Mance Lipscomb pt 2

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  • čas přidán 6. 04. 2011
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Komentáře • 86

  • @charlesanthony4004
    @charlesanthony4004 Před 3 lety +25

    The value of recordings like this is beyond measure.

  • @paulkersey1007
    @paulkersey1007 Před 11 lety +19

    Just listening to Mance speak and describing his music is a gift, let alone hearing Mance play. How the world needs a good man like Mance.

  • @Peters518
    @Peters518 Před 5 měsíci +2

    These GREAT old bluesmen!!! Enormous!!! And a wounded? finger doesn’t bother.
    The groove deeper than into the bone!Peet the Swede

  • @Mark8395217
    @Mark8395217 Před 8 lety +67

    Thumbs up if you're under 25 and listening to this...... there's hope for you

    • @lotyde
      @lotyde Před 7 lety +3

      thnx pal

    • @noahsilva3115
      @noahsilva3115 Před 5 lety +5

      This is the shit thats why. Nothing to do with age

    • @BlindWillieJackson
      @BlindWillieJackson Před 4 lety

      I started listening to Mance when I was 19 (in 1986). It started when I bought Exile on Main Street when i was 17 & started working my way backwards to the blues. I moved to Dallas after college and immersed myself into Texas Blues. Good times!

    • @myrlewulf6256
      @myrlewulf6256 Před 3 lety +1

      I'm 20, and I recognize that crumb drawing ya got there.

  • @Peters518
    @Peters518 Před 4 měsíci +1

    If one doesn’t like real deep music, one doesn’t like/love this!! Peet the Swede

  • @dirtworshiper2800
    @dirtworshiper2800 Před 3 lety +4

    Wow. You've posted some amazing treasures. Thank you for sharing brother. I hope to be wherever he is and all the other greats when I die.

  • @jitendrabhagat127
    @jitendrabhagat127 Před 3 lety +2

    big fan of mance listening to only him since past few years

  • @kaecake9575
    @kaecake9575 Před rokem +2

    9:28 the way he tuned that guitar and pop a knife as a slider. The best kind of guitarist:)

  • @mrhoolie
    @mrhoolie Před 3 lety +6

    Please remember that Mance Lipscomb never called himself a blues singer but a SONGSTER! He began also singing blues when they became popular in the 1920s - but he always enjoyed ALL kinds of songs that told a story which he called in the pre-blues era Billets or Reels!

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 Před 3 lety

      Yeah, many people assume that guys like Mance only played Delta or some style of blues particular to the region where they grew up, but in truth, if they wanted paid work as musicians, they had to learn popular tunes of the day, things being played on the radio or from best-selling records. I used to have a book of collected interviews with some of the classic old blues guys where Mance and Jesse Fuller in particular both spoke about this. The reason that the 1920's to 1940's recordings are mostly blues is because when some guy (most likely white) showed up with portable recording equipment and a few dollars in a paper sack, and asked for "race music", the musician said "yes suh" and complied. I write this for the benefit of others, but you, Chris Strachwitz, assuming you're the real Chris Strachwitz, obviously don't need me to tell you this! I am fully in agreement with what you said in the documentary film: "I don't need no mouse music!"

    • @stewartfenton7660
      @stewartfenton7660 Před 2 lety

      So good to see an acknowledged authority state this. I've seen so many songsters referred to as "King of the Blues" etc,some of whom, Mississippi John Hurt for instance, have only a small proportion of blues recordings. Perhaps it's a bit sweeping to say that it suggests to me, firstly, that the commenter hasn't heard many pre war black singers, and secondly that they can't actually distinguish a blues from a non blues song. If you want to call my bluff on that, we'll I'm not a musician and can't define the blues. But I sure as hell know what it sounds like.
      I've got a very interesting and convincing book "Escaping the Delta", forget the author offhand. Part history of Robert Johnson, part essay on the theory that MOST "blues" singers of the time were pretty much songsters.

  • @bishopvilleredneck
    @bishopvilleredneck Před 4 měsíci

    Another great find, love him,

  • @johnieallen6115
    @johnieallen6115 Před 10 lety +5

    wow real blues music and songs for a rainy valentines day in north east england top mance ##

  • @billlowe6883
    @billlowe6883 Před 5 lety +7

    Emancipation Lipscomb. Unbelievable treasure.

  • @aaroncombs1
    @aaroncombs1 Před 9 lety +6

    Read about this guy 40 years ago and tried to play a tune of his from tab and chords. So great to finally stumble across this. Incredible.

  • @billlowe6883
    @billlowe6883 Před 5 lety +25

    Broke finger, piece of s*** Harmony Sovereign, and a $1 pocket knife. Try that folks. Unbelievable artist. This man gets six stars in my book out of a possible 5. He was in his own league.

    • @KrazyKuul111
      @KrazyKuul111 Před 2 lety +2

      Apparently not a pos guitar, id get one if they werent so damn expensive. Maybe ill get lucky and find a good one cheap, but they are like $500 or more

    • @woolymhon405
      @woolymhon405 Před 2 lety +2

      @@KrazyKuul111 Mance up'd the price

    • @TheophilusBoone
      @TheophilusBoone Před 2 lety +2

      @@woolymhon405 I've got a Sovereign and it is a cannon, as they say. It needs a neck set but it's great for slide. Very resonant.

    • @BlindWillieJackson
      @BlindWillieJackson Před 2 lety

      $1 pocket knife? Could be an Imperial. . . you could easily put a razor's edge on one of those & it would be as dull as a butter knife after slicing it through a piece of paper.

    • @lindamorgan2678
      @lindamorgan2678 Před rokem

      Harmony's are great and this is not a sovereign looks like a H 162 to me. solid spruce top and solid mahogany back and sides and that nice ladder braced punchy sound. You don't realize why he liked it so much do you ?

  • @joegarrison5911
    @joegarrison5911 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm really enjoying these old videos, these are like a window into the past.

  • @christinamiller3363
    @christinamiller3363 Před 3 měsíci

    Brand new here...mind already blown,,...great musicianship

  • @TheJohnieB
    @TheJohnieB Před 11 lety +2

    The Godfather of a lot of fine musicians including Bob Dylan, Bonnie Raitt, etc.

  • @annonymost9318
    @annonymost9318 Před 3 lety +5

    I love his smooth voice so melodic...his playin....wish I could have heard of while he was still alive...everyone needs to know bout him...lol...

  • @Peters518
    @Peters518 Před 5 měsíci

    Great feel and groove!!
    Reminds of bassplayer Marcus Miller .. same look .. Peet the Swede

  • @fuzzyallan
    @fuzzyallan Před 5 lety +7

    open tuning pocket knife slide blues on Jack of Diamonds at 9:39. wonderful!

  • @BlindWillieJackson
    @BlindWillieJackson Před 4 lety +3

    I started listening to Mance when I was 19 (in 1986). It started when I bought Exile on Main Street when i was 17 & started working my way backwards to the blues. I moved to Dallas after college and immersed myself into Texas Blues. Good times! My favorite Mance song is "Tom Moore Blues". It's kind of autobiographical. Also, check out Jimmie Vaughan's "Little Son, Big Son". His playing has a heavy Mance influence. Both are on CZcams and my channel.

    • @billybean5213
      @billybean5213 Před 2 lety

      Tom I lived 10miles from Mance during his last years and used to go visit him all the time. I once brought him over to my grandpa's house to introduce them to each other. Grandpa was 6 months older than Mance and they grew up in the same community at the same time - one white and one black. They had a great visit and later in the afternoon my grandfather felt sick so Mance and I drove him to the hospital over in Navasota where they took care of grandpa but kept him there a couple of days. During those days Tom Moore and his wife came to visit grandpa as Tom's wife was my grandma's niece. During that time grandpa was starting to feel pretty good and enjoying his visitors and he told Tom that I had brought Mance over to his house and Mance played the guitar for him and made him sick ! Of course that wasn't what had happened at all but I later related that story to Mance and he just laughed ! Mance always asked about how my grandpa was every time I'd go visit him after that !

    • @BlindWillieJackson
      @BlindWillieJackson Před 2 lety

      Wow! Thanks for sharing.

    • @billybean5213
      @billybean5213 Před 2 lety

      @@BlindWillieJackson sure ! I loved that guy ! One the most outstanding people I have ever had the privilege to call my friend !

  • @itsallaroundyou7085
    @itsallaroundyou7085 Před 3 lety +4

    Dude this guy is a beast.

  • @lenkowalyshen9571
    @lenkowalyshen9571 Před 6 lety +8

    Mance I could only wish I could be as cool as you are at the age you were in this old video, A buggered up finger and playing slide with a pocket knife and sounding great ......Love yeah man your one of the greatest

  • @steveerickson6804
    @steveerickson6804 Před 8 lety +34

    A true story about Mance:
    He was asked by a New Orleans dentist to play at his wife's garden party, but Mance told him that he couldn't sing because his false teeth were stolen. So the dentist made him a set of false teeth that not only had gold stars on the upper front two, but had Mance" engraved in gold script on the upper plate. Mance showed them to me one time.

    • @timhitt5934
      @timhitt5934 Před 7 lety

      wow ,you knew Mance? Was this in Texas? Cool story!

    • @stevenharrison488
      @stevenharrison488 Před 5 lety +3

      Replying late by 3 years but none the less what a great story laughed out loud.

    • @UpperLeftCoast
      @UpperLeftCoast Před 2 lety

      (Steve E. using his partner's CZcams ID) This was at a performance at a church in Cambridge MA in 72 or 73 (I think). Mance and Joseph Spence, maybe 20 people in the audience. I was a street musician hanging with a girl from Quebec. She'd met Mance when he played in Montreal and he'd told her the story. After Mance and Joseph played, she introduced me and Mance told me the story himself. Then Mance eyed my guitar case and suggested I take it out. So I sat and played with Mance and Joseph Spence for an hour or so. Mance didn't have the finger problem then and he was playing a pretty new looking Gibson, which was't anywhere near as loud and projecting as the 30s Kalamazoo I played at the time. One thing: Mance played murder ballads and was totally straight and gentle. Joseph played christmas carols and had a flask of whiskey at the ready.

    • @billybean5213
      @billybean5213 Před 2 lety +2

      Ha ! I remember those teeth ! Mance was so proud of them he used to pull them out and wipe them off with a paper towel then hand them to you so you could get a close look at them ! I'd go over to his house to visit often as I lived 10 miles from him during the last part of his life. One of my favorite memories was during the wee hours of the night when it was just Mance and me in his front room and he'd gotten into a playing groove with me hanging on every note. I got up and went into his bathroom to pee and while standing at his toilet i looked down on the top of the tank and saw those gold teeth sitting in a bowl soaking for the night ! 🤗

  • @andrewdannatt7389
    @andrewdannatt7389 Před 7 lety +1

    The last track is incredible!

  • @connect741
    @connect741 Před 5 lety +2

    What a great voice - outstanding

  • @terryconaway9738
    @terryconaway9738 Před 6 lety +6

    Huh when you talk blues these old dudes will never be outdone they really knew what it took to mix the salts and soils from just trying to live and gave them a flavor that became the blues with a few chords bending notes on old beat up guitars. With a hammer on and a pull off they taught how to love and appreciate what you have by being real i think every modern music star should have to sit down and watch these old clips and learn about the reality. Of this is where all American music comes from not big time recording companys but from the heart of the blues

  • @djtdub1
    @djtdub1 Před 8 měsíci

    When he was at Reed College around 1972 he did 3 consecutive versions of C C Rider but totally different arrangements. He also told me that he played on Lemon Jefferson's grave.

  • @elhombreoculto6240
    @elhombreoculto6240 Před 3 lety +2

    Este tipo es de otro planeta!

  • @trevortagliabue5650
    @trevortagliabue5650 Před 3 lety

    ...night time is the right time if it's the one you love - killer track and the sentiments resonates more as l age...

  • @dennymk6454
    @dennymk6454 Před 5 lety +7

    played Jack O' Diamonds slide style with a pocket knife. i had a stack of his ablums in 74', and he passed in '76. lots of stories about him now. some may be true. some are made up. not many use his thumping low E bass line style today. Never be another man like Mance. that's true. Mance is short for Emancipation.

    • @jackpeters9349
      @jackpeters9349 Před 2 lety

      Did he cut any vinyl or anyone's know he cut a few heads

  • @lynettekomidar
    @lynettekomidar Před 12 lety +1

    thank you ,,,, there are no words .. totally enjoying this wet Sunday Afternoon FolkSeatle

  • @witchingours4432
    @witchingours4432 Před rokem

    RIP Chris Strachwitz. You may not have had the talent of some of the musical giants you recorded, but without those recordings we would never have heard them. 10 May, 2023

  • @YorkyOne
    @YorkyOne Před 5 lety

    Love the casual way he tips his hat at 9.30. If I tried that it would just fall off.

  • @jamesderoc6717
    @jamesderoc6717 Před 10 lety +4

    ridiculously good

  • @ziemo1965
    @ziemo1965 Před 7 lety

    ahh the good ole jack-knife blues...

  • @PeluMaad
    @PeluMaad Před 12 lety +3

    Oh come on man!..."See Your Mama" in F?...Have mercy!

    • @cheapfeet
      @cheapfeet Před 6 lety

      I was thinking the same thing! F for frig sakes

  • @56conn6h
    @56conn6h Před 5 lety +2

    Who needs a $20 metal or glass bottle neck from Guitar Center. That knife works fine

  • @larryhull368
    @larryhull368 Před 3 lety

    Jayzus, the man is good.

  • @danmurphy4724
    @danmurphy4724 Před 6 lety

    Pure Music

  • @medoelwerfally
    @medoelwerfally Před 4 lety

    Thanks for sharing this

  • @lookissjaxin
    @lookissjaxin Před rokem

    Fantastic 😊

  • @ZedValhalla
    @ZedValhalla Před 11 lety

    What a gun!

  • @TheBlues088
    @TheBlues088 Před 4 lety +1

    9:36 All guitarists thumbs up if you tune your guitar in 20 seconds.

  • @daveraven4044
    @daveraven4044 Před 7 lety +2

    A lost art. We are evolving? These stories . The same thing happening today.

  • @robgillan2245
    @robgillan2245 Před 7 lety +4

    Hypnotic

  • @wladimirtay69old
    @wladimirtay69old Před 6 lety

    comment inet==With his broke old finger
    And his bandaged hand
    This tune gonna linger
    Longer than a rock'n'roll band.

  • @TR-yi8up
    @TR-yi8up Před 3 lety +1

    thanks to les blank for sending me here

  • @sheilabarron5532
    @sheilabarron5532 Před 3 lety

    ❤❤❤✌💙

  • @trevortagliabue5650
    @trevortagliabue5650 Před 3 lety

    7.56...9.17 jeezus wept

  • @TheDocRitchie
    @TheDocRitchie Před 10 měsíci

    2 of my fingers broke? i got another 2 and a thumb!

  • @Gd10034
    @Gd10034 Před 4 lety +1

    Dear God: Keep Jesus. Send Mance back instead.

  • @rhomacity
    @rhomacity Před 3 lety +1

    " piece of s*** Harmony Sovereign" you say? Bull**** say I. They were a great cheap guitar, lots of bass, better than a lot more expensive guitars for the purpose.

  • @10phi9
    @10phi9 Před rokem

    no shit

  • @David53D
    @David53D Před 3 lety

    I noticed Mance doesn't tune his guitar that well and plays slightly out of tune.

    • @blindboyflowers
      @blindboyflowers Před 3 lety +4

      i think his tuning is fine, and sounds great. if hes a little flat or sharp or whatever its okay because hes tuned the strings all relative to each other. this style of music doesnt pertain to super precise tuning anyway.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 Před 3 lety +1

      David Stutz, one other possibility ---- Acoustic guitars, whether cheap or well built, didn't hold up well under heat and humidity, and/or under the tension of cheap strings, and as the neck bowed (probably didn't have a truss rod) and the soundboard and bridge bellied upwards, the string action got progressively higher and higher, which meant that pushing the strings down to the frets from a great height actually stretched the strings sufficiently to pull them a little sharp. Most modern guitarists would probably find these guitars virtually unplayable, but the old blues men were often manual laborers who picked cotton and did farm work and anything else they could to make a living, and they probably had a hand grip like an iron vise!