1 Robert Lee McCoy– Tough Time
2 Robert Lee McCoy– Lonesome World
3 Robert Lee McCoy– Don't Mistreat Your Woman
4 Robert Lee McCoy– Prowling Night-Hawk
5 Robert Lee McCoy– Take It Easy Baby
6 Robert Lee McCoy– Mean Black Cat
7 Robert Lee McCoy– Mamie Lee
8 Rambling Bob– Every Day And Night
9 Rambling Bob– Ol' Mose
10 Rambling Bob– Freight Train Blues
11 Rambling Bob– Next-Door Neighbor
12 Peetie's Boy– Friar's Point Blues
Part II - Also Known As Robert Nighthawk
13 The Nighthawks – My Sweet Lovin' Woman
14 The Nighthawks – Anna Lee
15 The Nighthawks – Black Angel Blues
16 The Nighthawks – Return Mail Blues
17 Nighthawks – Six Three O
18 Robert Nighthawk & His Nighthawks Band– Kansas City Blues
19 Robert Nighthawk & His Nighthawks Band– Cryin' Won't Help You
20 Robert Nighthawk & His Nighthawks Band– Take It Easy Baby
21 Robert Nighthawk & His Nighthawks Band– Feel So Bad
22 Robert Nighthawk & His Nighthawks Band– Bricks In My Pillow
23 Robert Nighthawk & His Nighthawks Band– You Missed A Good Man
24 Robert Nighthawk & His Nighthawks Band– Maggie Campbell
8 comments:
Many thanks. By the way, why oh why we don't have a FNAC in Uruguay : )
Many thanks for posting this. I thought I had Nighthawk's complete works but there's a couple of tracks here that are new to me - great post, great blog!
Very nice! Many thanks! This is one of his best CDs. To the down.loader ... it's at threeTwenty C. And there is good art ... but Xyros has tweaked up the image of the cover on this web page a bit and it is even a little bit better. Again, thanks!
Everything you'd want to know about Nighthawk's recordings but never dare ask! [smile]
http://nighthawk.sundayblues.org/
thank you for your many great posts.
I once assisted with a series of interviews in Helena and Clarksdale and thereabouts for a documentary about SBWII. (Actually, I mostly transcribed what I call "Delta Ebonics" into standard English for the researchers, who need a local translator in their work.) Anyway, related artists and KFFA history came up frequently, and I recall a number of conversations with elderly people who knew Robert Nighthawk. At the time of his death, he was staying at the Riverside Hotel in Clarksdale, and the owner and other regulars were convinced that Nighthawk knew his death was imminent. One day, he left all his worldly goods at the hotel and walked to a nearby bridge over the Sunflower River, where he found a comfortable spot in the shade under the bridge, sat down and died. That seems like the epitome of taking one's exit for a rambling blues man. Thanks so much for this wonderful recording!
Thanks very much!
Thank you very much for this fantastic compilation !
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