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Album Review

In 1959, blues singer/guitarist Robert Pete Williams was residing in Angola Prison, serving a life sentence for a murder he claimed he committed in self-defense, when he was discovered by blues researchers Harry Oster and Richard Allen. Immediately struck by the power of Williams' blues, the pair commenced the recordings that would appear on the collections Robert Pete Williams, Vol. 1 & 2 (including the stunning "Prisoner's Talking Blues"). Subsequent efforts by Oster and Allen led to Williams' release. No longer surrounded by the bars of Angola, the singer found himself trapped instead by the strict rules and regulations of his harsh parole. Thus on Free Again, the singer walks the streets like a stranger with death on his mind. "You know I walk along and talk to myself," he declares in "Death Blues," remembering his confinement. "Sometimes I have a mind to leave this place/But they say, you know you're doing time." In "A Thousand Miles From Nowhere," Williams finds himself alone on the streets of a "one horse town." Settling down for the night, he sings with a "tombstone for my pillow and the fairground for my bed." Sitting on the roadside in "Thumbing a Ride," he finds that the cars just pass him by as if he didn't exist. Despite the constant, restless movement of Williams' guitar lines, these recordings have a stillness to them, as if the reverberation of his blunt, heavy attack might be the only sound for miles around. Intimately recorded by Oster himself, these ten solo guitar and vocal performances represent some of the finest of Williams' career and some of the best the blues has to offer.

Customer Reviews

Mr. Ugly

For starters it's a crime that no review for this exists already. I first discovered Williams by way of The Black Keys cover, Grown So Ugly, which I have to say is confusing to me, being a Blues song and a cover having been done by Captain Beefheart. A testament to the versatility of the Blues. This album makes the case that RPW may be among the three greatest Louisiana Blues artists, along with Slim Harpo, and Snooks Eaglin or Buddy Guy during his Chess years. The writing is amazing and most likely the offspring of experience or being simple narrarations of his life. When he talks about prison, love, lonliness, or change, it's all good and true. It's really easy to hear in the language used here that he takes pride in the facts. He went to the Angola State Pen, sentenced to life as consequence to a bar shooting in which he killed another man , proclaiming self-defense. He was released after 12 yrs thanks to his music, but remained on parole for life. In cooperation with that parole, he was hardly allowed to travel and perform outside of LA. It's a shame, but what is sewn shall be reaped I guess. No regret will be had if ur to buy this one.

...the black keys...really?

is that what it takes to get this guy noticed?

get the first album. Listen to "Louse" and "I want to die easy"

xj

Biography

Born: March 14, 1914 in Zachary, LA

Genre: Blues

Years Active: '50s, '60s, '70s

Discovered in the Louisiana State Penitentiary, Robert Pete Williams became one of the great blues discoveries during the folk boom of the early '60s. His disregard for conventional patterns, tunings, and structures kept him from a wider...
Full Bio
Free Again, Robert Pete Williams
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