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Crawling Kingsnake

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Download links and information about Crawling Kingsnake by David " Honeyboy " Edwards. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Blues genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 56:08 minutes.

Artist: David " Honeyboy " Edwards
Release date: 1997
Genre: Blues
Tracks: 14
Duration: 56:08
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Songswave €1.58
Buy on Songswave €1.58

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Just Like Jesse James (featuring David) 2:22
2. Sweet Home Chicago (featuring David) 3:09
3. Blues Like Showers of Rain (featuring David) 2:17
4. Long Tall Woman Blues (featuring David) 4:17
5. Love Me Over Slow (featuring David) 3:30
6. Crawling Kingsnake (featuring David) 3:25
7. Skin & Bones Blues (featuring David) 2:33
8. Bull Cow Blues (featuring David) 2:34
9. Blue & Lonesome (featuring David) 2:10
10. My Baby's Gone (featuring David) 2:38
11. Ida Lou Blues (featuring David) 2:55
12. Angel Child (featuring David) 3:16
13. Love Me Over Slow (featuring David) 2:33
14. Honeyboy Speaks With Pete Welding About Robert Johnson & Tommy Johnson (feat. Pete Welding) (featuring David) 18:29

Details

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Any fan of Delta blues should grab this reissue as fast they can get to it. These are vintage recordings, mostly from 1967, made by scholar-producer Pete Welding when Edwards was 51 years old. Edwards' itinerant lifestyle resulted in his missing many opportunities to record, so that this was only the fifth session he'd had in over 30 years in music, performing solo, with an acoustic guitar on eight of the 13 cuts here. Edwards cuts a daunting figure on the guitar, making the strings sing in several voices at once (check out the playing on "Love Me Over Slow"), and his singing is a match for his playing. The eight solo numbers, dating from 1967, feature the music he was most familiar with, including Robert Johnson's "Sweet Home Chicago" and the title track of this collection. The rest date from a March 1964 session on which Edwards shares the spotlight with singer-harpist John Lee Henley. As a bonus, the last track is an interview from his 1967 solo session in which Edwards talks about Robert Johnson and Tommy Johnson, both of whom he knew personally. The background ambient sound does nothing to detract from the worth of the music, which has a wonderful raw quality.