Saturday, October 4, 2025

Furry Lewis

 

Walter "Furry" Lewis embodied the relaxed and intimate character of the early blues.  A master of multiple guitar techniques, Furry was most notable as an impressive bottleneck guitarist who echoed his vocal phrasings with an expressive set of sliding notes.  His performances exuded spontaneity, subtlety, and feeling, making him, in the words of blues historian Sam Charters, one of 
"Only a handful of singers [of his era] with the creative ability to use the blues as an expression of personal emotion."
In April 1927,  Furry ventured to Chicago, and recorded six songs for the Vocalion label.  This pivotal moment marked his entry into the world of recorded music.  Tragically, Furry lost a leg while attempting to hop a freight train in Illinois.  Undeterred, he continued his musical journey, traveling with a medicine show, performing on the streets and at various social gatherings, including picnics and saloons.  Furry often reminisced about his experiences playing with W.C. Handy and the "first good guitar" he ever owned, a gift from Handy himself.

His 1927-29 Vocalion and Victor recordings, now considered some of the finest examples of early blues, featured ragtime-influenced pieces, Delta-style blues (some played with a bottleneck), and folk hero ballads.  Unfortunately, music didn’t provide a livelihood for Lewis, who held various jobs in Memphis, including garbage man, night watchman, and street sweeper.

In the 1960s, Furry was able to build a new musical career, after author Sam Charters produced his first LP in 1959.  This was followed by a series of records and performances across the country for the emerging folk-blues audience.  Furry, known for his showmanship and humor, became a beloved figure in Memphis.  He formed a close bond with a young group of fans, writers, and musicians who visited him, chauffeured him to gigs, and even took turns going to the local pawn shop to retrieve his guitar or wooden leg.


His profile surged in the 1970s, gracing television shows like The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and films, notably 'W. W. and the Dixie Dance Kings'.  He even opened a concert for the Rolling Stones and had a song, "Furry Sings the Blues", written in his honor by Joni Mitchell, and released on her 'Hejira' album.  His album 'Live at the Gaslight', recorded in New York City in 1971, was produced by Jim Nash, who revealed that he first discovered Lewis through Jimi Hendrix. 

Furry Lewis died on September 14, 1981, at the age of 88. 

He was elected to the Blues Hall of Fame in 2012.


Today's freeload is two Furry albums, one from the late 1920s, and one from the early 1960s.



This Yazoo Records release is a very worthwhile collection of Furry Lewis recordings from the 1920s.  The re-mastering is very well done, and the sound quality is very good for 1920s original recordings taken from 78 rpm records of the period.


This double LP set was released in 1972, and is two previously released albums.  LP1 was originally released on the Prestige/Bluesville label as 'Back On My Feet Again', and was recorded on April 3 and 4, 1961.  LP2 was also originally released on the Prestige/Bluesville label as 'Done Changed My Mind', and was recorded in May 1961.

Both albums are vinyl rips, and sound sweet.

For the freeload, what's your favorite furry animal?

13 comments:

  1. Our cats, Zahira, Oliver, and Cleo, and our dog, Norton.

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  2. I’m currently between furry creatures, after Jasper the cat died last year, and I’m not sure if I’ll get another dog or cat. But who knows?

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  3. My goldens, Beany and Cecil. --Muzak McMusics

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  4. Red Pandas, tbh. But there's been a series of cats worthy of shout outs, notably Orangeaux and MiaMoZo. Some Memphis friends were on the fringes of the young white kids around Mr. Lewis and have really lovely stories of a very special guy. Thanks for featuring him here, Babs, I'm sending this their way.

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  5. Just before Christmas last year, we adopted a cute kitten. And as we hadn't had a cat in a few decades named him seasonally: Baby Chuy. Now, at 11 months and 12 or 13 lbs.(and still growing), his personality seems fully developed.

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  6. A 10 year old, heartworm ridden, schnauzer, who was left at the SPCA for the 3rd time. That's my favorite furry animal. Oh, he recovered from the heartworms and lived until the age of 21. He was my shadow for the last 11 years of his life. Loved my wife and me. Didn't really care for anyone else.

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  7. An 11 yr-old rescue cat called Brian & a German Shepherd currently in the terrible two's called Skye. As for non-domesticed it has to be the Koala - their not the sharpest tool's in the shed but there's just something about them that everyone loves.

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  8. Phantom Of The Rock OperaOctober 4, 2025 at 6:34 PM

    All my dogs over the years but most of all my current Golden Lab ' Jethro' who is snoozing beneath my desk as I write this.

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  9. My wife had a cat when we met in 1979. The kitty's name was Willie AKA the Real Wheel. Wheel had the softest fur. Thanks Babs

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  10. Link
    https://workupload.com/file/yR4pnMQ2Uxh

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  11. Thank you for the fur, Babs. I'll take dogs and cats over the rest, thank you.

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