Mississippi John Hurt and Tom Waits


I've noticed this before but today I was listening to Mississippi John Hurt and was once again astonished to hear how much Tom Waits (in his first recordings) borrowed from him. And Tom Waits is my favorite musician of all time (well, tied with John Coltrane) so it's not an attack on the man.

Anybody have recommendations for music in the style of MJH? Preferably something from that time period, especially his "last sessions" recording in the mid 1960s

By the way...MJH had an amazing career...falling totally off the radar around the depression and working as a sharecropper until he was rediscovered 30 years later! Check the link below for a little info on him.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_John_Hurt
kublakhan
Man, you ask a complex question....... When I started playing guitar John Hurt was one of my main influences. I loved country blues and from him I went on and tried to learn as many of the different styles from those old guy's as I could. John Hurt is pretty accessable. It might be hard to get into some of the other blues players of that period at first, but keep listening if this is the case.

Some of my favorites (hopefully you or others might like them too) are: in the Piedmont style, Reverend Gary Davis, Blind Blake, Bo Carter, and Blind Boy Fuller. Delta blues: Robert Johnson, Son House, Charley Patton (a monster), and Skip James. Texas guy's: Blind Lemon Jefferson, Blind Willie Johnson (another monster), and Muddy Waters (check out the "Plantation Recordings")........ Modern guy's you might like are: Ry Cooder, Taj Mahal, Paul Geremia, John Hammond Jr. (he made a record recently of all Tom Waits songs, BTW), The Jim Kweskin jug band, and Jourma Koukanen(sp?)..........

John Hurt is everywhere in modern music (or, at least roots variants), but so are a lot of the other old guy's. Listen to some of Beck's records, Wilco, The Rolling Stones, etc.

There was even a lot of cross-pollenation between them and the hillbilly music of that era; check out Jimmy Rodgers (the country one), Bill Monroe, etc.

Sorry to ramble...... hope it's helpful info

Chris
Thanks for all the recs guys. I went to amazon and took a listen and bought a bunch of stuff...

Avalon Blues tribute
Mance Lipscomb
blind willie johnson and bill monroe to start.

can't wait.
Kublakhan,

Once you've digested your current crop of purchases, all of which I second, you might also want to try Bill Morrissey's Songs of Mississippi John Hurt, a 1999 release on Philo. It's an admirable piece of work, and beautifully recorded.