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Moving to the Suburbs: Essential Guide for Relocating to the Outskirts of Town | Home & Lifestyle Tips" 使用场景: Perfect for families, remote workers, or anyone planning a peaceful suburban relocation.
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Moving to the Suburbs: Essential Guide for Relocating to the Outskirts of Town | Home & Lifestyle Tips Moving to the Suburbs: Essential Guide for Relocating to the Outskirts of Town | Home & Lifestyle Tips
Moving to the Suburbs: Essential Guide for Relocating to the Outskirts of Town | Home & Lifestyle Tips
Moving to the Suburbs: Essential Guide for Relocating to the Outskirts of Town | Home & Lifestyle Tips
Moving to the Suburbs: Essential Guide for Relocating to the Outskirts of Town | Home & Lifestyle Tips" 使用场景: Perfect for families, remote workers, or anyone planning a peaceful suburban relocation.
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The Hawaiian Guitar Wizard's BEST 24 songs!Casey Bill Weldon played a National steel guitar flat on his lap Hawaiian style.He was one of the foremost lap steel guitar players of the Prewar blues years, as well as an excellent singer and tunesmith. He is not to be confused with Will Weldon, a guitarist/singer who was a sometime member of the Memphis Jug Band and had a relationship (or may even have been married to Memphis Minnie). Practically all of the biographical data known about Casey Bill Weldon comes from a groundbreaking article by Jim O'Neal in Living Blues magazine no. 228 (Dec. 2013). In all probability, his real name was Nathan Hammond and he was born on Feb. 2, 1901, prob. in Chanute, Kansas, southwest of Kansas City. He adopted the name William Weldon at some point prior to his first appearances as a musician at various recording sessions in 1935, including accompaniments to Peetie Wheatstraw, Teddy Darby and Leroy Henderson, as well his first recordings as Kansas City Bill Weldon or Casey Bill (some subtitled ''Hawaiian Guitar Wizard'' for Vocalion and Bluebird. In the same year and in 1936, he was also featured with the Hokum Boys, the Washboard Rhythm Kings and Arnett Nelson & His Hot Four. Track List: 1 Doctor's Blues 2 What's The Matter With My Milk Cow 3 My Stove Won't Work 4 Somebody Changed The Lock On My Door 5 Howlin' Dog Blues 6 Somebody Changed The Lock On That Door 7 WPA Blues 8 Flood Water Blues-No 2, 3, 10 Unissued 9 Let Me Be Your Butcher 10 Blues Everywhere I Go 11 Somebodys Got To Go 12 Casey Blues 13 I'se Just A Bad Luck Man 14 Streamline Woman 15 I Believe, I Will Make A Change 16 The Big Boat 17 Can't You Remember 18 We Gonna Move (To The Outskirts Of The Town) 19 Oh Red 20 Give Me Another Shot 21 Sales Lady 22 Red Hot Blues 23 Christmas Time Blues 24 Say Midnight Blues Last
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One of the foremost bottleneck lap steel guitarists of the Prewar blues years, Casey Bill Weldon (1901 – 1972) was also a singer and songwriter who recorded for Vocalion and Bluebird. Now, Wolf Records (based in Vienna, Austria) is to be commended for this release in its “Blues Classics” series that will acquaint blues aficionados and historians with an artist worthy of much wider acclaim. This album, with its generous 24 tracks, documents Casey Bill Weldon’s work during the timeframe from 1935-38. For acoustic blues of this vintage, the sound is pretty good, and the liner notes by Klaus Kilian and Hannes Folterbauer are illuminating.The earliest 1935 recordings sampled are “Doctor’s Blues” and “What’s The Matter with My Milk Cow?” that feature Kansas City Bill Weldon with pianist Peetie Wheatstraw. With a style much like that of left-handed bottleneck guitarist James “Kokomo” Arnold, who recorded his own classic “Milk Cow Blues,” Weldon no doubt had an impact on western swing players of that day like Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys who may’ve heard his music on the radio at that time. This album then includes about a dozen tracks of Casey Bill (occasionally referred to as the “Hawaiian Guitar Wizard”) paired with the likes of legendary pianist Black Bob and unknown string bass players. In 1935, Weldon had a hit with “Somebody Changed the Lock on that Door” that’s been covered by many. Other songs like “My Stove Won’t Work,” “Howlin’ Dog Blues,” “Let Me Be Your Butcher,” “Blues Everywhere I Go,” and “Casey Blues” stay true to his early sound with moderate tempo’ed hard-luck tales of life. His own self-penned “WPA Blues” and “Flood Water Blues” are illustrative examples of Weldon the songwriter.At track 14, “Streamline Woman” (recorded in mid-1936), we start to hear Weldon recording not only with a pianist and bassist, but also with a second guitarist like Big Bill Broonzy perhaps to give the music more rhythmic drive. I particularly enjoyed songs like “The Big Boat” and “Can’t You Remember” from September, 1936 that added mandolinist Charlie McCoy to the effervescent musical mix. “Oh Red” is an interesting cut that gives us a sampling of clarinetist Arnett Nelson & His Hot Four (Casey Bill, Black Bob, Bill Broonzy and Bill Settles). Also a treat to hear are some 1937 recordings of Weldon with “his orchestra” although the band is basically a quintet.With his warm vocals and spirited lap steel slides, Casey Bill Weldon was clearly one of the great raconteurs of the 1930s blues. And like Kokomo Arnold who last recorded in 1938 and said, “I’m finished with music and that mad way of life,” Casey Bill Weldon’s final recording, “Say Midnight Blues Last” was also in 1938. There’s little known about his whereabouts and activities after that. This set of music is a vital, and important, document of blues that laid groundwork for blues, and even music in some other genres, that followed. I’d also encourage listeners to check out Wolf Records’ other releases, especially among their Blues Classics, that sample artists from Delta-style blues to that of Atlanta, Piedmont School, Memphis, Brownsville and Chicago blues. (Joe Ross, Roots Music Report)

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