(Preacher Boy, live at Mission St. BBQ. Photo by Jake J. Thomas.)
Kind of an intriguing set tonight, if I do say so myself. I certainly bookended with a pair of the usual suspects, and there were a few other familiar chirps throughout as well, but all in all, quite a lot of strange birds making sonic appearances tonight. Lots of country blues in here. Here’s the full list of what I ran down:
- If I Had Possession Over My Judgement Day (Robert Johnson, arr. PB)
- Preachin’ Blues (Son House, arr. PB)
- Levee Camp Blues (Mississippi Fred McDowell, arr. PB)
- Old Jim Granger (from the Preacher Boy album “The Tenderloin EP”)
- Diving Duck Blues (Sleepy John Estes, arr. PB)
- Evil Blues (Mance Lipscomb, arr. PB)
- A Little More Evil (from the Preacher Boy album “The National Blues”)
- Revenue Man Blues (Charley Patton, arr. PB)
- Milk Cow Blues (Mississippi Fred McDowell, arr. PB)
- Catfish Blues (Willie Doss, arr. PB)
- The Dogs (from the Preacher Boy album “The Devil’s Buttermilk”)
- Spoonful Blues (Charley Patton, arr. PB)
- Down And Out In This Town (from the Preacher Boy album “Gutters & Pews”)
- Sliding Delta (Mississippi John Hurt, arr. PB)
- Stagolee (Mississippi John Hurt, arr. PB)
- A Person’s Mind (from the Preacher Boy album “The National Blues”)
- Down South Blues (Sleepy John Estes, arr. PB)
- Coal Black Dirt Sky (from the Preacher Boy album “Crow”)
- Black Crow (from the Preacher Boy album “Crow”)
- Railroad (from the Preacher Boy album “Gutters & Pews”)
- Motherless Children (Blind Willie Johnson,/Mance Lipscomb/Dave Van Ronk, arr. PB)
- Shake ‘Em On Down (Bukka White)
And for your listening pleasure, two straight-from-the-stage-to-yer-ear-buds guerrilla-live tracks:
Preacher Boy – Sliding Delta [LIVE]
(arrangement based on the Mississippi John Hurt version)
Preacher Boy – Levee Camp Blues [LIVE]
(arrangement based on a recorded performance by Mississippi Fred McDowell)
For the guitar heads amongst ye, this version of Sliding Delta is performed on a ’36 National (Grandpa’s National), which is set up for standard tuning. This chords are based on Key of E forms, but the guitar is capo’d at the 4th fret. Levee Camp Blues is performed on a different ’36 National (THE National), and the guitar is tuned to an Open G tuning, then capo’d at the 2nd fret.
For the footwear fanatics amongst ye, the stomps come courtesy of my cowboy boots, which are a Size 13.