<< MP3 Guitar Shorty Alone in My Field
Guitar Shorty Alone in My Field
Category Sound
FormatMP3
SourceCD
SourceVinyl
Bitrate320kbit
GenreBlues
TypeAlbum
Date 1 decade, 1 year
Size 137.88 MB
 
Website http://www.amazon.com/Alone-His-Field-Guitar-Shorty/dp/B00002836D
 
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This release on Peter B. Lowry's Trix label featured the music of the Carolina bluesman and all-around character John Henry "Guitar Shorty" Fortescue.  Shorty was an absolute musical dynamo, and his music expresses as strongly as that of any Country Blues player I've heard the feeling of constantly being in the here and now, being made up on the spot.  Guitar Shorty's music illustrates particularly well the peril of confusing meter with time, when talking of a blues player's sense of rhythm and phrasing.  Metrically, Shorty's playing was quite irregular, but he was, at the same time, a supreme groover with a powerful rhythmic engine and an irresistible forward impetus in his time-keeping.  Shorty changed everything that he worked with; thus, his versions of commonly encountered blues forms are adapted on the fly as his inspiration dictated in the moment.
A major portion of what made Shorty's instrumental sound special was the tuning that he played all his music in: EAEGBE. This tuning is almost like cross-note except that the fifth string is tuned to a IV note (A) rather than a V note (B). The tuning ends up being the same as E in standard position for the first three strings, and for the fifth and sixth strings, but sets up things with the fourth string so that you have an unfretted octave for alternation between the sixth and fourth strings. Shorty used the tuning both for conventionally fretted playing and his expert slide playing. His ability to groove was varied enough that he doesn't end up sounding monotonous despite always working in the same tuning.
As distinctive as his playing was, Shorty's approach to lyrics and singing was more distinctive yet. Like Henry Townsend, he seems to have been a master at improvising blues lyrics, though Shorty on occasion took things a lot farther than that. On several of the tracks on the album, most notably "Like a Damn Fool", and "Pull Your Dress Down", Shorty launches into improvised dramatic riffing in which he switches seamlessly between two or three different characters (including female characters) while he spritzes a story that I'm thoroughly convinced he had no more insight with regard to the outcome, until he arrived there, than does the listener hearing it for the first time. "Pull Your Dress Down" in particular brings to mind some of the comic improvisations of people like Richard Pryor or Robin Williams, and I wouldn't be surprised at all if this improvisational story-telling of Shorty's was the most prized aspect of what he did by the people who knew him the best. These pieces make me glad for the LP era, for they could never have fit on a 78.
The program opens with "Easter Blues", in which Shorty has little to say, and says it at great length. It turns out he is resenting the prospect of having to work on Easter Monday, when he anticipates being hung over. "Boogie, Now" is a terrific dance number, just grooving like crazy and with Shorty's scat singing, some of the best since Popeye the Sailor. "Don't Cry, Baby" is a more moody, darker number with the unforgettable line:
Baby, don't you never, never treat me like a friend.
"Like a Damn Fool" is one of Shorty's story numbers, in this instance about encounters with ugly bears and other things. "Jesse Jones" is sensational, about a "bad little man". I've been advised that Jesse Jones is a sausage brand--did Shorty get this mixed up with Jesse James? We'll never know. "Whistling Blues" is an 8-bar "Worried Mind Blues" cover, featuring Shorty's spectacular whistling. "Near The Cross" starts as more-or-less conventional hymn but quickly moves into more characteristic Shorty progressive digressive story-telling territory. "Pull Your Dress Down" is the highlight of the story songs, featuring a female visitor with an excessively short dress and a persistent F.B.I. agent. "Working Hard" is my other favorite track, besides "Jesse Jones". Shorty's offended sense of justice in not being paid timely for his agricultural laboring comes through loud and clear. "Now Tell Me, Baby" features Shorty singing in a woman's voice and answering the woman in his own voice. The program concludes with "Shorty's Talking Boogie".
Shorty's over-all sound reminds me of an East coast version of his near-contemporary, Smoky Babe, though Shorty's lyric flights of fancy are far wilder than anything Smoky Babe did in that department. Both players were master groovers though, and fly in the face of the notion that there are no new things to be said, or new ways of saying things in the Country Blues. If you want to say something new, though, it must be conceded that having an imagination like Guitar Shorty's and being LOOSE really helps.


A1 Easter Blues
A2 Boogie, Now
A3 Don't Cry, Baby
A4 Like A Damm Fool
A5 Jessie Jones
A6 Whistling Blues
B1 Near The Cross
B2 Pull Your Dress Down
B3 Working Hard
B4 Now Tell Me, Baby
B5 Shorty's Talking Boogie

Label: Trix ‎– TRIX 3306
Format: Vinyl, LP
Country: US
Released: 1974
Genre: Blues
Style: Delta Blues

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