Точно!Но это вечеринка людей с интелектом и с культурой!Это не алкаши у метро выкобениваются!Тут духовность наличествует!!!Никакой похабщины!!!У меня тоска по таким людям.Спасибо за это видео,оно делает душу добрее.
I worked with Cheri at the archive that once repped these tapes, this blew my mind back then and remains one of the greatest things I've ever seen on videotape. I tried in vain to get some labels interested in releasing it but nobody ever bit, thank you so much for making it available here.
@@TJNorton Gianni Marcucci recorded the best for Albatross Records. Fat Possum tried to follow in his footsteps, but never really matched it because Gianni slept on those blues men's floors.
@@TavFalcoFilm I saw a great bluesman in Pittsburgh..singer..band with full pa system.. he walked into the crowd, no mic, belting away clear as the day is long! Billy Price! Obviously he was later in the game than the great artists you speak of.. probably early 80's. God bless him. Btw liked and subscribed!
@@StUdLySOXfan You are right. That lavalier mic was connected to an open reel tape deck, which had a big surveillance-type production camera attached. For most of that footage, that big camera was mounted on a tripod. The camera I was shooting was a Sony Portapak utilizing the internal mic - as you can see & hear, sound & picture was captured handheld.
@deaddocreallydeaddoc5244 it wasn't happening with the folks in the joint but it was happening in the west African rhythm of the music. It's a style even without participation.
And real-real lame compared to the origional Great song HONKEY TONK by Bill Dogget and his great musical artists in his band--- sax,guitar,drums, Bill on organ. That HONKEY TONK big hit in the late 50's will live on forever❗👍👌🎯 Not so much THIS ms.delta roadhouse boogie verson of honkey tonk--- oh it's good boogie, just not the same level as Bill Dogget's great verson❗😖 🤚👳♂️
White people went to Honky Tonks (hence the name), black people went to juke joints or juke houses. We had one in my hometown, Farrell, Mississippi, about 8 miles west of Clarksdale, called the Wagon Wheel. Robert Nighthawk, Elmore James, Sonny Boy and Little Walter all played there. When I was a little white boy, I used to go up there and peek in the window. It looked a lot like this - nothing fancy. When I was in my late teens up until I was in my 30s, I used to hang out in juke joints around Clarksdale. What few there are in Mississippi now are all tourist traps, sanitized for your protection. Back in the 50-60s a lot of the patrons carried guns. It was pretty rough. I knew several people who were shot or stabbed in them. Great film. Pretty raw alright. Not sanitized…💙
Nothing sanitary about The Brotherhood Sportsmen's Club. Outside of Bobby Rae Watson & Kenny Brown, who were hardly honkies, few white folks tipped into this tonk. We also called it a juke joint. You're right though, hillbillies spoke of their joints as honky tonks - some stylish music in those, too.
@@TavFalcoFilm I'm concerned about the sister the camera zoomed in on @ 13:05. She looks so sad for being in such a happening place! She looks like somebody stole her man, stepped on her foot, kicked her dog, and talked trash about her momma. Girl, listen to the advice of Kool and the Gang: "… How you gonna do it if you really don't wanna dance By standing on the wall? (Get your back up off the wall) tell me, baby How you gonna do it if you really won't take a chance By standing on the wall?"😃 The woman shown at 14:00 is gorgeous and having a great time, though! I love her blouse with ruffled collar and sleeves and her perfectly coiffed hair. That blouse she's wearing would still look elegant and stylish today.
@@TavFalcoFilm That is beautiful! And so very true. I'm so much of a wallflower that I'm actually a hermit who only goes to town once a month. Indeed, the Blues and other great music is a comfort to me. My mother was born in 1920, and she loved jazz and swing music from the 30s and 40s. Now that I can look up music I remember her singing, I've discovered that she was a huge Louis Jordan fan, because she knew and sang his music. Now that I can hear the original LJ and his Tympany Five, I'm a big fan too! IMO, his very funny song, "Saturday Night Fish Fry" is very early Hip Hop!
I loved Canned Heat's take on Delta Blues, because their sincerity and love for the music was obvious. I never did like Eric Clapton though, not him as a person or his boring music. Yeah, he plays guitar very well, but I never thought he FELT this music in his soul the way it's intended. He just heard music he could steal to make money from. Maybe I dislike him because he broke up George Harrison's marriage, and then after he stole George's wife, he got tired of her and dumped her.😉 Clapton just always seemed disingenuous to me. IMO, he ruined "Crossroads" by overdoing the electric guitars and making it into a jangly mess that ruined the true spirit of the song. The song should be "haunt-y", not jaunty. Eric Clapton's version (with Cream) of "I'm So Glad" is so cringey that I hated the song, until I heard the 1931 original by the man who wrote it, Skip James. At least the band Cream paid Skip James royalties for stinking up his great song, but I think James was the better guitar picker, and vocalist. Canned Heat understood, and they kept that spooky kind of swamp-voodoo spirit simplicity of the blues songs, with the harmonica, falsetto voice, and rhythm guitar.
White people went to honky tonks, hence the name. Black people went to juke joints or juke houses. Take it from someone raised in the Mississippi Delta in the 1950-60s. What few juke houses in Mississippi (now) are sanitized for your protection - tourist attractions.
One of the coolest adventures to understand real diversity. I grew up on Hank Williams, Fats Domino, and anything else with a solid groove. As a result, Not only do I play in this genre, but many others as well. This is the very base of most American Music. And more than A Lot came from Mississippi and the rest of the delta area. I have many relatives down that way. It's in the Soul.
Watch how the people respond to the guitar. This video tells you all you need to know about why and what blues guitar is. This video tells you all you need to know about where music itself comes from.
@@TavFalcoFilm Pretty much all music came from that. It's with the country Blues that you can see humans stripped back down to their bare essentials, creating music from scratch again.
I lived in Oxford, MS, and got to see RL live one time, early 90s, in a small club. Got to see fellow North Mississippi blues guitarist Jr. Kimbrough in his club (where RL played regularly too) in Holly Springs, and the atmosphere was much like this. Throw in a bass and drums but not much more space and you have the idea. One of the best nights of my life, to see and feel and HEAR the power of this music, these people. This is one of the poorest counties in the country, and I drove up from Oxford with my two also very white friends, my Gf and her friend, and lo and behold we all forgot to bring money. I had left my wallet behind, too late to turn back. We counted the little bit we had, including dimes and nickels, and made a little over 5 bucks. Which was 5 cold Busch beers. After those 5, we were counting our dimes to see if we could make another beer, but alas, no. There were pool tables on the side, and I saw a man, much like one of the people in this video, motion me over. I went over and he asked what I was doing. I told him the story, that we were counting our money to see if we could make another beer, and he gave me a 5 and told me to have fun. I will nver forget that as long as I live.
Kind, wonderful who love & support their music and who show love to those who celebrate their music and their way of life. This is the noble side of America.
What’s amazing to me is people back then had so little, all they needed was a guitar and a voice and maybe a little moonshine, rot gut, bath tub gin, grandpa’s hooch or a simple beer to dance and have a good time. Now they need an entire spectacle of singers, dancers, drill team routine, pyrotechnics, pre - recorded music with pitch correction, pharmaceutical drugs etc… people listen with their eyes now instead of with their ears, heart and soul. It make me sad… and at the same time it makes me happy that I’m not one of those people
You can hear Mississippi Fred's influence on RL. Most don't know that McDowell would take a young RL Burnside to play with him at fish fries n house parties. So that timeline puts it about 1942 ish.
Никакая не транс!Она наоборот выводит из танса!Для каждого порядочного человека,с менталитетом ,с душой это не транс!!!Я бы даже сказала:это ,в соём роде,Скрябин!Спасибо за Доброе утро!
This is Real Music that has Soul. I have a 65 Harmony similar to one shown, and I keep telling my 29 year old Son that it is capable of amazing Tone in right hands.
This is just a treasure to have, music at its basic roots. I've seen this many times and keep watching from the music to the crowd, this is just special.
Even though I was 5 years old in 1974, I remember eras like this. Some people who had a shack or a building on their property, they would call it a (Hold In The Wall) where they will party , sell food and have a great time without any violence 🌹👏🖤🤎✊
Top film. Excellent footage and sound. RL Burnside is one o the happiest folk Av ever seen. What a guy. Really good video brother. Thank you for that ❤
Faut bien s'amuser , très bon documentaire . Le vrai blues du Mississippi Queen . Les Rollings stones avaient compris , l' inspiration vient de là . Pour bien jouer de la guitare 🎸 c'est le bon endroit . Voilà l'endroit idéal le blues du delta . Beaucoup de musiciens noirs célèbres , ont appris se rythme saccadé . Une danse entraînante simple .❤❤❤❤I GOT Blues Very Version Good 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤
Absolute trance - just briiliant! - i sometimes imagine what incredible music would have been made if RL and the Desert blues group Tinariwen were in the same room - or juke joint! 🎸
Lots of good guitarists, lots of good singers, but not THAT MANY great (unique) players and amazing vocalists all in one... i dig his music but his singing/timing is where he shines the most (in my opinion)
@@TavFalcoFilm But he was driving cabs, and was on welfare until Fat Possum got him into the public eye. Shame it took so long for him to get a decent income for his performances.
He lit up a room! And had a warm smile just discovered him. A new influence now & inspiration. Wonder what in the world he thought of Jimi -sometimes l hear a tinge of Hendrix.. - but in his vocals!
I had tears of joy in my eyes, when i saw this video for the first time. I have no words to tell how wonderful this is! It's so raw, authentic, hypnotic, ecstatic, erotic ... Thank you for this video!!
Wow I feel like I am there, that's how great this guy was. And the people are just having so much fun. I would do anything to go back in time and just be there.
@@mwpalmgmailcom Most of what you see here - esp., the handheld material was recorded by me. The edits were also made by me. This is the result of a mission by the art-action video group I co-founded with Randall Lyon - TeleVista Projects, Memphis.
When I was a teenager. All the places to eat were closed. The driver said I know where? When we got to our destination. It was place like this. It was the first time I put hot sauce on my chicken. Oh the days of misspent youth is what a night that was.
R.L Burnside is one of the GREATEST, look up more of his music with accompaniment. ALSO one of his sons is in North Mississippi All Stars where this and more music is made ATOMIC.
This is the most magical thing I’ve ever seen and heard. This is my first time hearing of RL Burnside and now I’m hooked! This is the kind of artist D’Angelo is to me.
Vic the Book used to love to listen to R.L. Burnside sing See My Jumper Hanging On the Line while hauling a big load of Cowhide's "cawn lick-her whisk-key" down Highway 7 in his Toyota Supra from Dennis to Oxford to resell to the kiddies at Ole Miss after Vic laced it with a special blend of psilocybin mushroom grown and harvested out in the Holly Spring National Forest in Marshall and Lafayette Counties.
"Saturday Night" dans un 'Honky Tonk' du centre-nord du Mississippi, appelé « Brotherhood Sportsmen's Lodge ». Nous entendons là le blues exposé sous sa forme la plus insaisissable. Le joueur de Hill country Blues rural, R.L. Burnside et ses amis définissent ici clairement le rôle du honky tonk dans la vie rurale noire. [Como, Mississippi - 28 septembre 1974]
Oh Wow !! What an incredible video !! I remember ive seen a fragment of this video long time ago, it was just a little piece of footage, now its the first time i see this long video of the same gig, im a huge fan of Hill Country Blues and the music of RL Burnside and Junior Kimbrough, etc. Thank you for share !! Cheers from South América - Bolivia !!
Me too. Once i found the North Mississippi and deep Delta one chord blues i was addicted. There's a lot of North African / Saharan 'blues' that has the same rhythms and hypnotic vibe. Since moving from the UK to the USA i've had the chance to meet Cedric Burnside, who is a really nice guy.
One man with one guitar. That was a party.
Naked soul.
@@TavFalcoFilm 4 Realz! Amen!
Jeebus Xmas. Is his soul for sale like Charles Bradley?
@TavFalcoFilm Hey buddy. Good luck with your project. Let me know how it goes. I'm excited to see th end result. Be well.
And one chord lmao
This made my mother freakin day
This to me is priceless
Yes, some things money can't buy, motherelm.
JUST CLARIFY ABOUT LOU ANN SHELLY BEHIND 007 WHAT YA MEAN
Love that blues dancing. Many decades before anything was "standardized". Proves that it's as old as the hills.
Old as the hills and deeper than the swamps.
The Mississippi hill blues will put you in a trance!!!
Totally tranced-out since I heard 1st note of it.
@@TavFalcoFilm Reminds me of the album called Trance that Reebop Kwaku Baah recorded with the Ganoua tribe.
@@geoffreypiltz271 I can only imagine.
I'm still tranced out.
One of Mississippi Hill Blues' main nicknames is "the hypnotic boogie" - google it, it's true.
Guitar, amp, vocals. No mics, no PA, no stage, no system nothing. A house party just the way it's s'posed to be.
Use what you got at hand. Best policy.
Точно!Но это вечеринка людей с интелектом и с культурой!Это не алкаши у метро выкобениваются!Тут духовность наличествует!!!Никакой похабщины!!!У меня тоска по таким людям.Спасибо за это видео,оно делает душу добрее.
@MrMaxcypher Yea Man!
@@TavFalcoFilm Anything makes a noise.
Harness this thought, and you will be making music.
@@NoWayOut55 I prefer noise.
I worked with Cheri at the archive that once repped these tapes, this blew my mind back then and remains one of the greatest things I've ever seen on videotape. I tried in vain to get some labels interested in releasing it but nobody ever bit, thank you so much for making it available here.
@@thepollies I'm out of that loop now, that's up to Tav -- thanks for offering....
Fat Possum recorded the remaining North Mississippi blues players. Check their website.
Cool!
@@TJNorton Gianni Marcucci recorded the best for Albatross Records. Fat Possum tried to follow in his footsteps, but never really matched it because Gianni slept on those blues men's floors.
@@TavFalcoFilm Cool, thanks for the info. Do you have a link to Albatros Records?
Not even a microphone, dude just singin out. How beautiful.
This man did not need a microphone. Neither did Bessie Smith.
@@TavFalcoFilm I saw a great bluesman in Pittsburgh..singer..band with full pa system.. he walked into the crowd, no mic, belting away clear as the day is long! Billy Price! Obviously he was later in the game than the great artists you speak of.. probably early 80's. God bless him. Btw liked and subscribed!
@@cthulholmhastur5317 Thanks for sharing this. I can only admire those born with golden pipes.
I am pretty sure he has a mic clipped to his shirt
@@StUdLySOXfan You are right. That lavalier mic was connected to an open reel tape deck, which had a big surveillance-type production camera attached. For most of that footage, that big camera was mounted on a tripod. The camera I was shooting was a Sony Portapak utilizing the internal mic - as you can see & hear, sound & picture was captured handheld.
Damn, Mr. Burnside was the grooviest guitarist ever! Shit had me in a trance.
He was a conjurer.
Check out Junior Kimbrough🔥🔥🔥😵💫🔥🔥🔥
The real. Real folk. Real ancient rhythm roots call and response blues. Real juke. Real south. Real soul.
I don't hear any call and response going on, but yeah, genuine. RL Burnside was the real deal.
@deaddocreallydeaddoc5244 it wasn't happening with the folks in the joint but it was happening in the west African rhythm of the music. It's a style even without participation.
And real-real lame compared to the origional
Great song HONKEY TONK
by Bill Dogget and his great musical artists in his band--- sax,guitar,drums,
Bill on organ. That HONKEY TONK big hit in the late 50's will live on forever❗👍👌🎯
Not so much THIS ms.delta roadhouse boogie verson of honkey tonk--- oh it's good boogie, just not the same level as Bill Dogget's great verson❗😖 🤚👳♂️
Yes!!!!
Juke joint ramble.
White people went to Honky Tonks (hence the name), black people went to juke joints or juke houses. We had one in my hometown, Farrell, Mississippi, about 8 miles west of Clarksdale, called the Wagon Wheel. Robert Nighthawk, Elmore James, Sonny Boy and Little Walter all played there. When I was a little white boy, I used to go up there and peek in the window. It looked a lot like this - nothing fancy. When I was in my late teens up until I was in my 30s, I used to hang out in juke joints around Clarksdale. What few there are in Mississippi now are all tourist traps, sanitized for your protection. Back in the 50-60s a lot of the patrons carried guns. It was pretty rough. I knew several people who were shot or stabbed in them. Great film. Pretty raw alright. Not sanitized…💙
Nothing sanitary about The Brotherhood Sportsmen's Club. Outside of Bobby Rae Watson & Kenny Brown, who were hardly honkies, few white folks tipped into this tonk. We also called it a juke joint. You're right though, hillbillies spoke of their joints as honky tonks - some stylish music in those, too.
@@TavFalcoFilmThere is nothing like American music.
@@matthewatwood8641 Unique, yet a mixture of many ingredients & influences.
@@TavFalcoFilm yes, and free-spirited, restless, and wild
Definitely some honking going on! And people let it go and groove, not afraid to move
this is what we call an "intimate setting"--- singer in the middle of his audience, all together in one room. all one vibe and one shared experience.
Living room set.
Yup.. different times
@@chrishumphries1516 Very.
So cool, so much groove, so much alcohol, so much fun, so much polyester dancing clothes!
High fashion, but only Schlitz beer & back room action with the girls.
Lots of hep cats having a good ol'time ~
@@TavFalcoFilm I'm concerned about the sister the camera zoomed in on @ 13:05. She looks so sad for being in such a happening place! She looks like somebody stole her man, stepped on her foot, kicked her dog, and talked trash about her momma.
Girl, listen to the advice of Kool and the Gang:
"… How you gonna do it if you really don't wanna dance
By standing on the wall?
(Get your back up off the wall) tell me, baby
How you gonna do it if you really won't take a chance
By standing on the wall?"😃
The woman shown at 14:00 is gorgeous and having a great time, though! I love her blouse with ruffled collar and sleeves and her perfectly coiffed hair. That blouse she's wearing would still look elegant and stylish today.
@@LazyIRanch The bules comfort the wall flower while giving agency to the stylish.
@@TavFalcoFilm That is beautiful! And so very true. I'm so much of a wallflower that I'm actually a hermit who only goes to town once a month.
Indeed, the Blues and other great music is a comfort to me. My mother was born in 1920, and she loved jazz and swing music from the 30s and 40s. Now that I can look up music I remember her singing, I've discovered that she was a huge Louis Jordan fan, because she knew and sang his music. Now that I can hear the original LJ and his Tympany Five, I'm a big fan too! IMO, his very funny song, "Saturday Night Fish Fry" is very early Hip Hop!
This is fantastic, one electric guitar, no stage, playing on the flor and everybody happy… I can feel where Canned Heat found the inspiration
Vestine was a fan.
Bob Hite used to travel around Mississippi to places like this. Sometimes he’d buy records from the jukeboxes. His brother, Richard, told me this.
Yes Canned Heat inspired by this wonderful music 🤜🏾👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Absolutely love love this doc 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
I loved Canned Heat's take on Delta Blues, because their sincerity and love for the music was obvious.
I never did like Eric Clapton though, not him as a person or his boring music. Yeah, he plays guitar very well, but I never thought he FELT this music in his soul the way it's intended. He just heard music he could steal to make money from.
Maybe I dislike him because he broke up George Harrison's marriage, and then after he stole George's wife, he got tired of her and dumped her.😉
Clapton just always seemed disingenuous to me. IMO, he ruined "Crossroads" by overdoing the electric guitars and making it into a jangly mess that ruined the true spirit of the song. The song should be "haunt-y", not jaunty.
Eric Clapton's version (with Cream) of "I'm So Glad" is so cringey that I hated the song, until I heard the 1931 original by the man who wrote it, Skip James. At least the band Cream paid Skip James royalties for stinking up his great song, but I think James was the better guitar picker, and vocalist.
Canned Heat understood, and they kept that spooky kind of swamp-voodoo spirit simplicity of the blues songs, with the harmonica, falsetto voice, and rhythm guitar.
Whoever filmed and recorded this was brilliant for documenting. This…is real as it gets, stripped down to nothing. Fantastic.
Only the essentials. I filmed what the lens was seeing - nothing more.
Thank you for watching.
Burnside!
True raw live one man band R.L Burnside what an act. He still get the people a jivin ' .
Thank you, from those of us who never made it to a jukejoint!
Now you known...
White people went to honky tonks, hence the name. Black people went to juke joints or juke houses. Take it from someone raised in the Mississippi Delta in the 1950-60s. What few juke houses in Mississippi (now) are sanitized for your protection - tourist attractions.
I’m sorry…💙
One of the coolest adventures to understand real diversity.
I grew up on Hank Williams, Fats Domino, and anything else with a solid groove.
As a result, Not only do I play in this genre, but many others as well.
This is the very base of most American Music.
And more than A Lot came from Mississippi and the rest of the delta area.
I have many relatives down that way.
It's in the Soul.
We still have a few honky tonks left in Austin tx but they’ll be gone at some point. Take advantage while you can.
Watch how the people respond to the guitar. This video tells you all you need to know about why and what blues guitar is. This video tells you all you need to know about where music itself comes from.
The Blues come from where the sun don't shine.
@@TavFalcoFilm Pretty much all music came from that. It's with the country Blues that you can see humans stripped back down to their bare essentials, creating music from scratch again.
Amazing, those riffs will put you in a trance
Still tranced out from that night.
OWN GANNET SOOOO WHAT YOU GONNA DO NOW
I lived in Oxford, MS, and got to see RL live one time, early 90s, in a small club. Got to see fellow North Mississippi blues guitarist Jr. Kimbrough in his club (where RL played regularly too) in Holly Springs, and the atmosphere was much like this. Throw in a bass and drums but not much more space and you have the idea. One of the best nights of my life, to see and feel and HEAR the power of this music, these people. This is one of the poorest counties in the country, and I drove up from Oxford with my two also very white friends, my Gf and her friend, and lo and behold we all forgot to bring money. I had left my wallet behind, too late to turn back. We counted the little bit we had, including dimes and nickels, and made a little over 5 bucks. Which was 5 cold Busch beers. After those 5, we were counting our dimes to see if we could make another beer, but alas, no. There were pool tables on the side, and I saw a man, much like one of the people in this video, motion me over. I went over and he asked what I was doing. I told him the story, that we were counting our money to see if we could make another beer, and he gave me a 5 and told me to have fun. I will nver forget that as long as I live.
Kind, wonderful who love & support their music and who show love to those who celebrate their music and their way of life. This is the noble side of America.
I have been listening to RL for a long time. This is the real deal. Not for the trendy "fake rockers".
Nobody faking in that room.
What’s amazing to me is people back then had so little, all they needed was a guitar and a voice and maybe a little moonshine, rot gut, bath tub gin, grandpa’s hooch or a simple beer to dance and have a good time. Now they need an entire spectacle of singers, dancers, drill team routine, pyrotechnics, pre - recorded music with pitch correction, pharmaceutical drugs etc… people listen with their eyes now instead of with their ears, heart and soul. It make me sad… and at the same time it makes me happy that I’m not one of those people
You are one of us. Overkill is mere sensation. Nothing about country blues is sensational - it's all about trance.
this is golden footage
Golden tones & golden voices.
@@TavFalcoFilmМенталитет у них золотой!Люблю их!
@@Виола-в7й Самые свободные и легкие ритмы американской музыки для веселья!
Gotdamn! That's as pure as it gets there. That was a REAL party. AMEN!
HEY DON'T CUSS THE SENATE'S ISSUE WITH STENNIS' NOBE
MUSIC IS GREAT AND LOVED BY MANY NOT THEIR PROB
Sorry now. What? Steniss's Nobe? Be specific. I try to ignore politics.
Thanks for watching. There is a purity of expression here, but watch your language. Ladies are present.
What a wonderful document of a time gone by. Real music.
Only yesterday in the grand scheme of things.
Love how the groove will sag a little then Speeds😂 up reminds me a little of the ocean tide..
Oceanic is the word !
1974….everyone looks slim….
Slim & trim from dancing & hunching.
They smoked three packs a day
right. y'all know these folks worked hard every single day, no business sittin bein lazy
@@feed-kitty Burnside himself had just come in from a week of working in the fields driving a tractor.
@@Pete-z6e 🤔 Yes they do.. and 74 is even sort of _pre yayo_ days. Hehehe. At least compared to what it would soon become.
You can hear Mississippi Fred's influence on RL. Most don't know that McDowell would take a young RL Burnside to play with him at fish fries n house parties. So that timeline puts it about 1942 ish.
Where did you read this about Fred mentoring R.L. ?Makes sense as they both lived and worked around, Como MS.
Thanks for the background article.
I’ve experienced a good bit but it doesn’t come any more real than this.
Thank you for your documenting!
Really the blues.
Looks like heaven to me... 🎸
Kinda was. 😯
Reminds me so much of the trance music from Africa. Just wonderful.
Can’t wait to see Cedric in a couple of weeks!!
@@christinefisher1438 Yeah, that's a good African name, LOL!
Me too! Radio Mali and Ali Farka Toure❤❤
Same, same essentially. Especially in Tate & Panola counties.
Никакая не транс!Она наоборот выводит из танса!Для каждого порядочного человека,с менталитетом ,с душой это не транс!!!Я бы даже сказала:это ,в соём роде,Скрябин!Спасибо за Доброе утро!
This is Real Music that has Soul. I have a 65 Harmony similar to one shown, and I keep telling my 29 year old Son that it is capable of amazing Tone in right hands.
Truth all around!
I have my dads 1960 Harmony Dreadnaught, it was never a great guitar but it has mileage.
Con solo una guitarra y su voz se armo el fieston, un ritmo contagioso y hermoso 💓
One guitar is all you need to have a party!
I can listen to RL Burnside grooving on Goin Down South all day long!!! Thank you for uploading this great footage. Man! this is so good!!
Anything RL touched was totally hypnotic.
This is just a treasure to have, music at its basic roots. I've seen this many times and keep watching from the music to the crowd, this is just special.
If RL was there with his guitar, nobody ever asked for more.
Priceless....simply wonderful.
It's all about the Brotherhood.
Here in North Mississippi this still rings true.....
This is from heaven. Thank you.
Blues in the hills, whoops in the hollows.
Second generation Mississippi bluesman in the juke, absolute legend. A rare window into the real Delta blues culture. What a smoking upload!
Even though I was 5 years old in 1974, I remember eras like this. Some people who had a shack or a building on their property, they would call it a (Hold In The Wall) where they will party , sell food and have a great time without any violence 🌹👏🖤🤎✊
House party.
I just watched four major rock concerts from the 60s 70s on TH-cam and this is by far better music than any of them !
At this point, my sensibilities are fried with rock.
The greatest player/singer I'd never heard of.
The missing piece.
RL is the missing link !!
I'm a Burnside from Mississippi! I'm really going to have to look up the Ancestry site.
Research your distinguished lineage.
@@havefaith4358 From the little I know, Burnside is an old family name.
Probably given by the plantation owner.
@@NoWayOut55 Oh, I'm sure of that. It's just that my mom is originally from Mississippi, then they moved to Memphis.
Top film. Excellent footage and sound. RL Burnside is one o the happiest folk Av ever seen. What a guy. Really good video brother. Thank you for that ❤
Your appreciation of RL is why this piece was made.
they don't mess around ... into it
Faut bien s'amuser , très bon documentaire . Le vrai blues du Mississippi Queen . Les Rollings stones avaient compris , l' inspiration vient de là . Pour bien jouer de la guitare 🎸 c'est le bon endroit . Voilà l'endroit idéal le blues du delta . Beaucoup de musiciens noirs célèbres , ont appris se rythme saccadé . Une danse entraînante simple .❤❤❤❤I GOT Blues Very Version Good 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤
C'est vrai. Une dance hypnotique.
Absolute trance - just briiliant! - i sometimes imagine what incredible music would have been made if RL and the Desert blues group Tinariwen were in the same room - or juke joint! 🎸
What an amazing roomful of blues - RL & Tinariwen !
Lots of good guitarists, lots of good singers, but not THAT MANY great (unique) players and amazing vocalists all in one... i dig his music but his singing/timing is where he shines the most (in my opinion)
True, RL was among the best singer/guitarists.
Doesn't get any better than this
i used to go to a small bar and dance to this type of music.. things change,gone now, but sweet memories. the women very friendly.. 1995..
Because you danced, the hearts of those women opened. Not gone, something of the soul of those women and their barroom society endures within you.
I love this so much. Thank you for sharing ❤
My pleasure.
When I lived in Austin RL was big on the alternative video channel and his music was on the radio all the time. This around 2008, I think. Awesome
Yes, there was huge appreciation of him.
@@TavFalcoFilm But he was driving cabs, and was on welfare until Fat Possum got him into the public eye. Shame it took so long for him to get a decent income for his performances.
Hard day's work. Warm nights. Gotta head on down there to let loose and boogie.
THAT's the credo!
This is the core of great live music: stripped back ,raw, danceable rhythm, and an audience that feeds the vibe right back to the musician.
Total throw-down immersive.
so wish i was there ...
Wish you were, too.
Gives me the chills! I love the whole atmosphere!
this becomes my new Gold Standard. So Cool!
Golden throated & silver stringed!
Dam man. This brother Burnside putten me through the roof!
Prepare for the duration spent on the rooftops!
We gone all ways fix our lips a certain way and raise our arms and pop our fingers. that's how you know the groove is groovin.
Finger poppin' daddies.
Pure....real... original....no sound special effects needi....wow....
Truth is stranger than fiction.
Wowwwwww, fantastic!!!!
What a Guitar!!!!!!
His Taiwanese guitars had a tone like no others.
North Mississippi Hill Country Blues ❤❤❤
More lyrical than Delta Blues.
That was "Fucking Kool!" R.L in his true element. Nitty fucking gritty!
An elemental artist in his own element.
Brilliant this, it don't get better
Thanks for watching.
He lit up a room! And had a
warm smile just discovered
him. A new influence now &
inspiration. Wonder what in
the world he thought of Jimi
-sometimes l hear a tinge of
Hendrix.. - but in his vocals!
RL had true charisma esp. during his sharecropper days. Good question re: Jimi, whose own music was essentially blues.
the blues in it's purest form
Purely rarified.
Old white woman here, thank you for this video. Looks like a good time❤
It was a hoot ! Wish you were there.
I had tears of joy in my eyes, when i saw this video for the first time. I have no words to tell how wonderful this is! It's so raw, authentic, hypnotic, ecstatic, erotic ... Thank you for this video!!
Anytime, TK. It was also quite moving to capture these heightened moments.
@@TavFalcoFilm How's your doc coming along?
Making a movie - not a doc. All done as of last week. www.uraniadescending-themovie.com/
@@joshuadowling8778
Salt of the world over will feel this...beautiful
World Boogie !
i saw burnside at buddy guy's legends back in the 90s and was blown away by his music. much respect to you for showing this.
Saw Buddy Guy twice on stage with Junior Wells. Glad to hear RL was supported by Mr. Guy.
Tav Falco, i thank you for showing me this historical event.
Thank you for watching.
Wow I feel like I am there, that's how great this guy was. And the people are just having so much fun. I would do anything to go back in time and just be there.
It was truly a rarified all nighter.
Memento mori - there is no going back.
Now dat’s a party!
Sure enuf!
Holy Moly, this man is a one man rave
There was a 2nd guitarist at some points & sing-alongs.
Just amazing. Any viewers by chance there, that night??
Me. I was behind the camera.
I'm Houston. Sadly, the pandemic killed the last of the old school juke joints.
Real pity. Disease is a hard act to follow.
this is one of the most amazing things I've ever seen, made my year.
Amazing to capture it as well.
@@TavFalcoFilm @tav did you record this?? regardless, thank you for the film.
@@mwpalmgmailcom Most of what you see here - esp., the handheld material was recorded by me. The edits were also made by me. This is the result of a mission by the art-action video group I co-founded with Randall Lyon - TeleVista Projects, Memphis.
There’s such great value in the fact someone recorded this. We should all be grateful!
It was a long, yet cosmic night.
@@TavFalcoFilmthis is ,....'tttttt, ....IT,.......
@@EikeMariaHochmuth-jz9gw Wicked.
Fantastic, the world is full of great wonder and we are all blessed to be able to see this masterpiece. Thank you so much for sharing this!
This was a wonderous happening.
Lawd! If this ain't the get down than nothing is.
Power of the Juke!
I have never seen an atmosphere like this one, it's amazing
Unique to the territory.
🙌 Teleport me to that Juke. It's about the trance.
Deep trance hoodoo.
I see where rock n roll got its rock n roll from💪🏾
Where R&R should go back.
"The blues had a baby and they named it rock'n'roll". It's true.
@@olaclaesson8074the blues had a lot of babies😊
@@rickmerritt128 For sure. Was just quoting Muddy Waters there.
wonderful !!! Let's Boogie !!!
Thank you for sharing this!
Thanks for watching.
When I was a teenager. All the places to eat were closed. The driver said I know where? When we got to our destination. It was place like this. It was the first time I put hot sauce on my chicken. Oh the days of misspent youth is what a night that was.
Night ride!
It was meant to be.
Gosh I wish I did parties like this!
Standing behind him is Mr. Burnside’s wife. I’ve seen her in other videos as well. Pretty gal!
Yes, Alice Mae.
Love those African vibes; RL Burnside will live for ever;
Immortal soul.
Yes ❤❤
@@Auntkekebaby 😍
This is to me when America was great
Amerika was still hanging on at this point.
R.L Burnside is one of the GREATEST, look up more of his music with accompaniment. ALSO one of his sons is in North Mississippi All Stars where this and more music is made ATOMIC.
Atomic rampage.
Many thanks Gustavo. This is a real burning panther!
Panther, panther burning bright, in the forest of the night.
What a damned Jerk dance party ! The kind you'd like to be in ! 💅🏻
Door was open to everyone.
Absolutely brilliant. Love RL
Original blues sounds.😊😊😊😊❤❤❤
Out of a tradition, but original in style.
This is the most magical thing I’ve ever seen and heard. This is my first time hearing of RL Burnside and now I’m hooked! This is the kind of artist D’Angelo is to me.
The music on D'Angelo's album, Voodoo, is also melodically & rhythmically mesmerizing. In that regard, not unlike the secular dance music of RL.
Vic the Book used to love to listen to R.L. Burnside sing See My Jumper Hanging On the Line while hauling a big load of Cowhide's "cawn lick-her whisk-key" down Highway 7 in his Toyota Supra from Dennis to Oxford to resell to the kiddies at Ole Miss after Vic laced it with a special blend of psilocybin mushroom grown and harvested out in the Holly Spring National Forest in Marshall and Lafayette Counties.
RL inspired quite a trippy concoction for the progeny of Ole Miss.
WOW! Great little story...thought those Ole Miss kids were supposed to be well behaved? 🙃
@@xaspirate8060 They like to party. So ole Vic and Todd the Toller accommodated their needs.
This is some of the rawest shit ive ever seen online. Thank you for putting this on youtube.
Bruh!!!! I'm melting.💪🏾🎸
Tear ass.
Glad you got into it, but watch your language. There are ladies present,
-Maan this is some raw Rockin' Blues! I can rock, groove & move with some sexy azz women to this sh!t!!!
Precisely the intention of this music.
Nice one Tav. I saw RL Burnside a few times down here in Australia in the late 90s and he left an indelible memory.
RL was a snake charmer.
"Saturday Night" dans un 'Honky Tonk' du centre-nord du Mississippi, appelé « Brotherhood Sportsmen's Lodge ». Nous entendons là le blues exposé sous sa forme la plus insaisissable. Le joueur de Hill country Blues rural, R.L. Burnside et ses amis définissent ici clairement le rôle du honky tonk dans la vie rurale noire. [Como, Mississippi - 28 septembre 1974]
C'est vrai.
This is the original Rave...
Backwoods style.
Fabulous!
It was a glorious night.
Oh Wow !! What an incredible video !! I remember ive seen a fragment of this video long time ago, it was just a little piece of footage, now its the first time i see this long video of the same gig, im a huge fan of Hill Country Blues and the music of RL Burnside and Junior Kimbrough, etc. Thank you for share !! Cheers from South América - Bolivia !!
Me too. Once i found the North Mississippi and deep Delta one chord blues i was addicted. There's a lot of North African / Saharan 'blues' that has the same rhythms and hypnotic vibe. Since moving from the UK to the USA i've had the chance to meet Cedric Burnside, who is a really nice guy.
@@TJNorton Wow ! Thats awesome !
Da nada. Nothing but trance music - really the blues.