john long
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Homesick James & Snooky Pryor - No More Lovin'.wmv
john long 11mo ago
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1994 - Basketball - Magic Johnson All Stars vs New Zealand All Stars - ASB Stadium, Auckland
john long 1d ago
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The Only Blasphemy
john long 3d ago
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John Long Star Trek Communicator Kit Build - Hero Version Demo
john long 1w ago
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Adidas Lifetime Award Introduction for Fred Beckey
john long 3w ago
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Genuine Deception ( John Long's one claim to fame)!
john long 4w ago
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Brazilian Peel - Sephora video
john long 1mo ago
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Reina - Protect-A-Grid (FULL)
john long 1mo ago
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Midwest Independent Film Festival - Titles
john long 1mo ago
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Sign up for a workshop with horticulturist John Long
john long 1mo ago
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John Long responds to a question about U.S. horse show culture
john long 1mo ago
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Tomorrow and Forever- One Step Away- John Long Cover
john long 2mo ago
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Time to Kill a Mountain Man | Cliffhanger | Classic Clips
john long 2mo ago
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MC Chimed feat. Amelie - No Happy Ending (Official Video)
john long 2mo ago
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Fred Beckey, OR Awards
john long 3mo ago
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Don't let me fall | Cliffhanger | Classic Clips
john long 3mo ago
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USA First - Jean-Luc Pouchet Webdynamic World General Commander 2008-2011
john long 3mo ago
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Seasons Over | Cliffhanger | Classic Clips
john long 4mo ago
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Faded Freestyle - Oren Major [TEASER!!]
john long 5mo ago
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Why Can't We Stop Sudden Infant Deaths?
john long 6mo ago
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World Maker Fair 2012: John Long, "Darwin's Devices: Evolving Robots to Study Animal Evolution"
john long 7mo ago
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Casey Savin
john long 8mo ago
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Midwest Independent Film Festival
john long 8mo ago
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Red Bull Cliff Diving
john long 10mo ago
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Elton John Long Way From Happiness
john long 1y ago
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Nematode
john long 1y ago
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Ask a Professor: John Long
john long 1y ago
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Novartis
john long 1y ago
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Bone Diggers (NOVA)
john long 1y ago
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Robots re-create ancient-era life forms
john long 1y ago
Tags
- How Tos
- baby face
- big bear
- bugle calls
- chicago
- compilation album
- cover version
- crossroads
- delta blues
- electric guitar
- elmore james
- fleetwood mac
- he is
- homesick
- italy
- james
- joe williams
- john estes
- john long
- national public radio
- prestige records
- public radio
- radio
- rca
- rca victor
- robert johnson
- self-taught
- sings the blues
- slide guitar
- somerville
- south side
- springfield, missouri
- square deal
- tennessee
- that way
- the blues
- the circle
- the compilation album
- the square
- the u
- the wedding
- united states
- united states army
- us army
- walter horton
- weddings
Description
Homesick James (April 30, 1910 - December 13, 2006) He was born in Somerville, Tennessee, the son of Cordellia Henderson and Plez Williamson Rivers, who were both musicians.[3] He developed a self-taught style of slide guitar through playing at local dances in his teens. Little is known about his early life.[4] He claimed to have played with Yank Rachell, Sleepy John Estes, Blind Boy Fuller and Big Joe Williams, among others, and to have been acquainted with Robert Johnson. He also claimed to be the older cousin of Elmore James,[4] to have bought James his first guitar, and to have taught him how to play slide. However, some of these claims are unconfirmed. By the mid 1930s he was based in Chicago, and working with Horace Henderson's band at the Circle Inn, and with pianist Jimmy Walker at the Square Deal Club.[5] He may have first recorded for RCA Victor in 1937, but this is also unconfirmed, and by 1938 may have begun playing electric guitar. His first known recordings were in 1952 for Chance Records, recording the tracks "Lonesome Ole Train" and "Homesick" which gave him his stage name.[4] During the late 1940s and 1950s he worked with both Sonny Boy Williamson II (Rice Miller), and with Elmore James, and in the early 1950s he worked in bands including Baby Face Leroy Foster, Snooky Pryor, Floyd Jones, and Lazy Bill Lucas.[6] He was a longtime member of James' band from 1955 to 1963, contributing to such tracks as "Dust My Broom," "The Sky Is Crying," and "Roll and Tumble." Elmore James is said to have died on Homesick's couch, while the latter frantically searched for the former's heart pills.[7] As a solo performer, he recorded for the Colt and USA labels in 1962, including a cover version of Robert Johnson's "Crossroads". Homesick James's slide guitar style, not as refined as Elmore James', traces back to Johnson's. He also recorded a 1964 album for Prestige Records, Blues On the South Side (Prestige OBCCD 529-2), including another of his best-known covers, "Stones In My Passway", and some tracks for Vanguard that are available on the compilation album Chicago: The Blues Today.[8] One of his own songs, "Gotta Move" (also on Blues On the South Side) was covered (as "Got To Move") both by Elmore James and Fleetwood Mac. In the 1970s he began playing at blues festivals, including some in Europe, often with Snooky Pryor.[4] He continued to record for labels including Delmark, Prestige, Big Bear, Appaloosa and Icehouse Records. Homesick married Rosa Mangiullo, an Italian immigrant, who with her son Tony owns and operates premier blues club, Rosa's Lounge, on the west side of Chicago in the 1980s - they would remain married until his death, although they did not live together other than for a brief period after the wedding. Her son Tony is a well-known blues drummer in Chicago and Europe. Homesick was referred to by name in the Deacon Blue song "Fergus Sings the Blues", in the lyric "Homesick James, my biggest influence". Homesick toured the country with Big Walter Horton and appeared on National Public Radio broadcasts live from college campuses in the late 1970s, backed by Rich Molina, Bradley P. Smith, Eddie Taylor, Guido Sinclair and Paul Nebenzahl. He remained an active performer into his 90s, performing both locally and at international festivals, but stopped recording in 2004. He moved to Springfield, Missouri, where he was cared for during the last years of his life by blues musician and protege John Long, and died there on December 13, 2006. He is buried in Covington, Tennessee. Snooky Pryor (September 15, 1921 -- October 18, 2006) James Edward Pryor was born in Lambert, Mississippi and developed a Delta blues style influenced by both Sonny Boy Williamson I and Sonny Boy Williamson II. He moved to Chicago around 1940. While serving in the U.S. Army he would blow bugle calls through the powerful PA system, which led him to experiment with playing the harmonica that way. Upon discharge from the Army in 1945,...
