Re: Isaac Washington?
- Subject: Re: Isaac Washington?
- From: tom ball <havaball@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 6 Apr 2004 17:36:18 -0700
Ryan asked,
The topic of Isaac Washington was briefly brought up on CTBlues-l,
Connectcut's answer to Blues-l, after area writer Mary Lou Sullivan
bought a book with the picture of Muddy and Isaac from the around the
time of the 59 Carnegie Hall show. Where did he come from? Where
did he go? I would say he he is the most obscure and ephemeral of
Muddy's harp players. Scott Dirks? Anyone?
Ryan Hartt
ps Please try, hard as it might be, to refrain from "Love Boat" references.
______________________
It's probably a bit of a stretch to mention Isaac Washington as one
of Muddy's harp players -- Evidently Washington was hired by Alan
Lomax for the Carnegie Hall concert, and may or may not have played
on the two Muddy cuts on the resultant release.
According to the Tooze bio of Muddy, the Carnegie show was titled
'Folksong '59', and was a multi-artist (and multi-genre) show made up
of, among others, Mamphis Slim, Muddy, Jimmy Driftwood, the Stoney
Mountain Boys, Mike & Pete Seeger, the Selah Jubilee Singers, Isaac
Washington, and Bobby Darin (who didn't show up.)
No idea who Washington was, and cannot find any records by him as a
folk artist... In the Phil Wight & Fred Rothwell discography of
Muddy (in the Tooze bio,) it says, "some sources list James Cotton as
the harp player on this session."
So the questions are (a) is it Cotton or Washington?; and (b) who was
Washington, anyway? Anybody got the United Artists LP? Any comments
on the playing? (I've never heard it...)
cheers,
Tom Ball
Santa Babs
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