Create account Log in

Peetie Wheatstraw Vol. 3 1935-1936

[Edit]

Download links and information about Peetie Wheatstraw Vol. 3 1935-1936 by Peetie Wheatstraw. This album was released in 1993 and it belongs to Blues, Acoustic genres. It contains 25 tracks with total duration of 01:13:08 minutes.

Artist: Peetie Wheatstraw
Release date: 1993
Genre: Blues, Acoustic
Tracks: 25
Duration: 01:13:08
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Good Hustler Blues 3:02
2. Cocktail Man Blues 2:47
3. King Spider Blues 3:01
4. Hi-De-Ho Woman Blues 3:14
5. Sorrow Hearted Blues 3:16
6. Up the Road Blues 3:09
7. Last Dime Blues 3:14
8. King of Spades 3:03
9. Johnnie Blues 2:45
10. Santa Claus Blues 3:15
11. Lonesome Lonesome Blues 3:03
12. No Good Woman (Fighting Blues) 2:52
13. First and Last Blues 2:50
14. True Blue Woman 2:38
15. Kidnapper's Blues (C-1259) 2:44
16. Sweet Home Blues (Take 1) 2:47
17. Sweet Home Blues (Take 2) 2:47
18. Good Woman Blues 2:44
19. Working Man (Doing the Best I Can) 2:34
20. Low Down Rascal 2:54
21. When I Get My Bonus (Things Will Be Coming My Way) 2:36
22. Coon Can Shorty 2:56
23. Meat Cutter Blues 3:03
24. The First Shall Be Last and the Last Shall Be First 2:49
25. Kidnapper's Blues (60527) 3:05

Details

[Edit]

William Bunch recognized way back in the 1920s that creating a bad-ass persona would do wonders for record sales, and drawing on a shady character from black folklore, re-christened himself as Peetie Wheatstraw, claiming (long before Robert Johnson thought of it) that he had sold his soul to the devil down at the proverbial crossroads in exchange for success as a musician. And success he had, cutting upwards of 170 tracks for the ARC, Bluebird and Decca labels before his death in 1941, and at his peak in the '30s, he was the equivalent of a superstar. A down and dirty pianist and a surprisingly innovative singer (his frequent use of "oh well well" as a verbal punctuation device led to all sorts of variations by other singers), Wheatstraw was in essence the first pop outlaw, and his songs covered amazingly modern song topics like drug use (mostly alcohol), murder, suicide, unemployment, poverty, and, of course, sex, and he was a pivotal figure in the conversion of country blues to urban themes. Wheatstraw seldom varied from his chosen template, so this single-disc compilation is as fine an introduction to his work as any, and it includes key tracks like the jazz-inflected "Gangster Blues" as well as the cool cat (and ultimately ironic, given the terms of his demise) "Bring Me Flowers While I'm Living." Even Wheatstraw's tragic early death (he was 39) had "rock star cinema" written all over it, as he and his friends tried unsuccessfully to race their car through a crossing with a freight train bearing down on them, finally giving, as the legend dictates, the devil his due.