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Perry Tillis was born July 29, 1919, in Elba , Alabama , and began playing his brand of rambling blues at a very early age. He continued playing the blues and singing gospel, despite going blind, up until his death on November 3, 2004. In the '40s Tillis played the Chicago blues circuit alongside all-time greats likes Muddy Waters and Furry Lewis. However, when a revelation convinced him it was the devil's music, he moved back home and began preaching the gospel.
In 1972 Swedish music archivist Begnt Olsson tracked down Tillis at his church in Samson , Alabama, and recorded these tracks over three sessions. He was frail and old when Olsson found him, but he played the guitar, both electric and acoustic, with a mosquito-like fragility that is truly transcendent.
In an age when major pre-war blues players were being rediscovered, unknown geniuses like Tillis were still playing a style of blues (gospel) that touched upon greatness and kept alive the traditions that were inspiring the likes of The Rolling Stones and Eric Clapton. This CD has a hallucinatory, Velvet Underground-like groove that meanders through each hymn. The slide guitar playing is beautiful and Tillis' voice speaks of a knowledge all but lost in the 21st Century.
A wonderful debut release from an unknown blues virtuoso who is missed.
Tracks:
1 God don't like it 4:27
2 Too close 4:54
3 Kennedy moan 2:30
4 Look out liar 3:28
5 That's all (Denomination blues) 4:41
6 Soon one morning 4:57
7 Nobody's fault but mine 3:53
8 What is this 4:48
9 Tell me why you like Roosevelt 4:44
10 Rich girl, poor girl 7:03
11 Do you know the man 4:08
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