King Solomon Hill

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Whoopee Blues 00:00 Tools
The Gone Dead Train 00:00 Tools
Gone Dead Train 00:00 Tools
Tell Me Baby 00:00 Tools
Times Has Done Got Hard 00:00 Tools
My Buddy Blind Papa Lemon 00:00 Tools
Down On My Bended Knee 00:00 Tools
Whoopie Blues 00:00 Tools
Whoopee Blues (Alternate Take) 00:00 Tools
Down On My Bended Knee (Take 2) 00:00 Tools
Whoopee Blues (Take 1) 00:00 Tools
Whoopee Blues (Take 2) 00:00 Tools
Down on my Bended Knee (Take 1) 00:00 Tools
Down On My Bended Knee (Tk. 2) 00:00 Tools
The Dead Gone Train 00:00 Tools
Whoopee Blues [Alternate Take] 00:00 Tools
Times Has Done Got So Hard 00:00 Tools
Tell Me, Baby 00:00 Tools
The Gone Dead Train (Ch 50022, L-1254-2) 00:00 Tools
Down On My Bended Knee (Pm 13116, L-1253-1) 00:00 Tools
Whoopee Blues (take 1) (1932) 00:00 Tools
Down On My Bended Knee (Cr 3325, L-1253-2) 00:00 Tools
Whoopee Blues (Cr 3325, L-1252-2) 00:00 Tools
Whoopee Blues (Pm 13116, L-1252-1) 00:00 Tools
My Buddy Blind Papa Lemon (1932) 00:00 Tools
Tell Me Baby (Ch 50022, L-1258-2) 00:00 Tools
Whoopee Blues (take 2) (1932) 00:00 Tools
Down On My Bended Knee (take 2) (1932) 00:00 Tools
Down On My Bended Knee (take 1) (1932) 00:00 Tools
Gone Dead Train - King Solomon Hill 00:00 Tools
Time Has Done Got Hard 00:00 Tools
Down On My Bended Knee - King Solomon Hill 00:00 Tools
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King Solomon Hill (1897, McComb, Mississippi - 1949, Sibley, Louisiana) was a bluesman who recorded a small handful of songs in 1932. Hill is speculated to have been Joe Holmes, a self-taught guitarist from Mississippi. He fused the styles of his friends Sam Collins and Ramblin' Thomas (respectively, south Mississippi and east Texas/Louisiana musicians), and elements from Blind Lemon Jefferson, into the eerie bottleneck guitar sound that accompanied his chilling falsetto on his 1932 recordings. Hill signed to Paramount in 1932 and recorded his four songs in Grafton, Wisconsin. Songs like "Gone Dead Train" and "Down on Bended Knee" feature almost alien vocals certainly unique to their time and place, although the best known song from that sole session was probably "Whoopee Blues". After that Hill returned to the streets and the party circuit, and little else is known of him. He was said to be a heavy drinker and he died of a brain haemorrhage in Louisiana in 1949. As of 2007 King Solomon Hill has eight known recordings. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.