known enough that Library of Congress archivist John Lomax felt compelled to record him in 1940, although during the war, like many other acoustic country bluesmen, his recording career came to a halt. Luckily for Willie and generations of listeners after him, however, there was a brief revival of interest in acoustic country blues after World War II that brought him back into the studio. Amazingly enough, the newly founded Atlantic Records — which was more noted for its recordings of jazz and R&B — took an interest in Willie and cut 15 songs with him in Atlanta during 1949. The one single released from these sessions, however, didn't sell, and most of those recordings remained unheard for more than 20 years after they were made. A year later, however, he was back in the studio, this time with his longtime partner Curley Weaver, cutting songs for the Regal label. None of these records sold especially well, however, and while Willie kept playing to anyone who would listen, the bitter realities of life had finally overtaken him, and he began drinking on a regular basis. He was rediscovered in 1956, just in time to get one more historic session down on tape. He left music soon after, to become a pastor of a local church, and he died of a brain hemorrhage in 1959, his passing so unnoticed at the time that certain reissues in the 1970s referred to Willie as still being alive in the 1960s.

Blind Willie McTell was one of the giants of the blues, as a guitarist and as a singer and recording artist. Hardly any of his work as passed down to us on record is less than first rate, and this makes most any collection of his music worthwhile. A studious and highly skilled musician whose skills transcended the blues, he was equally adept at ragtime, spirituals, story-songs, hillbilly numbers, and popular tunes, excelling in all of these genres. He could read and write music in braille, which gave him an edge on many of his sighted contemporaries, and was also a brilliant improvisor on the guitar, as is evident from his records. Willie always gave an excellent account of himself, even in his final years of performing and recording.

by Bruce Eder

 


Slicni muzicari / grupe Uticaj od ... Uticaj na ...
Curley Weaver
Buddy Moss
Big Bill Broonzy
Lonnie Johnson
Blind Willie Johnson
Barbecue Bob
Buddy Moss
Taj Mahal
Bo Weavil Jackson
Kelly Joe Phelps
Alvin Youngblood Hart
Eddie Mapp
The White Stripes
Harlem Slim
Tom Gray
C.W. Stoneking


 1949 Atlanta Twelve String  Atlantic
 1960 Last Session  Original Blues Classics
 1972 Blues Original, Vol. 1  Atlantic  
  Jazz Heritage: Blues in the Dark  MCA  
  Trying to Get Home  Biograph  


1931 Jailhouse Blues History  
1967 Legendary Library of Congress Session Elektra  
1968 Love Changin' Blues Biograph  
1969 Complete Library of Congress Recordings (1940) Document
  -----    
1993 Pig 'n Whistle Red Biograph
1994 The Definitive Blind Willie McTell [Columbia/Legacy] Columbia/Legacy
1995 The Complete Victor Recordings 1927-1932 Victor  
1995 Stomp Down Rider, 1927-1931 Collectables  
1995 Statesboro Blues: The Essential Recordings Indigo  
  -----    
1998 Blind Willie McTell 1927-1949 Wolf  
1999 Traveling Blues Catfish  
2001 Broke Down Engine Blues Wolf  
2001 The Essential Classic Blues  
2001 Crapshooter's Blues TKO Collectors  
2002 Definitive Blind Willie McTell [Catfish] Catfish  
2002 Experience Blues Our World
2003 King of the Blues, Vol. 7 P-Vine Japan  
2003 The Classic Years 1927-1940 JSP
2003 Statesboro Blues Blackbird
  -----    
2005 Statesboro Blues: The Early Years 1927-1935 Document