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R. L. Burnside

R. L. Burnside (November 23, 1926 – September 1, 2005) was an American blues singer, songwriter and guitarist. He played music for much of his life but received little recognition before the early 1990s. In the latter half of that decade, Burnside recorded and toured with Jon Spencer, garnering crossover appeal and introducing his music to a new fan base in the punk and garage rock scenes.

R. L. Burnside
Burnside performing at the 1982 World's Fair in Knoxville, Tennessee
Background information
Born(1926-11-23)November 23, 1926
Harmontown, Mississippi, U.S.
OriginOxford, Mississippi, U.S.
DiedSeptember 1, 2005(2005-09-01) (aged 78)
Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.
Genres
Instrument(s)
  • Guitar
  • vocals
Years active1960s–2005
LabelsFat Possum

Life and career edit

1926–1959: Early years edit

Burnside was born in 1926[1] to Earnest Burnside and Josie Malone,[2] in either Harmontown,[3] College Hill,[4][5] or Blackwater Creek,[6] all of which are in the rural part of Lafayette County, Mississippi, near the area that would be covered by Sardis Lake a few years later. His first name is given variously as R. L.,[7] Rural,[8][7][n 1] Robert Lee,[6] Rule,[7] or Ruel. His father left the family early on, and R. L. grew up with his mother, grandparents, and several siblings.

He played the harmonica and dabbled with playing guitar, beginning at the age of 16. He said he first played in public at age 21 or 22.[9][10] He learned mostly from Mississippi Fred McDowell, who had lived near Burnside since Burnside was a child. He first heard McDowell playing at age 7 or 8[11] and eventually joined his gigs to play a late set.[10][12] Other local teachers were his wife's brother,[9] his uncle-in-law Ranie Burnette,[11] who was a popular player from Senatobia,[13] the mostly unknown Henry Harden,[14] Son Hibbler, Jesse Vortis, and possibly Stonewall Mays.[15] Burnside cited church singing[12][16] and fife-and-drum picnics as elements of his childhood's musical landscape, and he credited Muddy Waters, Lightnin' Hopkins, and John Lee Hooker as influences in adulthood.[9][10][11]

In the late 1940s[17] he moved to Chicago, where his father had lived since he separated from his mother,[10] in the hope of finding better economic opportunities.[10] He found jobs at metal and glass factories,[11][18][19] had the company of Muddy Waters (his cousin-in-law),[10] and enjoyed the blues scene on Maxwell Street.[2][17] But things did not turn out as he had hoped; within the span of one year his father, two brothers, and two uncles were all murdered in the city.[12][n 2]

Three years after coming to Chicago,[12][17] Burnside went back south. He married Alice Mae Taylor in 1949 or 1950,[20][21][19] his second marriage.[9][n 3] He moved several times in the 1950s, between Memphis, Tennessee, the Mississippi Delta and the hill country of northern Mississippi.[22][8][23] During his time in the Delta, he met bluesmen Robert Lockwood Jr. and Aleck "Rice" Miller.[9][10] It seems it was around that time that Burnside killed a man, possibly at a craps game, was convicted of murder and incarcerated in Parchman Farm.[21][24] He would later relate that his boss at the time had arranged to release him after six months, as he needed Burnside's skills as a tractor driver.[n 4]

1960–1990: Part-time musician edit

He spent the next 45 years, not unlike his early years, in Panola and Tate counties, in northern Mississippi. At first he kept to particularly remote dwellings,[20] working into the 1980s as a sharecropper growing cotton and soybean, as a commercial fisherman on the Tallahatchie River, selling his catch from door to door,[9][26] and as a truck driver.[27] Later he moved closer to Holly Springs. After coming back to Mississippi, and especially after marrying,[14] he picked more local gigs,[17] playing guitar in juke joints and bars[3] (some under his management),[2][11][8][28] at picnics and at his own open house parties,[23][n 5] and at the occasional festival.

His earliest recordings were made in 1967 by George Mitchell, then a graduate student of journalism. Mitchell and his wife went on a 13-day summer trip in Mississippi, which resulted in the first recordings of several country blues artists.[29] He came to Burnside's house near Coldwater on the advice of fife player and maker Othar Turner.[30] Mitchell wrote that Fred McDowell had not told him about Burnside, likely because Burnside posed "big-time competition".[31] Six of the songs, played on an acoustic guitar lent by Mitchell, were released on Arhoolie Records after two years; nine others are on later records. Another album of acoustic material was recorded in 1969 for Adelphi Records, not to be released until thirty years later. Recordings from 1975 had a similar fate.[32][33]

These recordings featured Burnside playing acoustic guitar and singing, and a few tracks had harmonica accompaniment by W.C. Veasey or Ulysse Red Ramsey. Although not recorded, by that time Burnside also played electric guitar.[8][23] His early repertoire came from hill country and Memphis favorites, John Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters,[34] hits by Howlin' Wolf and Elmore James, and sides by Yank Rachell, Lightnin' Hopkins, and Lonesome Sundown.

In 1969 he performed for the first time outside the United States, at a program in Montreal with Lightnin' Hopkins and John Lee Hooker.[9][10] As a solo performer, he made three tours in Europe, appearing before enthusiastic audiences.[23] In 1974 he played at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, the first of nine of these festivals at which he performed.[35] Also in 1974, Tav Falco filmed Burnside in the Brotherhood Sportsmen's Lodge, a juke joint he ran at the time near Como.[36][37][n 6] His performance featured the slide guitarist Kenny Brown, Burnside's friend and understudy, whom he began tutoring in 1971 and claimed as his "adopted son".[41][42] In 1978 Burnside was filmed by Alan Lomax in what remained mostly outtakes of the television documentary The Land Where the Blues Began.[n 7]

A series of recordings in 1979 by the musicologist David Evans for his record label High Water was the first to feature Burnside's Sound Machine, which included his sons Duwayne and Daniel on guitar, his son Joseph on bass, and his son-in-law Calvin Jackson on drums.[20] The band was active mostly in home settings but also joined Burnside in Europe in 1980[23] and 1983. They offered a rare fusion of rural and urban blues, funk, R&B and soul,[8][n 8] which appealed to young Mississippians;[23] their sets included covers of songs by Jimmy Rogers, Little Walter, Albert King and Little Milton. An EP, Sound Machine Groove, was released by Evans's label in the US but had next to no distribution.[43][44] Apart from it, one full album of the same title, a debut of sorts, was licensed for prompt European release by Disques Vogue,[23] and another hour's worth was released by the Memphis label Inside Sounds in 2001.[45]

From 1980 to 1986, Burnside recorded for the Dutch label Old Swingmaster and for the French label Arion, mostly solo or with harmonica accompaniment: Johnny Woods served on some occasions (he also recorded as a lead artist, with guitar accompaniment by Burnside); Curtis Salgado served once in a New Orleans session. Selections focused on hill country material and starker, less danceable songs by Lightnin' Hopkins, Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker. The results were four more LP releases and a videotape under his name, all in European markets.[46][47]

In the mid-1980s Burnside retired from farm work and became more busy with the music.[17] For about 12 years he worked with New Orleans–based harpist Jon (Joni) Morris Neremberg (or Nuremberg).[9][20][8] He appeared before American crowds at such occasions as the 1982 World's Fair, the 1984 Louisiana World Exposition,[20] and the 1986 San Francisco Blues Festival,[48] between international tours.[20][49] By the mid-1980s he toured about "once a year or maybe twice",[17] and by one report in 1985 he had been to Europe 17 times.[9] Recordings from his time with Morris were eventually released on two records, both produced by M.C. Records and Louis X. Erlanger: Acoustic Stories (a session from 1988) and Well, Well, Well (a 2001 compilation of informal recordings provided by Morris).[11]

1991–2005: Commercial success and declining health edit

 
Burnside at the Liri Blues Festival, Italy, in 1992

In the late 1970s or early 1980s, Burnside was introduced and struck a partnership with Junior Kimbrough.[17] Roughly a decade later, his own Burnside Palace had shut down[28][n 9] and the family lived next to the Kimbroughs' new Junior's Place in Chulahoma, Mississippi and collaborated with the counterpart musical family.[11][43][51] The music writer Robert Palmer, teaching for a time in the University of Mississippi in Oxford, frequented the scene with some celebrity musicians, which led to the making in 1990 of the documentary Deep Blues, in which Burnside was prominently featured.

Burnside began recording for the Oxford, Mississippi, label Fat Possum Records in 1991.[1] The label, dedicated to recording aging north Mississippi bluesmen such as Burnside and Junior Kimbrough,[21][52] was founded by two students who had been attending their performances for some years[53][54]—Peter Redvers-Lee, editor of Living Blues magazine, and Matthew Johnson, a writer for the magazine. Burnside remained with Fat Possum from that time until his death. Their first output was Bad Luck City (1992), featuring the Sound Machine. The next, Too Bad Jim (1994), was recorded at Junior's Place and produced by Palmer, with support from Calvin Jackson and Kenny Brown.[51][55] After Jackson moved to Holland,[41][42] Burnside found a new stable band and would usually perform with Brown and drummer Cedric Burnside, his grandson. R.L. played his first art museum gig when Grammy nominee/producer Larry Hoffman brought him to Baltimore to play the Walters Art Museum in February, 1993 as the feature of a Baltimore Folk Music Society concert.

In a New York concert around the release of the documentary Deep Blues, he attracted the attention of Jon Spencer, the leader of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion.[56] He started touring with this group in 1995, both as an opening act and sitting in,[56] gaining many new fans.[57] The 1996 album A Ass Pocket of Whiskey was recorded with Spencer's band and was marketed for their audience, but was credited to Burnside.[56] It gained critical acclaim and received praise from Bono and Iggy Pop; Billboard magazine wrote that "it sounds like no other blues album ever released"[56] and an author there picked it for a year's end critics' poll,[58] but Living Blues opined that it was "perhaps the worst blues album ever made."[59][n 10]

 
Burnside at the Double Door Inn in Charlotte, N.C., in 1998

After parting ways with the Blues Explosion, the label turned to produce music in which recorded materials were remixed by producer Tom Rothrock with an eye to techno, downtempo and hip-hop listeners. The experiment started with a track in Mr. Wizard (1997),[60][61] an album based on a variety of sessions, and matured into a full album with Come On In (1998).[62] The recording artists themselves heard only the final product, but they conceded that with time they came to like it, in part influenced by its popularity.[41][63]

Burnside continued to tour, perhaps more extensively than ever. He opened for the Beastie Boys,[11][64] was a musical guest on Late Night with Conan O'Brien and on HBO's Reverb, provided entertainment at private events such as Richard Gere's birthday party,[21] and participated in shared or showcase bills with other Fat Possum artists, notably T-Model Ford, Paul "Wine" Jones, CeDell Davis, Robert Cage and Robert Belfour. An influx of visitors and young musicians were attracted to Junior's Place, before it burned down in 2000.

Documentary coverage of his contemporaneous life and work expanded too. Bradley Beesley filmed the 60-minute Hill Stomp Hollar, a film about Burnside and other Fat Possum artists, that received a positive response[65] at the 1999 SXSW Film Festival premiere,[66] but that was not approved for release by the label.[67] Much of Beesley's footage and many of his interviews became part of the 77-minute You See Me Laughin', directed by Mandy Stein; it was released by Fat Possum in 2003. A 1999 date at Paris' New Morning club, with Brown and Cedric, was an occasion at which the French blues singer Sophie Kay (also known as Sophie Kertesz) filmed a 52-minute documentary.

Before long, however, Burnside was in declining health. He had an ear infection and underwent heart surgery in 1999.[3][68][69][70] As his tours decreased to a minimum,[71][72] Wish I Was In Heaven Sitting Down (2000) was released, which relegated guitar work to other players (Rick Holmstrom, Smokey Hormel, John Porter) but used Burnside's vocals.[11][73] After a heart attack in 2001, his doctor advised him to stop drinking; Burnside did, but he reported that change left him unable to play.[25] Fat Possum rebounded with A Bothered Mind (2004), an album that used previously recorded guitar tracks, and included collaborations with Kid Rock and Lyrics Born.[74]

These remix albums received mixed reviews, some describing the results as "unnatural"[75] while others lauded the playful spirit,[76] or "the way it yokes authentic blues feeling to new technology".[77] Commercially, the remixes were successful; each surpassed its previous in Billboard's Top Blues Albums chart, as they stayed there for 12–18 weeks' periods (but none entered into the more competitive Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs),[78][n 11] and two tracks from Come On In were included in The Sopranos' soundtrack. "Let My Baby Ride" off Come On In received significant airplay and an ensuing music clip was slotted in MTV's 120 Minutes;[63] the album's "Rollin' & Tumblin'" accompanied a 2002 Nissan TV commercial.[11][82][83] But the live, unremixed album Burnside on Burnside (2001) peaked at number 4 of Billboard's Blues Albums chart[78] and was nominated for a Grammy.[84] – the last article to catch Burnside as an active bandleader, recorded in January 2001 with Brown and Cedric.

In between, Fat Possum licensed and released First Recording (2003), comprising George Mitchell's 1967 recordings in its fullest edition yet, in traditional format.[n 12] In addition, the 1990s and 2000s saw release of several recordings from previous decades by other labels (see above), as well as a couple of new recordings by HighTone Records.

Death and legacy edit

Another heart attack in November 2002 resulted in a surgery in 2003, and short-circuited any future career plans he had.[11][68] Yet Burnside continued as guest singer on occasions, such as at Bonnaroo Music Festival, 2004, his last public appearance.[86] He died at St. Francis Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, on September 1, 2005, at the age of 78.[87] Services were held at Rust College, in Holly Springs, with burial in the Free Springs Cemetery, in Harmontown. Around the time of his death, he resided in Byhalia, Mississippi. His immediate survivors included:[87]

  • His wife: Alice Mae Taylor Burnside (1932–2008),[88] married 1949[19][21]
  • His daughters: Mildred Jean Burnside (1949–2010),[89] Linda Jackson, Brenda Kay Brooks, and Pamela Denise Burnside
  • His sons: Melvin Burnside, R.L. Burnside Jr. (1954–2010),[90] Calvin Burnside, Joseph Burnside, Daniel Burnside, Duwayne Burnside, Dexter Burnside, Garry Burnside, and Rodger Harmon
  • His sisters: Lucille Burnside, Verlyn Burnside, and Mat Burnside
  • His brother: Jesse Monia
  • His 35 grandchildren: Cedric Burnside
  • 32 great-grandchildren

Members of his extended family continue to play blues in the Holly Springs area and in wider circles:

  • His son Duwayne Burnside has played guitar with the North Mississippi Allstars (Polaris; Hill Country Revue with R. L. Burnside). He has operated music venues named after Burnside and Alice Mae in Chulahoma, Memphis,[91][92] Waterford,[93] and Holly Springs[94]
  • His grandson Cedric Burnside has released six albums with four musical partners and toured with Kenny Brown and others
  • His son Garry Burnside used to play bass guitar with Junior Kimbrough, North Mississippi Allstars, and Hill Country Revue; in 2006 he released an album with Cedric
  • His son-in-law Calvin Jackson recorded with blues musicians of Burnside's generation and younger
  • His grandson Kent Burnside is also a touring blues musician. Kent is currently touring with the Flood Brothers and released an album with them in 2016[95]
  • His grandson Cody released four albums and toured with the family and his own band

Burnside won one W. C. Handy Award in 2000 (Traditional Blues Male Artist of the Year),[96] two in 2002 (Traditional Blues Male Artist of the Year; Traditional Blues Album of the Year, Burnside on Burnside),[97][98] and one in 2003 (Traditional Blues Male Artist of The Year);[99] he had 11 unsuccessful nominations in 8 years for the awards, starting in 1982,[100] as well as one for a Grammy. Several of the Mississippi Blues Trail markers, which have been erected since 2006, mention him. In 2014 he was inducted to the Blues Hall of Fame in Memphis.[101]

Burnside's fellow Fat Possum musicians The Black Keys credit him as an influence and interpolated his "Skinny Woman" into their track "Busted".[citation needed]The Black Keys would perform two Burnside covers on their album Delta Kream in 2021 featuring Kenny Brown. Brown along with bassist Eric Deaton would also join The Black Keys for their 2022 tour (supporting the release of Dropout Boogie) to perform the Burnside covers live.

The electronica musician St. Germain used samples of Burnside's "Nightmare Blues" throughout the track "How Dare You", on his 2015 album.[102]

Style edit

 
Burnside performing at the Crystal Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, in January 2001

Burnside had a powerful, expressive voice, that did not fail with old age but rather grew richer,[11][21] and played both electric and acoustic guitar, with and without a slide. His drone-heavy style was more characteristic of North Mississippi hill country blues than Delta blues. Like other country blues musicians, he did not always adhere to strict 12- or 16-bar blues patterns, often adding extra beats to a measure as he saw fit.[103] His rhythms are often based on the fife and drum blues of north Mississippi.[55][104][n 13]

As was the case with his role model John Lee Hooker, Burnside's earliest recordings sound quite similar to one another, even repetitive, in vocal and instrumental styling. Many of these songs eschew traditional chord changes in favor of a single chord[8][30][55] or a simple bassline pattern that repeats throughout. Burnside played the guitar fingerstyle—without a pick—and often in open-G tuning.[34] His vocal style is characterized by a tendency to "break" briefly into falsetto, usually at the end of long notes.

Like his contemporary T-Model Ford, Burnside favored a stripped-down approach to the blues, marked by a quality of rawness. He and his later managers and reviewers maintained his persona as a hard-working man leading a life of struggle,[105] a heavy drinker, latent criminal singing songs of swagger and rebellion.

Burnside knew many toasts—African American narrative folk poems such as "Signifying monkey" and "Tojo Told Hitler"—and fondly recited them between songs at his concerts and on recordings. He narrated long jokes in concerts and social events,[57][106] and many sources noted his quick wit and charisma.

Discography edit

Studio albums edit

  • Sound Machine Groove (1981)
  • Plays and Sings the Mississippi Delta Blues (1981)
  • Mississippi Hill Country Blues (1987)
  • Skinny Woman (1989)
  • Bad Luck City (1992)
  • Too Bad Jim (1994)
  • A Ass Pocket of Whiskey (1996)
  • Mr. Wizard (1997)
  • Acoustic Stories (1997)
  • Come On In (1998)
  • Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down (2000)
  • A Bothered Mind (2004)

Live albums edit

  • Mississippi Blues (1984)
  • Burnside on Burnside (2001)

Compilation albums edit

  • Going Down South (1999)
  • My Black Name a-Ringin' (1999)
  • Well, Well, Well (2001)
  • Raw Electric (2002)
  • No Monkeys on this Train (2003)
  • First Recordings (2003)
  • Rollin' and Tumblin': the King of Hill Country Blues (2010)
  • Long Distance Call (2019)

Films edit

  • Honky Tonk (1974), by Tav Falco
  • The Land Where the Blues Began (1979) by Alan Lomax, John Melville Bishop, and Worth Long in association with the Mississippi Authority for Educational Television
    • American Patchwork: Songs and Stories of America, part 3: "The Land Where the Blues Began" (1990), North Carolina Public TV, a lightly re-edited version of "The Land Where the Blues Began" (1979)
    • The Land Where the Blues Began (2010), restored original version, DVD containing two additional performances by Burnside
  • Deep Blues: A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads (1991), directed by Robert Mugge
  • Hill Stomp Hollar (1999), by Bradley Beesley
  • Un jour avec... R. L. Burnside (1999/2001), by Sophie Kertesz, produced and distributed by Ciné-Rock, Paris OCLC 691729826
  • You See Me Laughin': The Last of the Hill Country Bluesmen (2002), released by Fat Possum Records in 2005, produced and directed by Mandy Stein, Oxford, Mississippi: Plain Jane Productions, Fat Possum Records
  • Richard Johnston: Hill Country Troubadour (2005), directed by Max Shores, Alabama PBS, featuring an interview with Burnside and information about the Holly Springs music community
  • Big Bad Love (2001), directed by Arliss Howard, with soundtrack songs by Burnside and a cameo live performance, MGM/IFC Films
  • Holy Motors (2012), directed by Leos Carax, with an accordion and drum cover of "Let My Baby Ride" by Docteur L

Further reading edit

  • Dessier, Matthieu (2006). The Real Deal: Experiencing Authenticity in the Music of R.L. Burnside. M.A. thesis. University of Mississippi. OCLC 82143665
  • Smirnoff, Marc, ed. (2008). The Oxford American Book of Great Music Writing. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Burnside's headstone reads "R. L. (Rural) Burnside".
  2. ^ Burnside would later draw upon this experience in his work, particularly in his interpretation of Skip James's "Hard Time Killing Floor" and the talking blues "R.L.'s Story", the opening and closing tracks of Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down (2000).
  3. ^ His first marriage is apparently alluded to in a story he would tell in response to questions like "What is the blues about?": "It's when you get to your house, late at night, and the first thing you meet out there in the driveway is the cat, sayin'—[in a well-imitated cat's voice] 'She-ain't-here, She-ain't-here.'—You got the blues then. Your wife done gone." (Cited from "New York Magazine". Newyorkmetro.com: 94. 11 September 1995. ISSN 0028-7369.; similar versions of the story are in "Have You Ever Been Lonely" from A Ass Pocket of Whiskey (1996) and the opening of You See Me Laughin')
  4. ^ About the incident he would recite, "I didn't mean to kill nobody. I just meant to shoot the sonofabitch in the head and two times in the chest. Him dying was between him and the Lord."[25]
  5. ^ Evans provided a few more details: Nelson, Chris (1997-08-02). "Classic R.L. Burnside 'House Party' Style Recordings Reissued". MTV News. Retrieved 2015-06-17., to which the Mississippi Blues Commission adds at: "Tate County Blues". Mississippi Blues Trail.
  6. ^ Some of the 26 minutes of footage is included in You See Me Laughin'. Burnside was instrumental in Falco becoming a guitarist,[38] and Tav Falco's Panther Burns were probably the first to cover, and name, a Burnside composition on record: "Snake Drive" on Behind the Magnolia Curtain, 1981.[39][40] Band member Lorette Velvette produced other early covers in her solo albums.
  7. ^ Later released on a 2010 DVD, and the Alan Lomax Archive's Youtube channel: playlist
  8. ^ In Burnside's words, "they can play rock 'n' roll and disco too".[9]
  9. ^ Like many joints that were abandoned in response to the crack epidemic.[11][50]
  10. ^ His work with Jon Spencer was later cited as an influence by Hillstomp[1] and covered on record by The Immortal Lee County Killers.[citation needed]
  11. ^ From a hip-hop perspective the Fat Possum efforts were among the very first to incorporate the blues, but ultimately did not alter the younger genre's landscape.[79] One clear precursor is found in The Wolf that House Built from Little Axe,[80] others are by Chris Thomas (King). Contemporary projects, that used archival blues samples, included Moby's extremely successful Play (1999), Tangle Eye's remix of Alan Lomax material (2004), and with a broader mix, Alabama 3's Exile on Coldharbour Lane (1997).[81]
  12. ^ In interviews Watson and Johnson of Fat Possum have indicated that Burnside was the label's best seller and enabled them to finance less commercially-assured projects, and sign new artists.[25][52][28][85]
  13. ^ Compare Burnside's vocal imitation of fife and drum music: You See Me Laughin' (see filmography), min. 25:55ff.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Skelly, Richard. "R.L. Burnside". AllMusic. Retrieved December 30, 2011.
  2. ^ a b c Bruin, Leo (1981). Liner notes, R. L. Burnside Plays and Sings the Mississippi Delta Blues. scan
  3. ^ a b c "Blues Veteran R.L. Burnside Dies". Billboard.com. Retrieved 20 October 2011.
  4. ^ Miller, David Michael. Birthplaces of Mississippi Blues Artists (Map).
  5. ^ "Oxford Blues". Mississippi Blues Trail.
  6. ^ a b Eagle, Bob L.; LeBlanc, Eric S. (2013). Blues: A Regional Experience. ABC-CLIO. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-313-34424-4.
  7. ^ a b c Scott Barretta. "Burnside, R. L." The Mississippi Encyclopedia. Ted Ownby and Charles Reagan Wilson, eds. University Press of Mississippi, 2017. p. 155. ISBN 9781496811592 "His given name appears to have been R. L.; his friends often called him Rule or Rural."
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Gérard Herzhaft (1992). "R. L Burnside". Encyclopedia of the Blues (second ed.). University of Arkansas Press. pp. 28–29. ISBN 978-1-61075-139-1.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j [Jeff Hannusch] (August 1985). Connie Atkinson (ed.). "A Bluesman Lives the Life [interview]". Wavelength: New Orleans Music Magazine. No. 58. Nauman S. Scott. pp. 23–24.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Mabe, Ed (November 1999). "R. L. Burnside: One Badass Bluesman: Interview and Photos". Perfect Sound Forever.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m John Puckett (December 2004). "R.L. Burnside: North Mississippi Blues Legend". Vintage Guitar. Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  12. ^ a b c d Filmed interview. You See Me Laughin' (see filmography), minutes 25–30.
  13. ^ Evans, David (1978), Afro-American Folk Music from Tate and Panola Counties, Mississippi (PDF), Archive of Folk Song, Library of Congress, p. 16
  14. ^ a b Bruin, Leo, and Laundre, Kent. Liner notes of Mississippi Hill Country Blues. Swingmaster CD 2201. scan 1, scan 2
  15. ^ According to Axel Küstner, who met them both in 1978: Liner notes to 'Mississippi Delta Blues', 1982: discogs, scan.
  16. ^ Nelson, Chris (2000-12-08). "The Story Behind R.L. Burnside's Sad 'Story'". MTV News. Retrieved 2015-06-22.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g Stiles, Ray M. (1998-08-01). "Interview with R.L. Burnside & Kenny Brown". Blues on Stage.
  18. ^ Leigh, Spencer (2005-09-03). "R. L. Burnside". Obituaries. The Independent. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
  19. ^ a b c "R. L. Burnside". Contemporary Black Biography. Gale Group. 2006. Retrieved 2015-05-23.
  20. ^ a b c d e f Sylvester Oliver (2005-09-29). "A memoriam to bluesman R.L. Burnside". The South Reporter: ; .
  21. ^ a b c d e f McInerney, Jay. "White Man at the Door: One Man's Mission to Record the 'Dirty Blues' – before Everyone Dies." New Yorker (February 4, 2002), page 55.
  22. ^ "R.L.'s Story", interview clip from Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down (2000)
  23. ^ a b c d e f g Evans, David (1980). Notes to High Water 410 EP (scan), and to Sound Machine Groove, 1981/1997 (scan).
  24. ^ "Parchman Farm". Mississippi Blues Trail.
  25. ^ a b c Grant, Richard (2003-11-16). "Delta Force". Observer Music Monthly. Retrieved 2010-02-26.
  26. ^ "Charleston interview", audio clip, recorded May 1986), in Well, Well, Well (2001)
  27. ^ Fortunato, John (1998). "R.L. Burnside Welcomes All to 'Come On In'". beermelodies. Retrieved 2015-07-09.
  28. ^ a b c Rubin, Mike (May 1997). "Call of the Wild". Spin. pp. 74–82, 128–131. ISSN 0886-3032.
  29. ^ Stephen McDill (August 16, 2013). . Mississippi Business Journal. Archived from the original on June 29, 2015. Retrieved 2015-06-13.
  30. ^ a b George Mitchell; David Evans. Arhoolie 1042 (1969) liner notes (scans: 1, 2)
  31. ^ Booklet of The George Mitchell Collection (2007), FP 1114. Quoted in Jeff Harris (2008-03-23). "A Look At The George Mitchell Collection - Part 2". Big Road Blues. Retrieved 2015-06-03.
  32. ^ Wolf LP 120.917 leaflet (scan)
  33. ^ "The King Of Hill Country Blues: Rollin' & Tumblin'". Discogs.com. 2010.
  34. ^ a b Arhoolie 1042 (1969) leaflet (scan)
  35. ^ New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Archive – performers list. See also 1975 setlist
  36. ^ Morse, Erik. "Bomb — Artists in Conversation: Tav Falco". Bomb. Retrieved 2015-06-07.
  37. ^ "Tav Falco Panther Burns: Films and Videos". 7 December 2014.
  38. ^ Richard A. Pleuger (May 2006). "Inside the Invisible Empire: My Travels with Rock 'n' Roll Legend Tav Falco and His Unapproachable Panther Burns". Arthur Magazine (21). Retrieved 2015-06-12.
  39. ^ Wallace Lester, Wallace. "Record Of The Issue - Tav Falco's "Behind The Magnolia Curtain"". The Local Voice. No. 159. Oxford, Mississippi. Retrieved 2015-06-12.
  40. ^ "R.L. Burnside | Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  41. ^ a b c Michael Koster; Carter Grice (Summer 1999). . Thirsty Ear Magazine. Archived from the original on 2013-09-09.
  42. ^ a b Cedric Burnside and Kenny Brown. Interview. Jefferson Blues Magazine, Issue 141, March 2004. Swedish original, via Google Translate
  43. ^ a b James Lien (November 1998). "Mississippi Juke Joints". CMJ New Music Monthly.
  44. ^ "New Blues Label Founded at Memphis State Univ". Billboard. 6 September 1980. p. 8. ISSN 0006-2510.
  45. ^ "Raw Electric: 1979–1980". Discogs.com. 2001.
  46. ^ Jean-Pierre Urbain. "CD Review: R.L.BURNSIDE on SWINGMASTER". Retrieved 2016-03-21 – via Google Groups.
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  106. ^ E.g. on Well, Well, Well (2001) and Burnside on Burnside (2001)

External links edit

  • R. L. Burnside at AllMusic  
  • Fat Possum artist website
  • Slade's R. L. Burnside page 2018-07-09 at the Wayback Machine
  • Illustrated R. L. Burnside discography

burnside, stage, director, burnside, november, 1926, september, 2005, american, blues, singer, songwriter, guitarist, played, music, much, life, received, little, recognition, before, early, 1990s, latter, half, that, decade, burnside, recorded, toured, with, . For the stage director see R H Burnside R L Burnside November 23 1926 September 1 2005 was an American blues singer songwriter and guitarist He played music for much of his life but received little recognition before the early 1990s In the latter half of that decade Burnside recorded and toured with Jon Spencer garnering crossover appeal and introducing his music to a new fan base in the punk and garage rock scenes R L BurnsideBurnside performing at the 1982 World s Fair in Knoxville TennesseeBackground informationBorn 1926 11 23 November 23 1926Harmontown Mississippi U S OriginOxford Mississippi U S DiedSeptember 1 2005 2005 09 01 aged 78 Memphis Tennessee U S GenresBlueshill country bluesInstrument s GuitarvocalsYears active1960s 2005LabelsFat Possum Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 1926 1959 Early years 1 2 1960 1990 Part time musician 1 3 1991 2005 Commercial success and declining health 1 4 Death and legacy 2 Style 3 Discography 3 1 Studio albums 3 2 Live albums 3 3 Compilation albums 4 Films 5 Further reading 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksLife and career edit1926 1959 Early years edit Burnside was born in 1926 1 to Earnest Burnside and Josie Malone 2 in either Harmontown 3 College Hill 4 5 or Blackwater Creek 6 all of which are in the rural part of Lafayette County Mississippi near the area that would be covered by Sardis Lake a few years later His first name is given variously as R L 7 Rural 8 7 n 1 Robert Lee 6 Rule 7 or Ruel His father left the family early on and R L grew up with his mother grandparents and several siblings He played the harmonica and dabbled with playing guitar beginning at the age of 16 He said he first played in public at age 21 or 22 9 10 He learned mostly from Mississippi Fred McDowell who had lived near Burnside since Burnside was a child He first heard McDowell playing at age 7 or 8 11 and eventually joined his gigs to play a late set 10 12 Other local teachers were his wife s brother 9 his uncle in law Ranie Burnette 11 who was a popular player from Senatobia 13 the mostly unknown Henry Harden 14 Son Hibbler Jesse Vortis and possibly Stonewall Mays 15 Burnside cited church singing 12 16 and fife and drum picnics as elements of his childhood s musical landscape and he credited Muddy Waters Lightnin Hopkins and John Lee Hooker as influences in adulthood 9 10 11 In the late 1940s 17 he moved to Chicago where his father had lived since he separated from his mother 10 in the hope of finding better economic opportunities 10 He found jobs at metal and glass factories 11 18 19 had the company of Muddy Waters his cousin in law 10 and enjoyed the blues scene on Maxwell Street 2 17 But things did not turn out as he had hoped within the span of one year his father two brothers and two uncles were all murdered in the city 12 n 2 Three years after coming to Chicago 12 17 Burnside went back south He married Alice Mae Taylor in 1949 or 1950 20 21 19 his second marriage 9 n 3 He moved several times in the 1950s between Memphis Tennessee the Mississippi Delta and the hill country of northern Mississippi 22 8 23 During his time in the Delta he met bluesmen Robert Lockwood Jr and Aleck Rice Miller 9 10 It seems it was around that time that Burnside killed a man possibly at a craps game was convicted of murder and incarcerated in Parchman Farm 21 24 He would later relate that his boss at the time had arranged to release him after six months as he needed Burnside s skills as a tractor driver n 4 1960 1990 Part time musician edit He spent the next 45 years not unlike his early years in Panola and Tate counties in northern Mississippi At first he kept to particularly remote dwellings 20 working into the 1980s as a sharecropper growing cotton and soybean as a commercial fisherman on the Tallahatchie River selling his catch from door to door 9 26 and as a truck driver 27 Later he moved closer to Holly Springs After coming back to Mississippi and especially after marrying 14 he picked more local gigs 17 playing guitar in juke joints and bars 3 some under his management 2 11 8 28 at picnics and at his own open house parties 23 n 5 and at the occasional festival His earliest recordings were made in 1967 by George Mitchell then a graduate student of journalism Mitchell and his wife went on a 13 day summer trip in Mississippi which resulted in the first recordings of several country blues artists 29 He came to Burnside s house near Coldwater on the advice of fife player and maker Othar Turner 30 Mitchell wrote that Fred McDowell had not told him about Burnside likely because Burnside posed big time competition 31 Six of the songs played on an acoustic guitar lent by Mitchell were released on Arhoolie Records after two years nine others are on later records Another album of acoustic material was recorded in 1969 for Adelphi Records not to be released until thirty years later Recordings from 1975 had a similar fate 32 33 These recordings featured Burnside playing acoustic guitar and singing and a few tracks had harmonica accompaniment by W C Veasey or Ulysse Red Ramsey Although not recorded by that time Burnside also played electric guitar 8 23 His early repertoire came from hill country and Memphis favorites John Lee Hooker Muddy Waters 34 hits by Howlin Wolf and Elmore James and sides by Yank Rachell Lightnin Hopkins and Lonesome Sundown In 1969 he performed for the first time outside the United States at a program in Montreal with Lightnin Hopkins and John Lee Hooker 9 10 As a solo performer he made three tours in Europe appearing before enthusiastic audiences 23 In 1974 he played at the New Orleans Jazz amp Heritage Festival the first of nine of these festivals at which he performed 35 Also in 1974 Tav Falco filmed Burnside in the Brotherhood Sportsmen s Lodge a juke joint he ran at the time near Como 36 37 n 6 His performance featured the slide guitarist Kenny Brown Burnside s friend and understudy whom he began tutoring in 1971 and claimed as his adopted son 41 42 In 1978 Burnside was filmed by Alan Lomax in what remained mostly outtakes of the television documentary The Land Where the Blues Began n 7 A series of recordings in 1979 by the musicologist David Evans for his record label High Water was the first to feature Burnside s Sound Machine which included his sons Duwayne and Daniel on guitar his son Joseph on bass and his son in law Calvin Jackson on drums 20 The band was active mostly in home settings but also joined Burnside in Europe in 1980 23 and 1983 They offered a rare fusion of rural and urban blues funk R amp B and soul 8 n 8 which appealed to young Mississippians 23 their sets included covers of songs by Jimmy Rogers Little Walter Albert King and Little Milton An EP Sound Machine Groove was released by Evans s label in the US but had next to no distribution 43 44 Apart from it one full album of the same title a debut of sorts was licensed for prompt European release by Disques Vogue 23 and another hour s worth was released by the Memphis label Inside Sounds in 2001 45 From 1980 to 1986 Burnside recorded for the Dutch label Old Swingmaster and for the French label Arion mostly solo or with harmonica accompaniment Johnny Woods served on some occasions he also recorded as a lead artist with guitar accompaniment by Burnside Curtis Salgado served once in a New Orleans session Selections focused on hill country material and starker less danceable songs by Lightnin Hopkins Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker The results were four more LP releases and a videotape under his name all in European markets 46 47 In the mid 1980s Burnside retired from farm work and became more busy with the music 17 For about 12 years he worked with New Orleans based harpist Jon Joni Morris Neremberg or Nuremberg 9 20 8 He appeared before American crowds at such occasions as the 1982 World s Fair the 1984 Louisiana World Exposition 20 and the 1986 San Francisco Blues Festival 48 between international tours 20 49 By the mid 1980s he toured about once a year or maybe twice 17 and by one report in 1985 he had been to Europe 17 times 9 Recordings from his time with Morris were eventually released on two records both produced by M C Records and Louis X Erlanger Acoustic Stories a session from 1988 and Well Well Well a 2001 compilation of informal recordings provided by Morris 11 1991 2005 Commercial success and declining health edit nbsp Burnside at the Liri Blues Festival Italy in 1992 In the late 1970s or early 1980s Burnside was introduced and struck a partnership with Junior Kimbrough 17 Roughly a decade later his own Burnside Palace had shut down 28 n 9 and the family lived next to the Kimbroughs new Junior s Place in Chulahoma Mississippi and collaborated with the counterpart musical family 11 43 51 The music writer Robert Palmer teaching for a time in the University of Mississippi in Oxford frequented the scene with some celebrity musicians which led to the making in 1990 of the documentary Deep Blues in which Burnside was prominently featured Burnside began recording for the Oxford Mississippi label Fat Possum Records in 1991 1 The label dedicated to recording aging north Mississippi bluesmen such as Burnside and Junior Kimbrough 21 52 was founded by two students who had been attending their performances for some years 53 54 Peter Redvers Lee editor of Living Blues magazine and Matthew Johnson a writer for the magazine Burnside remained with Fat Possum from that time until his death Their first output was Bad Luck City 1992 featuring the Sound Machine The next Too Bad Jim 1994 was recorded at Junior s Place and produced by Palmer with support from Calvin Jackson and Kenny Brown 51 55 After Jackson moved to Holland 41 42 Burnside found a new stable band and would usually perform with Brown and drummer Cedric Burnside his grandson R L played his first art museum gig when Grammy nominee producer Larry Hoffman brought him to Baltimore to play the Walters Art Museum in February 1993 as the feature of a Baltimore Folk Music Society concert In a New York concert around the release of the documentary Deep Blues he attracted the attention of Jon Spencer the leader of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion 56 He started touring with this group in 1995 both as an opening act and sitting in 56 gaining many new fans 57 The 1996 album A Ass Pocket of Whiskey was recorded with Spencer s band and was marketed for their audience but was credited to Burnside 56 It gained critical acclaim and received praise from Bono and Iggy Pop Billboard magazine wrote that it sounds like no other blues album ever released 56 and an author there picked it for a year s end critics poll 58 but Living Blues opined that it was perhaps the worst blues album ever made 59 n 10 nbsp Burnside at the Double Door Inn in Charlotte N C in 1998 After parting ways with the Blues Explosion the label turned to produce music in which recorded materials were remixed by producer Tom Rothrock with an eye to techno downtempo and hip hop listeners The experiment started with a track in Mr Wizard 1997 60 61 an album based on a variety of sessions and matured into a full album with Come On In 1998 62 The recording artists themselves heard only the final product but they conceded that with time they came to like it in part influenced by its popularity 41 63 Burnside continued to tour perhaps more extensively than ever He opened for the Beastie Boys 11 64 was a musical guest on Late Night with Conan O Brien and on HBO s Reverb provided entertainment at private events such as Richard Gere s birthday party 21 and participated in shared or showcase bills with other Fat Possum artists notably T Model Ford Paul Wine Jones CeDell Davis Robert Cage and Robert Belfour An influx of visitors and young musicians were attracted to Junior s Place before it burned down in 2000 Documentary coverage of his contemporaneous life and work expanded too Bradley Beesley filmed the 60 minute Hill Stomp Hollar a film about Burnside and other Fat Possum artists that received a positive response 65 at the 1999 SXSW Film Festival premiere 66 but that was not approved for release by the label 67 Much of Beesley s footage and many of his interviews became part of the 77 minute You See Me Laughin directed by Mandy Stein it was released by Fat Possum in 2003 A 1999 date at Paris New Morning club with Brown and Cedric was an occasion at which the French blues singer Sophie Kay also known as Sophie Kertesz filmed a 52 minute documentary Before long however Burnside was in declining health He had an ear infection and underwent heart surgery in 1999 3 68 69 70 As his tours decreased to a minimum 71 72 Wish I Was In Heaven Sitting Down 2000 was released which relegated guitar work to other players Rick Holmstrom Smokey Hormel John Porter but used Burnside s vocals 11 73 After a heart attack in 2001 his doctor advised him to stop drinking Burnside did but he reported that change left him unable to play 25 Fat Possum rebounded with A Bothered Mind 2004 an album that used previously recorded guitar tracks and included collaborations with Kid Rock and Lyrics Born 74 These remix albums received mixed reviews some describing the results as unnatural 75 while others lauded the playful spirit 76 or the way it yokes authentic blues feeling to new technology 77 Commercially the remixes were successful each surpassed its previous in Billboard s Top Blues Albums chart as they stayed there for 12 18 weeks periods but none entered into the more competitive Hot R amp B Hip Hop Songs 78 n 11 and two tracks from Come On In were included in The Sopranos soundtrack Let My Baby Ride off Come On In received significant airplay and an ensuing music clip was slotted in MTV s 120 Minutes 63 the album s Rollin amp Tumblin accompanied a 2002 Nissan TV commercial 11 82 83 But the live unremixed album Burnside on Burnside 2001 peaked at number 4 of Billboard s Blues Albums chart 78 and was nominated for a Grammy 84 the last article to catch Burnside as an active bandleader recorded in January 2001 with Brown and Cedric In between Fat Possum licensed and released First Recording 2003 comprising George Mitchell s 1967 recordings in its fullest edition yet in traditional format n 12 In addition the 1990s and 2000s saw release of several recordings from previous decades by other labels see above as well as a couple of new recordings by HighTone Records Death and legacy edit Another heart attack in November 2002 resulted in a surgery in 2003 and short circuited any future career plans he had 11 68 Yet Burnside continued as guest singer on occasions such as at Bonnaroo Music Festival 2004 his last public appearance 86 He died at St Francis Hospital in Memphis Tennessee on September 1 2005 at the age of 78 87 Services were held at Rust College in Holly Springs with burial in the Free Springs Cemetery in Harmontown Around the time of his death he resided in Byhalia Mississippi His immediate survivors included 87 His wife Alice Mae Taylor Burnside 1932 2008 88 married 1949 19 21 His daughters Mildred Jean Burnside 1949 2010 89 Linda Jackson Brenda Kay Brooks and Pamela Denise Burnside His sons Melvin Burnside R L Burnside Jr 1954 2010 90 Calvin Burnside Joseph Burnside Daniel Burnside Duwayne Burnside Dexter Burnside Garry Burnside and Rodger Harmon His sisters Lucille Burnside Verlyn Burnside and Mat Burnside His brother Jesse Monia His 35 grandchildren Cedric Burnside 32 great grandchildren Members of his extended family continue to play blues in the Holly Springs area and in wider circles His son Duwayne Burnside has played guitar with the North Mississippi Allstars Polaris Hill Country Revue with R L Burnside He has operated music venues named after Burnside and Alice Mae in Chulahoma Memphis 91 92 Waterford 93 and Holly Springs 94 His grandson Cedric Burnside has released six albums with four musical partners and toured with Kenny Brown and others His son Garry Burnside used to play bass guitar with Junior Kimbrough North Mississippi Allstars and Hill Country Revue in 2006 he released an album with Cedric His son in law Calvin Jackson recorded with blues musicians of Burnside s generation and younger His grandson Kent Burnside is also a touring blues musician Kent is currently touring with the Flood Brothers and released an album with them in 2016 95 His grandson Cody released four albums and toured with the family and his own band Burnside won one W C Handy Award in 2000 Traditional Blues Male Artist of the Year 96 two in 2002 Traditional Blues Male Artist of the Year Traditional Blues Album of the Year Burnside on Burnside 97 98 and one in 2003 Traditional Blues Male Artist of The Year 99 he had 11 unsuccessful nominations in 8 years for the awards starting in 1982 100 as well as one for a Grammy Several of the Mississippi Blues Trail markers which have been erected since 2006 mention him In 2014 he was inducted to the Blues Hall of Fame in Memphis 101 Burnside s fellow Fat Possum musicians The Black Keys credit him as an influence and interpolated his Skinny Woman into their track Busted citation needed The Black Keys would perform two Burnside covers on their album Delta Kream in 2021 featuring Kenny Brown Brown along with bassist Eric Deaton would also join The Black Keys for their 2022 tour supporting the release of Dropout Boogie to perform the Burnside covers live The electronica musician St Germain used samples of Burnside s Nightmare Blues throughout the track How Dare You on his 2015 album 102 Style edit nbsp Burnside performing at the Crystal Ballroom in Portland Oregon in January 2001 Burnside had a powerful expressive voice that did not fail with old age but rather grew richer 11 21 and played both electric and acoustic guitar with and without a slide His drone heavy style was more characteristic of North Mississippi hill country blues than Delta blues Like other country blues musicians he did not always adhere to strict 12 or 16 bar blues patterns often adding extra beats to a measure as he saw fit 103 His rhythms are often based on the fife and drum blues of north Mississippi 55 104 n 13 As was the case with his role model John Lee Hooker Burnside s earliest recordings sound quite similar to one another even repetitive in vocal and instrumental styling Many of these songs eschew traditional chord changes in favor of a single chord 8 30 55 or a simple bassline pattern that repeats throughout Burnside played the guitar fingerstyle without a pick and often in open G tuning 34 His vocal style is characterized by a tendency to break briefly into falsetto usually at the end of long notes Like his contemporary T Model Ford Burnside favored a stripped down approach to the blues marked by a quality of rawness He and his later managers and reviewers maintained his persona as a hard working man leading a life of struggle 105 a heavy drinker latent criminal singing songs of swagger and rebellion Burnside knew many toasts African American narrative folk poems such as Signifying monkey and Tojo Told Hitler and fondly recited them between songs at his concerts and on recordings He narrated long jokes in concerts and social events 57 106 and many sources noted his quick wit and charisma Discography editStudio albums edit Sound Machine Groove 1981 Plays and Sings the Mississippi Delta Blues 1981 Mississippi Hill Country Blues 1987 Skinny Woman 1989 Bad Luck City 1992 Too Bad Jim 1994 A Ass Pocket of Whiskey 1996 Mr Wizard 1997 Acoustic Stories 1997 Come On In 1998 Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down 2000 A Bothered Mind 2004 Live albums edit Mississippi Blues 1984 Burnside on Burnside 2001 Compilation albums edit Going Down South 1999 My Black Name a Ringin 1999 Well Well Well 2001 Raw Electric 2002 No Monkeys on this Train 2003 First Recordings 2003 Rollin and Tumblin the King of Hill Country Blues 2010 Long Distance Call 2019 Films editHonky Tonk 1974 by Tav Falco The Land Where the Blues Began 1979 by Alan Lomax John Melville Bishop and Worth Long in association with the Mississippi Authority for Educational Television American Patchwork Songs and Stories of America part 3 The Land Where the Blues Began 1990 North Carolina Public TV a lightly re edited version of The Land Where the Blues Began 1979 The Land Where the Blues Began 2010 restored original version DVD containing two additional performances by Burnside Deep Blues A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads 1991 directed by Robert Mugge Hill Stomp Hollar 1999 by Bradley Beesley Un jour avec R L Burnside 1999 2001 by Sophie Kertesz produced and distributed by Cine Rock Paris OCLC 691729826 You See Me Laughin The Last of the Hill Country Bluesmen 2002 released by Fat Possum Records in 2005 produced and directed by Mandy Stein Oxford Mississippi Plain Jane Productions Fat Possum Records Richard Johnston Hill Country Troubadour 2005 directed by Max Shores Alabama PBS featuring an interview with Burnside and information about the Holly Springs music community Big Bad Love 2001 directed by Arliss Howard with soundtrack songs by Burnside and a cameo live performance MGM IFC Films Holy Motors 2012 directed by Leos Carax with an accordion and drum cover of Let My Baby Ride by Docteur LFurther reading editDessier Matthieu 2006 The Real Deal Experiencing Authenticity in the Music of R L Burnside M A thesis University of Mississippi OCLC 82143665 Smirnoff Marc ed 2008 The Oxford American Book of Great Music Writing Fayetteville University of Arkansas Notes edit Burnside s headstone reads R L Rural Burnside Burnside would later draw upon this experience in his work particularly in his interpretation of Skip James s Hard Time Killing Floor and the talking blues R L s Story the opening and closing tracks of Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down 2000 His first marriage is apparently alluded to in a story he would tell in response to questions like What is the blues about It s when you get to your house late at night and the first thing you meet out there in the driveway is the cat sayin in a well imitated cat s voice She ain t here She ain t here You got the blues then Your wife done gone Cited from New York Magazine Newyorkmetro com 94 11 September 1995 ISSN 0028 7369 similar versions of the story are in Have You Ever Been Lonely from A Ass Pocket of Whiskey 1996 and the opening of You See Me Laughin About the incident he would recite I didn t mean to kill nobody I just meant to shoot the sonofabitch in the head and two times in the chest Him dying was between him and the Lord 25 Evans provided a few more details Nelson Chris 1997 08 02 Classic R L Burnside House Party Style Recordings Reissued MTV News Retrieved 2015 06 17 to which the Mississippi Blues Commission adds at Tate County Blues Mississippi Blues Trail Some of the 26 minutes of footage is included in You See Me Laughin Burnside was instrumental in Falco becoming a guitarist 38 and Tav Falco s Panther Burns were probably the first to cover and name a Burnside composition on record Snake Drive on Behind the Magnolia Curtain 1981 39 40 Band member Lorette Velvette produced other early covers in her solo albums Later released on a 2010 DVD and the Alan Lomax Archive s Youtube channel playlist In Burnside s words they can play rock n roll and disco too 9 Like many joints that were abandoned in response to the crack epidemic 11 50 His work with Jon Spencer was later cited as an influence by Hillstomp 1 and covered on record by The Immortal Lee County Killers citation needed From a hip hop perspective the Fat Possum efforts were among the very first to incorporate the blues but ultimately did not alter the younger genre s landscape 79 One clear precursor is found in The Wolf that House Built from Little Axe 80 others are by Chris Thomas King Contemporary projects that used archival blues samples included Moby s extremely successful Play 1999 Tangle Eye s remix of Alan Lomax material 2004 and with a broader mix Alabama 3 s Exile on Coldharbour Lane 1997 81 In interviews Watson and Johnson of Fat Possum have indicated that Burnside was the label s best seller and enabled them to finance less commercially assured projects and sign new artists 25 52 28 85 Compare Burnside s vocal imitation of fife and drum music You See Me Laughin see filmography min 25 55ff References edit a b c Skelly Richard R L Burnside AllMusic Retrieved December 30 2011 a b c Bruin Leo 1981 Liner notes R L Burnside Plays and Sings the Mississippi Delta Blues scan a b c Blues Veteran R L Burnside Dies Billboard com Retrieved 20 October 2011 Miller David Michael Birthplaces of Mississippi Blues Artists Map Oxford Blues Mississippi Blues Trail a b Eagle Bob L LeBlanc Eric S 2013 Blues A Regional Experience ABC CLIO p 118 ISBN 978 0 313 34424 4 a b c Scott Barretta Burnside R L The Mississippi Encyclopedia Ted Ownby and Charles Reagan Wilson eds University Press of Mississippi 2017 p 155 ISBN 9781496811592 His given name appears to have been R L his friends often called him Rule or Rural a b c d e f g Gerard Herzhaft 1992 R L Burnside Encyclopedia of the Blues second ed University of Arkansas Press pp 28 29 ISBN 978 1 61075 139 1 a b c d e f g h i j Jeff Hannusch August 1985 Connie Atkinson ed A Bluesman Lives the Life interview Wavelength New Orleans Music Magazine No 58 Nauman S Scott pp 23 24 a b c d e f g h Mabe Ed November 1999 R L Burnside One Badass Bluesman Interview and Photos Perfect Sound Forever a b c d e f g h i j k l m John Puckett December 2004 R L Burnside North Mississippi Blues Legend Vintage Guitar Retrieved 2015 04 30 a b c d Filmed interview You See Me Laughin see filmography minutes 25 30 Evans David 1978 Afro American Folk Music from Tate and Panola Counties Mississippi PDF Archive of Folk Song Library of Congress p 16 a b Bruin Leo and Laundre Kent Liner notes of Mississippi Hill Country Blues Swingmaster CD 2201 scan 1 scan 2 According to Axel Kustner who met them both in 1978 Liner notes to Mississippi Delta Blues 1982 discogs scan Nelson Chris 2000 12 08 The Story Behind R L Burnside s Sad Story MTV News Retrieved 2015 06 22 a b c d e f g Stiles Ray M 1998 08 01 Interview with R L Burnside amp Kenny Brown Blues on Stage Leigh Spencer 2005 09 03 R L Burnside Obituaries The Independent Retrieved 2011 10 20 a b c R L Burnside Contemporary Black Biography Gale Group 2006 Retrieved 2015 05 23 a b c d e f Sylvester Oliver 2005 09 29 A memoriam to bluesman R L Burnside The South Reporter Part 1 Part 2 a b c d e f McInerney Jay White Man at the Door One Man s Mission to Record the Dirty Blues before Everyone Dies New Yorker February 4 2002 page 55 R L s Story interview clip from Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down 2000 a b c d e f g Evans David 1980 Notes to High Water 410 EP scan and to Sound Machine Groove 1981 1997 scan Parchman Farm Mississippi Blues Trail a b c Grant Richard 2003 11 16 Delta Force Observer Music Monthly Retrieved 2010 02 26 Charleston interview audio clip recorded May 1986 in Well Well Well 2001 Fortunato John 1998 R L Burnside Welcomes All to Come On In beermelodies Retrieved 2015 07 09 a b c Rubin Mike May 1997 Call of the Wild Spin pp 74 82 128 131 ISSN 0886 3032 Stephen McDill August 16 2013 Summer of Blues Thirteen Days in the Hill Country Mississippi Business Journal Archived from the original on June 29 2015 Retrieved 2015 06 13 a b George Mitchell David Evans Arhoolie 1042 1969 liner notes scans 1 2 Booklet of The George Mitchell Collection 2007 FP 1114 Quoted in Jeff Harris 2008 03 23 A Look At The George Mitchell Collection Part 2 Big Road Blues Retrieved 2015 06 03 Wolf LP 120 917 leaflet scan The King Of Hill Country Blues Rollin amp Tumblin Discogs com 2010 a b Arhoolie 1042 1969 leaflet scan New Orleans Jazz amp Heritage Archive performers list See also 1975 setlist Morse Erik Bomb Artists in Conversation Tav Falco Bomb Retrieved 2015 06 07 Tav Falco Panther Burns Films and Videos 7 December 2014 Richard A Pleuger May 2006 Inside the Invisible Empire My Travels with Rock n Roll Legend Tav Falco and His Unapproachable Panther Burns Arthur Magazine 21 Retrieved 2015 06 12 Wallace Lester Wallace Record Of The Issue Tav Falco s Behind The Magnolia Curtain The Local Voice No 159 Oxford Mississippi Retrieved 2015 06 12 R L Burnside Credits AllMusic Retrieved 2015 09 07 a b c Michael Koster Carter Grice Summer 1999 Kenny Brown America s Finest Slide Guitar Player interview Thirsty Ear Magazine Archived from the original on 2013 09 09 a b Cedric Burnside and Kenny Brown Interview Jefferson Blues Magazine Issue 141 March 2004 Swedish original via Google Translate a b James Lien November 1998 Mississippi Juke Joints CMJ New Music Monthly New Blues Label Founded at Memphis State Univ Billboard 6 September 1980 p 8 ISSN 0006 2510 Raw Electric 1979 1980 Discogs com 2001 Jean Pierre Urbain CD Review R L BURNSIDE on SWINGMASTER Retrieved 2016 03 21 via Google Groups R L Burnside With Johnny Woods Live 1984 1986 Discogs com 2008 Part 2 was filmed in Swingmaster s record shop Groningen The Netherlands in 1984 and was previously issued as a video by Swingmaster 1986 Archives San Francisco Blues Festival Vanna Pescatori 1990 11 04 Cuneo il sound di Burnside e Morris La Stampa Cuneo in Italian p 7 Retrieved 2015 06 27 Allison Stewart 2002 12 06 Vintage T Model Ford is the real deal Chicago Tribune a b Sinclair John 1993 Robert Palmer Site Specific Music interview Johnsinclair us Archived from the original on June 26 2015 Retrieved June 24 2015 a b Gill Andy 24 June 2005 We ve Still Got the Blues The Independent Archived from the original on July 22 2015 Retrieved 2014 01 23 Morris Chris 11 June 1994 Mississippi Labels Tap into Wealth of Delta Blues Talent Billboard Nielsen Business Media pp 1 95 ISSN 0006 2510 Dixon Michael Winter 1997 Fat Possum A Rocky Road for the Roots Label Blues Access Retrieved 2014 07 30 a b c Robert Palmer Liner notes to Too Bad Jim 1994 scan a b c d Morris Chris 22 June 1996 R L Burnside Brews Blues on Matador Billboard pp 10 95 ISSN 0006 2510 a b Ratliff Ben 1997 03 15 Delta Blues Including Long Jokes And Lust The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2015 06 12 Critics Poll Chris Morris Billboard 28 December 1996 ISSN 0006 2510 Cited in Dan DeLuca 1996 12 08 This Is A Blues Band Of Another Color Purist Not The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion Spencer Calls Its Music white Suburban Punk The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved 2015 05 03 Mr Wizard Discogs com 1997 OCLC 36765619 Matt Kelemen 1999 01 06 Turning the tables on Burnside s deep blues Orlando Weekly Retrieved 2015 07 04 a b Lou Friedman Fall 1999 Mississippi Remix or how 73 year old R L Burnside found the hip hop audience Blues Access 39 Retrieved 2015 06 16 Burnside To Open For Beasties MTV News August 10 1998 Retrieved June 17 2015 Slacking at the SXSW Film Festival Indiewire March 26 1999 Retrieved 2016 03 10 1999 Films at SXSW PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 11 Retrieved 2016 03 10 Steve Walker August 23 2001 Bite Me The Pitch Retrieved 2016 03 10 a b Lou Friedman September 14 2005 Well Well Well R L Burnside 1926 2005 PopMatters Retrieved 2015 06 17 R L Burnside Scheduled For Heart Surgery MTV News August 30 1999 Retrieved June 17 2015 R L Burnside recovering following heart surgery CMJ New Music Report October 4 1999 p 8 ISSN 0890 0795 Marian Montgomery 2000 12 20 R L Burnside Not Ready for Heaven Yet Rolling Stone Retrieved 2015 06 26 Steve Newton January 18 2001 It s rough all over the world says R L Burnside even down in Mississippi some reprint title The Georgia Straight Retrieved 2015 11 10 Wish I Was In Heaven Sitting Down Discogs com 24 October 2000 Retrieved 2015 11 10 A Bothered Mind FP1013 2 Discogs com 2004 Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down review by Alex Henderson allmusic A Bothered Mind review by Steve Leggett allmusic Andy Gill 2004 10 08 Album RL Burnside A Bothered Mind FAT POSSUM The Independent Archived from the original on February 19 2014 Retrieved 2014 01 22 a b R L Burnside Chart history Billboard com Retrieved May 11 2015 Roni Sarig 2007 Third Coast Outkast Timbaland and How Hip Hop Became a Southern Thing Da Capo Press p 221 Morrison Nick January 12 2011 Dragging The Blues Into The 21st Century A Blog Supreme NPR Retrieved 2015 10 29 Steve Knopper 2004 11 21 nublues Chicago Tribune Retrieved 2015 11 04 Sisario Ben 2005 09 02 R L Burnside 78 Master of Raw Mississippi Blues Dies The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2015 06 16 Music from TV Commercials Spring 2002 Retrieved June 17 2015 The complete list of nominees Los Angeles Times 2003 01 08 ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved 2015 06 21 Eric Schumacher Rasmussen 1998 06 09 Fat Possum Raises Hackles With Off Beat Blues MTV News Retrieved 2015 07 16 Jason Rewald 2009 06 18 Hill Country Revue and Blues Evolution TheDeltaBlues Archived from the original on May 18 2015 Retrieved April 23 2015 a b Obituaries R L Burnside The South Reporter September 15 2005 Archived from the original on 2014 04 16 Obituaries The South Reporter Obituaries October 8 2010 djournal Northeast Mississippi daily journal Memphis area obituaries December 9 2010 The Commercial Appeal Memphis Lisle Andria 2004 06 12 Local Beat If the Juke Joint s a Rockin Memphis Flyer No Wayback or archive today return for this URL Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2015 06 06 Skelly Richard Duwayne Burnside Allmusic Burnside Blues Cafe Waterford MS The Frontline Thefrontlinemusic wordpress com 2011 05 22 Retrieved 2015 09 07 Alice Mae s Cafe The Frontline Thefrontlinemusic com Retrieved 2015 09 07 Kent Burnside amp The Flood Brothers Play google com Retrieved 2017 05 02 2000 21st W C Handy Blues Awards PastBlues 2002 23rd W C Handy Blues Awards PastBlues Buddy Guy Wins Three W C Handy Honors Billboard May 24 2002 Retrieved May 11 2015 2003 24th W C Handy Blues Awards PastBlues Blues music awards all years PastBlues The Blues Foundation Announces 2014 Blues Hall of Fame Inductees American Blues Scene Magazine February 12 2014 Retrieved 2015 06 17 Fusilli Jim 2015 10 06 St Germain Review Bamako by Way of Paris Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 2015 11 09 Lou Erlanger Liner notes to Acoustic Stories 1989 1997 David Evans 2003 Fife and drum Band In John Shepherd David Horn Dave Laing Paul Oliver Peter Wicke eds Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Volume 2 Performance and Production Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Part 1 Performance and Production A amp C Black pp 27 28 ISBN 978 1 84714 472 0 Ross Haenfler 8 October 2013 Who are the authentic participants and who are the poseurs Subcultures The Basics Routledge pp 89 90 ISBN 978 1 134 54763 0 E g on Well Well Well 2001 and Burnside on Burnside 2001 External links editR L Burnside at AllMusic nbsp Fat Possum artist website Slade s R L Burnside page Archived 2018 07 09 at the Wayback Machine Illustrated R L Burnside discography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title R L 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