In 1963, graduate students and blues fans
John Fahey and
Ed Denson sent a letter addressed to
Bukka White, Old Blues Singer, c/o General Delivery, Aberdeen, MS, in an effort to locate the man who had recorded a 78 called "Aberdeen Mississippi Blues" on the OKeh label in 1940. Amazingly, the letter actually reached
White, who was still alive, having moved to Memphis. The two budding blues scholars rushed there to meet him, recording the songs found on this collection in the singer's room. These historic recordings reveal that
White's robust guitar playing and his gruff, thundering voice had lost none of their vitality in the intervening years, and the bluesman delivers impassioned versions of some of his key tunes, including "Shake 'Em on Down," and the song that led to his rediscovery, "Aberdeen Mississippi Blues."
White even takes a surprisingly nimble turn at the piano for "Drunk Man Blues." These sessions were originally released on
Fahey's Takoma label, and although
White went on to do other recording dates, most notably with Arhoolie Records in 1963, he never sounded quite this intimate and impassioned again. The only minor complaint about this reissue is that the haunting version of "When Can I Change My Clothes" included here is mislabeled "Parchman Farm Blues." ~ Steve Leggett