Hear Me Howling! Book and 4 CD set – Various Artists
$44.95
Blues Ballads and Beyond as recorded by the San Francisco Bay by Chris Strachwitz in the 1960s
4 CDs with a 136 page 8 1/2 x 11″ full color hardcover book
Over 4 hours and 40 minutes of music
72 tracks including 38 previously unissued
Over 150 photographs
Text by Adam Machado
In stock
Description
CD 518 A-D
Grammy Winner for
Best Album Notes — Adam Machado
Special Grammy Winning Sale $ 44.95
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Hear Me Howling!
Blues Ballads and Beyond as recorded by the San Francisco Bay by Chris Strachwitz in the 1960s
4 CDs with a 136 page 8 1/2 x 11″ full color hardcover book
Over 4 hours and 40 minutes of music
72 tracks including 38 previously unissued
Over 150 photographs
Text by Adam Machado
Also available “Hear Me Howling” Limited Edition Art Print – Each print is signed and numbered by Chris Strachwitz Hear Me Howling author Adam Machado and artist John Seabury. The print is silkscreened with silver metallic ink on high quality 16″ x 22″ print paper. Less than 50 left. |
Here’s what they’re saying about Hear Me Howling!:
“Long time coming. The most exciting documentation of this great music in the last 25 years. And not only will you be able to read and see you’ll be able to hear and see too. Enjoy!!!”
— Taj Mahal
“Chris Strachwitz’s living room in the Berkeley hills was one of the secret centers of the world in the ‘60s and “Hear Me Howlin’” opens the dusty closet of tapes he collected in those years – a rare view from inside of one of the cultural command posts of a changing society. ”
— Joel Selvin Senior Pop Music Correspondent San Francisco Chronicle
This collection is an evocative historical review of the 1960s San Francisco bay area music scene as heard and recorded by Chris Strachwitz founder of Arhoolie Records. Text by Adam Machado provides biographical and historical context for the widely varied selection of performances. Artists include Big Mama Thornton Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee Bukka White Lightning Hopkins Country Joe and the Fish Dave Frederickson & Crabgrass Debbie Green Bob Neuwirth Mance Lipscomb Alice Stuart Perry Lederman Barbara Dane the Hackberry Ramblers Rev. Louis Overstreet Rev. Gary Davis Fred McDowell Skip James Vern & Ray Clifton Chenier Notes from the Underground Stanley Willis Jerry Hahn Sonny Simmons and many more!
Text by Adam Machado
This is a gathering of recordings made by Chris Strachwitz in the San Francisco Bay Area between 1954 and 1971. Most of them are previously unreleased and some of the artists presented here have never appeared in the Arhoolie catalog. Whether captured at a coffee house a festival a professional studio or someone’s home the songs on these four CDs reflect a few of Chris’ musical interests during the early days of his Arhoolie label. Together they create a sense of some of the music you might have found in and around Berkeley and the San Francisco Bay Area at any given moment during a period that has come to be known as the Folk and Blues Revival. Many young people at that time became increasingly interested in vernacular musical traditions rooted in the past. Chris was among those who located often obscure and marginalized living blues and country artists and helped bring them to the attention of new audiences in the United States and beyond. Over the years his recording trips have taken him thousands of miles from his home base in Berkeley. Arhoolie’s 40th anniversary box set traced those journeys through Texas Louisiana Mississippi Chicago North Carolina Virginia Mexico and as far away as Austria. With a handful of omissions Hear Me Howling offers a document of what Chris was up to in the 1960s when he wasn’t on the road.
Some of the musicians you will find on this set lived in Berkeley Oakland or San Francisco; others were just visiting. In general they came from a great variety of backgrounds and experiences: a songster from East Texas a ragtime guitarist from the Piedmont a protest singer from Detroit a powerhouse jazz drummer from Oakland an itinerant street preacher and his four sons a Cajun string band from Louisiana a handful of folksingers from the Northeast the Midwest and Berkeley itself. All told they constituted a shifting community of musicians and friends as vital as any of the more celebrated scenes in places like Greenwich Village and Cambridge.
The last few tracks of the fourth CD reach beyond the musical styles ordinarily presented alongside ballad singers and bluesmen. In the late sixties Chris became involved with a small but thriving avant-garde jazz community in Oakland and Berkeley. Whether southern blues Cajun fiddle or free jazz it’s all good music to Chris’ ears and forty or fifty years later gives us a broader view of what was happening in the Bay Area at the time.
CD – I:
1. Hump in My Back – Jesse Fuller*
2. Brother Low Down – Jesse Fuller*
3. Berkeley’s Junko Partner – Skid Band*
4. Tight Like That – Skid Band*
5. Moose March – Bob Mielke’s Bearcats +
6. Highway 49 – Big Joe Williams*
7. Oakland Blues – Big Joe Williams with Mary Williams*
8. Greystone (Alameda County Jail) Blues – Big Joe Williams
9. I Know You Didn’t Want Me – K.C. Douglas and band +
10. Night Shirt Blues – K.C. Douglas and band
11. Stop Time – K.C. Douglas and band*
12. Hear Me Howling – K.C. Douglas and band
13. Stand Alone Blues – Lonnie Johnson*
14. Brenda – Lonnie Johnson*
15. Changed the Lock on my Door – Sonny Terry*
16. Bald Eagle Train (take 1) – Bukka White*
17. Tom Moore’s Farm – Lightning Hopkins*
18. Up on Telegraph (Avenue) – Lightning Hopkins
19. Lady Luck – Mercy Dee
CD – II:
1. I Feel Like I’m Fixin’ to Die Rag – Country Joe and the Fish +
2. You Turned Your Back – Toni Brown +
3. How Could I Stand It – Toni Brown +
4. Don’t Forget Me Love – Toni Brown +
5. Charles Giteau – Crabgrass +
6. Midnight Blues – the Joy of Cooking*
7. Depression Gone from Me – T.A. Talbott +
8. Mr. Brakeman – T.A. Talbott*
9. Who’s Going to Be My Man? – Debbie Green*
10. Come See – Bob Neuwirth*
11. Lady Gay – Janet Smith +
12. Talking Protest Blues – Merritt Herring +
13. Black Jack David – Alice Stuart
14. Eventually – Perry Lederman +
15. Impressions of John Henry – Perry Lederman +
16. Deportees – Barbara Dane
17. Grand Texas – Hackberry Ramblers*
18. Jolie Blonde – Hackberry Ramblers*
19. Turtle Tail – Hackberrry Ramblers*
20. The Beatles are in Town – the Fondettes +
CD – III:
1. Willie Poor Boy – Mance Lipscomb
2. The Titanic – Mance Lipscomb
3. Mean Boss Man – Mance Lipscomb
4. Sugar Babe – Mance Lipscomb
5. Working on a Building – Rev. Louis Overstreet*
6. The Old Ship of Zion – Rev. Louis Overstreet*
7. I’m a Soldier – Rev. Gary Davis*
8. Floor Sweepin’ Boy – Rev. Gary Davis*
9. Courtin’ Boy – Rev. Gary Davis*
10. Shake ‘Em on Down – Fred McDowell
11. Louise – Fred McDowell
12. Write Me a Few of Your Lines – Fred McDowell*
13. Low Down Dirty Things – Skip James*
14. 22-20 Blues (Mr. Kress) – Skip James*
15. Sea Walking Jesus – Skip James*
16. No Special Lover – Skip James*
17. Peace in the Valley – Skip James*
CD – IV:
1. Sweetheart You Done Me Wrong – Vern & Ray*
2. The Touch of God’s Hand – Vern & Ray*
3. ‘Fore Day in the Mornin’ – Big Mama Thornton*
4. Ball and Chain – Big Mama Thornton*
5. Hound Dog – Big Mama Thornton*
6. Monsieur Leonard – John Semien & the Opelousas Playboys*
7. Chi Ca Nai – John Semien & the Opelousas Playboys +
8. Bye Bye Rosa – John Semien & the Opelousas Playboys*
9. Mr. Charlie – Clifton Chenier*
10. Louisiana Rock – Clifton Chenier
11. What Am I Doing Here? – Notes from the Underground +
12. To Be a Thief – Stanley Willis*
13. Pretty Good – NOW Creative Arts Ensemble +
14. In the Breeze – Jerry Hahn
15. To ‘Trane (aka: Two Trains) – Smiley Winters
16. The Beauty of Isis – Sonny Simmons
* = previously unreleased
+ = first time on CD
REVIEWS
Sometimes all you need are the facts man. This set comes with the subtitle Blues ballads and beyond as recorded by the San Francisco Bay by Chris Strachwitz in the 1960s and is a beautiful 136-page large format hardcover book with four full-length CDs mounted on the inside covers jammed full with over 150 photos memorabilia and text by Adam Machado. The words tell the story of Chris Strachwitz’s early years building Arhoolie Records with lots of background on and anecdotes about the artists featured and the local scene. Among the 72 tracks more than half are previously unissued and they include bluesers like Jesse Fuller Big Joe Williams Lonnie Johnson Mance Lipscomb Skip James Rev. Gary Davis Fred McDowell Bukka White Big Mama Thornton and KC Douglas (who provides the title track) folk players like Bob Neuwirth Janet Smith Barbara Dane early SF bands like Country Joe & the Fish Cajun and zydeco from the Hackberry Ramblers and Clifton Chenier a smattering of jazz and a whole lot more (though none of the Mexican border music that Chris would later create a wider following for).
As a desirable artifact they don’t come much better. As a listening and reading pleasure it’s first class. Not having been there at the time I can’t imagine it’s anything other than a peerless documentary of the roots music that came from or to the SF Bay area from 1960 onwards a local equivalent of what Rooney & Von Schmidt’s Baby Let Me Follow You Down did for the New England scene of roughly the same era but with added music. And as a tribute to the early years of one of America’s unswervingly greatest record producers with unrivalled integrity and taste it’s spot on.
-Ian Anderson FRoots
For the last half-century Arhoolie Records has recorded and released an astounding assortment of folk blues Tejano brass string band Cajun zydeco sacred steel and any other type of non-pop music to grateful ears. In honor of the label’s 50th anniversary head honcho Chris Strachwitz has curated a four-CD set that features mostly unreleased recordings from the San Francisco Bay Area on the 1960s. These recordings are the sound of roots music circa the 1960s in a nutshell. There are blues from well-known artists such as Lightnin’ Hopkins and more obscure players like Jesse Fuller. There’s folk music from Dylan cohort Bob Neuwirth and Debbie Green and talking blues from Merritt Herring. Louisiana makes an appearance with cuts from the Hackberry Ramblers John Semien and Clifton Chenier.
The recording settings vary from sessions in Strachwitz’s living room to coffeehouses to folk festivals which contributes to what is striking about these tracks: their intimacy. When KC Douglas and Clarence Van Hook sing the rough-but-right-on harmonies of “I Know You Didn’t Want Me” it is easy to hear their surprise at how good it sounds and how much fun they are having. When Skip James one of the more plaintive and eerie bluesmen sits down at the funky piano in Strachwitz’s house to sing “Low Down Dirty Shame” the deep feeling behind his music is inescapable. And in some tracks such depth hits the musicians as strongly as the listeners. When Country Joe and the Fish’s 1965 spasm/hokum band version of “I Feel Like I’m Fixin’ to Die Rag” comes on you can hear the band realizing how much conviction they have behind this song and how it could become the anthem.
On some songs the guitars or pianos are not fully tuned and some voices warble in the melodies but this rawness elevates the music. In addition the CDs come with a book of essays about the musicians and their circumstances illustrated with great candid pictures of the players and the scenes in which they flourished. If you are a fan of this music these tracks will be a confirmation of these musicians’ greatness. If you’re on the fence this compilation could be a revelation.
-David Kunian offBEAT Magazine
Additional information
Weight | 3.0 lbs |
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Dimensions | 12 × 10 × 2 in |
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