Blind Boy Fuller lyrics
Artist · 20 327 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Blind Boy Fuller 1935 - 1940
2000 · album
Blind Boy Fuller Vol. 1 1935 - 1936
1992 · album
Blind Boy Fuller Vol. 3 1937
1992 · album
Blind Boy Fuller Vol. 4 1937 - 1938
1992 · album
Blind Boy Fuller Vol. 5 1938 - 1940
1992 · album
Blind Boy Fuller Vol. 6 1940
1992 · album
East Coast Piedmont Style
1991 · album
Blues Clásicos de "Blind Boy Fuller"
2022 · single
Precious Lord, Vol. 2
2022 · album
Cat Man Blues
2021 · album
Lonesome
2021 · album
Precious Lord
2020 · album
His Greatest Tracks
2018 · album
Log Cabin Blues
2018 · EP
Greatest Hits 1935-1938 (Hd Remastered)
2018 · album
East Coast Piedmont Style
2015 · album
Rough Guide To Blind Boy Fuller
2015 · album
Street Musician
2015 · album
Blind Boy Fuller, Vol 2 (1936 - 1937)
2013 · album
Blind Boy Blues
2009 · album
Sweet Honey Hole
2009 · album
The Best Of
2008 · compilation
Presenting Blind Boy Fuller
1936 · album
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Biography
Unlike blues artists like Big Bill or Memphis Minnie who recorded extensively over three or four decades, Blind Boy Fuller recorded his substantial body of work over a short, six-year span. Nevertheless, he was one of the most recorded artists of his time and by far the most popular and influential Piedmont blues player of all time. Fuller could play in multiple styles: slide, ragtime, pop, and blues were all enhanced by his National steel guitar. Fuller worked with some fine sidemen, including Rev. Gary Davis, Sonny Terry, and washboard player Bull City Red. Initially discovered and promoted by Carolina entrepreneur H.B. Long, Fuller recorded for ARC and Decca. He also served as a conduit to recording sessions, steering fellow blues musicians to the studio. In spite of Fuller's recorded output, most of his musical life was spent as a street musician and house party favorite, and he possessed the skills to reinterpret and cover the hits of other artists as well. In this sense, he was a synthesizer of styles, parallel in many ways to Robert Johnson, his contemporary who died three years earlier. Like Johnson, Fuller lived fast and died young in 1942, only 33 years old. Fuller was a fine, expressive vocalist and a masterful guitar player best remembered for his uptempo ragtime hits "Rag Mama Rag," "Trucking My Blues Away," and "Step It Up and Go." At the same time he was capable of deeper material, and his versions of "Lost Lover Blues" and "Mamie" are as deep as most Delta blues. Because of his popularity, he may have been overexposed on records, yet most of his songs remained close to tradition and much of his repertoire and style is kept alive by North Carolina and Virginia artists today. ~ Barry Lee Pearson, Rovi