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Lyr Add: Migrant Jesse Sawyer (James Talley)
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Subject: Lyr Add: MIGRANT JESSE SAWYER^^ From: Stewie Date: 27 Oct 99 - 10:11 PM MIGRANT JESSE SAWYER
It was 94 degrees in Sapville, Georgia
He said, my body and my mind are so hungry
I'm a migrant and I move with the seasons
I've got a wife, Sandy Belle, and 6 children
Sandy Belle, Lord, she works right here beside me
Ain't no schools for me to send my little children
Well, it might help if I could see some way to change it
Author: James Talley James Talley is a fine, but sadly neglected, writer of country, blues and folk idiom songs. In the 1970s, he recorded 4 wonderful albums for Capitol – these have been reissued by Bear Family. The albums received critical acclaim, but lay like dead fish in the record racks until, finally, his record company dropped him. One of his - perhaps somewhat dubious - claims to fame is that he was invited to perform at Jimmy Carter's inauguration. Talley agreed when he learned that Carter had cited James Agee's magnificent study of rural poverty, 'And Let Us Now Praise Famous Men', as one of his favourite books. Talley felt that anyone who respected Agee's work couldn't be all bad. In the early 198Os, he made a disappointing album, 'American Originals', for a Nashville label. In the 1990s, he returned to form with a studio and live album for Bear Family. More importantly, Bear Family released a box set of CD and lavish book that adopted an approach similar to James Agee's and Walker Evans' 'And Let Us Now Praise Famous Men' : 'The Road to Torreon – Photographs of New Mexico Villages by Cavalliere Ketchum, Love Songs and Other Writings by James Talley'. Talley has a Ph.D in the art of the Depression. The curious may find more information on Talley in the chapter devoted to him in Peter Guralnick's 'Lost Highway'. |
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