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NGE >> The Arts >> Music >> Blues, Rhythm and Blues, and Soul >> Individual Artists and Musical Groups >> Precious Bryant (b. 1942) |
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Precious Bryant (b. 1942) A charismatic country blues singer and fingerstyle guitarist of the Piedmont tradition, Precious Bryant stands
Bryant was born on January 4, 1942, in Talbot County, the third of nine children. As a young girl she sang with her sisters in their Baptist church. Her family was musical, and she learned to play guitar at a very early age, becoming proficient by age nine. Her father then taught her to play bottleneck guitar, and eventually her uncle and mentor, blues musician George Henry Bussey, presented her with an instrument of her own, a Silvertone from Sears and Roebuck. She grew up listening to country blues artists like Muddy Waters, and her cousins played in the Georgia Fife and Drum Band. She dropped out of high school in the eleventh grade and in 1965 got married. She soon began performing whenever possible, accepting tips in her guitar. Bryant's repertoire evolved from traditional songs to include original arrangements and compositions. In
In 1983 Mitchell persuaded Bryant to perform at the Chattahoochee Folk Festival in Columbus. The audience's enthusiastic response reassured Mitchell that his assessment of the blues musician had been accurate. Soon, Bryant began performing at regional, national, and international music festivals and, as her following grew, also began playing in clubs. Recording for the Atlanta-based label Terminus Records, Bryant released her debut, Fool Me Good (2002), more than thirty years after the Mitchell field recording sessions. The acoustic project included original material as well as "Broke and Ain't Got a Dime," her interpretation of the "Blind Willie" McTell classic "Last Dime Blues," and an arrangement of the old spiritual standard "When the Saints Go Marching In." Produced by Bryant's manager, Amos Harvey, the eclectic collection of songs was recorded at Zelda Station (in the home of longtime friend and folklorist-author Fred Fussell) in Buena Vista, in Harris County. Fool Me Good garnered Bryant nominations for W. C. Handy Awards in the categories of Acoustic Blues Album of the Year and Best New Artist Debut. Bryant's second album, The Truth, was released in 2005, and includes covers of the Irma Thomas song "You Can Have My Husband (But Please Don't Mess with My Man)" and the Willie Dixon tune "My Babe." Also in 2005, Music Maker Relief Foundation released the disc My Name Is Precious. Suggested Reading Andria Lisle, "Precious Bryant: Chattahoochee River Valley Blues," Living Blues (March/April 2005). Nick Marino, "At Home with the Blues," Atlanta Journal-Constitution, January 23, 2005. Greg Freeman, Southern Edition Updated 1/4/2008 |
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