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Horace Sprott
Horace Sprott
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kudzurunner
4225 posts
Aug 27, 2013
3:05 PM
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It's hard to believe that there are stellar players out there, historical players, who have never been mentioned on this forum. It feels as though we've surely touched on everybody at least once. This is why I was surprised when Pandora Radio, on the "Harmonica Boogie Radio" channel, turned up Horace Sprott.
He has, in fact, been mentioned precisely once: he shows up in a very long post of mine where I simply dumped the contents of the Harmonica Project at the Ole Miss Blues Archive.
http://www.modernbluesharmonica.com/board/board_topic/5560960/456669.htm
But he wasn't discussed, and hasn't been discussed. He deserves his moment.
There are only a couple of videos on YT, and they feature his singing. But an Italian player has done a tribute to one of his recordings, and the tribute alone suggests something about what a great player he is. He's got the great tone AND technical range of Deford Bailey and Dan Smith. The tribute-giver is Bertrando Goio, and he's a heck of a player himself. I assume that he is more or less replicating one of Sprott's pieces:
If you go to the following page and scroll down to play the clip marked "Freight Train: The Southern," you'll get a bit of Sprott himself:
http://www.folkways.si.edu/horace-sprott/music-from-the-south-vol-4-3/american-folk-blues-sacred/album/smithsonian
Please share info about Sprott, along with vids, music, etc.
Last Edited by kudzurunner on Aug 27, 2013 3:06 PM
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timeistight
1335 posts
Aug 27, 2013
5:46 PM
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Here's a biography (by Steve Leggett) from Allmusic:Alabama songster and harmonica player Horace Sprott was born February 2, 1890, the son of former slave Bessie Ford, and his surname was taken from the Sprott Plantation where he was born. He took up guitar and harmonica and was soon playing a mix of blues, work songs, spirituals, and old slave songs at local functions and parties in the area. Sprott reportedly got himself into some trouble, however, and ended up spending a stretch at a prison work farm in Montgomery. Folkways researcher Frederic Ramsey encountered Sprott in Marion, AL, in 1954, and impressed with the musician's varied repertoire, which included several a cappella set pieces, recorded him in seven sessions held in April and May of that year. These field recordings were edited down to form an LP, which was released in 1954 by Folkways Records. The album caused a brief stir in the folk world, and Sprott even ended up making an appearance on television for CBS in 1956, but a substantive career as a performer never really took shape, and Sprott drifted away into the haze of blues history, reportedly passing away in the early '90s.
The Folkway recordings are available from Amazon and iTunes.
This has some harmonica (wait for it):
Last Edited by timeistight on Aug 27, 2013 5:51 PM
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2chops
158 posts
Aug 27, 2013
6:24 PM
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Listening to both bids, I hear a cool mix of Peg Leg Sam and Rev. Dan Smith. I like the chording mixed with the raspy single notes. Good find. ---------- You Tube = goshinjk
I'm workin on it. I'm workin on it.
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