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Doctor Deathray - He May Be Your Man (But He Comes to See Me Sometimes)

from Revolting Music from the Public Domain (1914​-​1928) by Analog Revolution

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    This cassette, dubbed with love and spite in Ellijay, Georgia, feature two blistering sides of Public Domain goodness!

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    Duplicated by (statistically likely) queer people in Ellijay, Georgia

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about

Originally Released 1922

Written by Lemuel Fowler in 1922 and recorded by multiple artists, the earliest being Trixie Smith and Lucille Hegamin. Fowler is a figure shrouded in much mystery, although he was quite prolific. Fowler recorded 57 songs and 23 player piano rolls from 1922 to 1932 before disappearing into obscurity.

This “Classic Female Blues” or “Vaudeville Blues” song plays with a recognizable folk blue structure, but predates the first known recording or publication of a folk blues track by several years. It’s cheeky and suggestive in a way that white musicians of the era were afraid to attempt.

credits

from Revolting Music from the Public Domain (1914​-​1928), released January 1, 2024
Written by Lemuel Fowler
Recorded by Trixie Smith in 1922 on Black Swan Records

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Analog Revolution Ellijay, Georgia

Analog Revolution Records is Ellijay GA's finest record label.

Specializing in kick-ass local and regional acts, we're the kind of people you wish you could be friends with.

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