
Folk Singer is a Blues album by Muddy Waters, originally released in 1964. On Gatefold: 73 pressings tracked, owned by 20 collectors.
Sound DNA
- Blues
- Acoustic & Delta Blues
- sparse
- intimate
- storytelling
About
<i>Folk Singer</i> is like a good mystery: What’s on the page might draw you in, but it’s what <i>isn’t</i> that keeps you going. Released in 1964, <i>Folk Singer</i> marked Muddy Waters’ first all-acoustic album—an experiment, in part, in trying to market him to a broader, whiter audience. While his early music released the energy that helped form rock ’n’ roll, <i>Folk Singer</i> was subtle and restrained, an exercise in negative space. You never sense him swinging for the fences or pouring it all out. If anything, the album’s most dramatic moments are its quietest ones (“My Captain,” “Long Distance,” “Country Boy”). And even when the music picks up—“Good Morning Little Schoolgirl”—the mood has a spectral quality more redolent of country blues than of Waters’ electric strut. He says he’s after the schoolgirl—but it sounds like he’s singing to the moon. At the time he recorded <i>Folk Singer</i>, Waters was riding a wave of interest, thanks in part to artists like The Rolling Stones and Cream, who’d helped repurpose electric blues as something like pop. At the same time, promoters and record labels were trying to market artists like Waters not just as entertainers, but as stewards of a unique American tradition that, like jazz, deserved serious attention and institutional respect. The subtext here was clear: Blues was Black and low-class. But an album like <i>Folk Singer</i>, especially in the era of Bob Dylan, was a figure of cultural repute. Four years earlier, Waters’ label had gone so far as to photograph him holding an acoustic guitar for the cover of his live album <i>At Newport 1960</i>—even though he’d played an electric one at the show. <i>Folk Singer</i> not only accepted the gambit and beat the odds, but stands as one of the more singular blues albums of the post rock ’n’ roll era. Good poets know that words matter—but so do the spaces in between.
via Apple Music
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Tracklist
- 1My Home Is in the Delta4:01
- 2Long Distance3:33
- 3My Captain5:13
- 4Good Morning Little School Girl3:16
- 5You Gonna Need My Help3:13
- 6Cold Weather Blues4:43
- 7Big Leg Woman3:29
- 8Country Boy3:29
- 9Feel Like Going Home3:57
- 10The Same Thing2:45
- 11You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had2:59
- 12My John the Conqueror Root2:22
- 13Short Dress Woman2:49
- 14Put Me In Your Lay Away2:56
Credits
Performers
- Willie DixonBASS DRUMS
- Clifton JamesDRUMS
- Francis ClayDRUMS
- Buddy GuyGUITAR
- Sammy LawhornGUITAR
- Unknown ArtistGUITAR
- Otis SpannPIANO GUITAR
- Muddy WatersVOCALS GUITAR
- S.P. LearyDRUMS
- Pee Wee MadisonGUITAR
- Milton RectorBASS
- James CottonHARMONICA
- J.T. BrownTENOR SAXOPHONE CLARINET
- Clifton JonesDRUMS
20 collectors on Gatefold own this · 73 pressings tracked on Gatefold
