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Tunes of Inequitable Toil
Nero the Pict Archives the Blues
© 2016 James LaFond
JUN/19/16
"Figured this might be up your alley...Don't know if you ever heard any of the old Alan Lomax field recordings. If so disregard...If not I figure these recordings might offer some inspiration.
"Negro Prison Blues and Songs
"Original Black Betty and so as not to be a total downer Ram Jam - Black Betty
Ram Jam!!!"
-Nero the Pict
Oh King of Pennsylvania Pictdom, I have oft heard complaints of cultural piracy leevlled at the Rolling Stones, Stevie Ray Vaughn and Clapton, that they stole old negro blues born under the white man’s lash and used it to turn a profit. However, when one considers that white slaves cleared the lands and first tilled, sowed and reaped the fields of miserable toil, and that their British masters [such as William Bligh, who wrote of forcing his slave sailors to dance to music for two hours per day] forced them to dance to the fiddle, pipes and drums [which began when they were kidnapped as boys in Scotland and entertained in the locked barn they were being held in by adult musicians], I see the adoption of negro blues by rockers as a coming back to our Caucasian slave roots and reaquiring the tarditions of our forgotton ancestors, just as European scholars reaquired the works of the Greek philospophers preserved in Muslim lands while Christendom slumbered.
Negro Prison Blues and Songs
YouTube video Original Black Betty
YouTube video Ram Jam - Black Betty
'Raping a Virgin of the White Race'
video reviews
‘The Painted People’
eBook
uncle satan
eBook
within leviathan’s craw
eBook
sons of aryаs
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songs of aryаs
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the year the world took the z-pill
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book of nightmares
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the first boxers
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triumph
Sam J.     Jun 20, 2016

If you listen to the early blues players in many cases the White rockers took a decent art form and polished it into something far better in my opinion.

R. L. Burnside excepting who is kill.

youtube.com/watch?v=jI5qCXuD4Y4

Rounder records record company has an excellent Blues series. "Georgia Blues", "Alabama Blues", etc. They started out as a folk and traditional music publisher but ran across George Thorogood and recorded his stuff. One of Rounder records guys was at a bar and George was playing there. He said there was only a few people there but George was playing like it was a Colosseum. He decided he had to record him.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rounder_Records
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