This collection elegantly reframes the blues as a rhythmic testament to urban resilience, finding profound dignity in the quiet persistence of the working class. It serves as a soulful reminder that shared struggle and community are the ultimate catalysts for emotional renewal.
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Smooth Chicago Blues at Midnight | Blues Above the Alley追加:
[music] [music] [music] [music] >> Little shop on clock street [music] full of ticking air. [singing] Tiny [music] clocks [singing] and patient care.
Old man bent beneath the lamp.
Working slow [music] but never cramped.
>> [music] >> Magnify one eye.
Hands too steady to deny.
He could calm [music] a frantic spring.
>> [music] >> And make lost [singing] minutes sing.
>> [music] [music] [music] >> I bought it when my father wore.
>> [music] >> Stopped at quarter after four. [music] He opened up the silver back.
Like memory in a stack.
>> [music] >> Said this one DON'T NEED MUCH, SON.
Just cleaning what time done.
>> [music] >> Lord, that landed sharp and [music] true.
CUZ MAYBE I WAS DUSTED, TOO.
THAT [music] WATCH REPAIRMAN ON CLOCK NEWS.
WHAT years can do to you.
Chicago [music] blues AIN'T ALWAYS PAIN.
SOMETIMES THEY'RE STARTING TIME AGAIN.
>> [music] >> THAT WATCH REPAIRMAN ON CLOCK NEWS.
HOW CARE COMES THROUGH. Some [music] things don't need replacing whole.
Just someone [music] patient with the soul.
>> [music] [music] >> WHEN I STRAPPED IT [screaming] ON THAT NIGHT.
>> [music] >> TICK SOFT AND RIGHT like my father's wrist came back.
Walking with me through [music] the black.
And every wound is SHATTERED WHOLE.
SOME ONLY need [music] a cleaner heart.
And every life goes slower still.
They move again. [music] With skill.
>> [singing] >> THAT WATCH REPAIRMAN ON CLOCK.
>> [music] >> Still keeps me true.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> There's a guitar in the closet case [music] upstairs.
Been sleeping years in there.
Strings gone [singing] brown on tuner bent.
Dust where younger found it.
>> [music] >> I BOUGHT IT WHEN I STILL BELIEVED.
Music could outrun what grieved.
Then working life moved in. [music] And closed the lid on him.
>> [music] >> Last Sunday I unlatched [music] the clasp.
SAT DOWN with all my past. [music] Hit one chord [singing] of an out of tune.
>> [music] >> Still lit up the room.
Funny how some dreams don't die.
>> [music] >> They wait quiet and dry.
Till one tired hand comes back around.
And wakes an older sound.
That guitar in the closet case knew.
[music] What long silence do.
Chicago [music] blues ain't always gone.
Sometimes they're paused too long. THAT GUITAR IN THE CLOSET case knew.
>> [music] >> How to come back through.
Some parts of you stay patient there.
>> [music] >> To courage meets the end.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> I played till fingertips turned [music] sore.
LIKE KNOCKING ON A DOOR.
Inside myself [music] I shut the ears.
With schedules, [music] pride, and fears.
And every loss a final thing.
>> [music] >> Some just wait for strength.
>> [music] >> And every soul set down too long.
>> [music] >> They still wake back to song.
>> [music] >> THAT GUITAR IN THE closet case.
>> [music] >> Still knows my name.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> Corner caught at 5:15.
>> [music] >> Steam rising through the morning rain.
Young girl pouring cups with speed.
Feeding everybody's need.
Bus men, nurses, road [singing] crew backs.
>> [music] >> Office shoes on train line tracks.
>> [music] >> All came half awake and gray. [singing] >> [music] >> She brightened up the day.
She remembered cream and names. [music] Who tipped short and who had change.
Who just lost work, who [music] had a test.
Who needed silence best.
I ASKED HER ONCE WHY I SMILE SO WIDE.
She said, "SOME FOLKS GOT NO LIGHT INSIDE.
Till caffeine or kindness [music] starts.
So I serve [singing] both before they part."
That [music] girl selling coffee at dawn KNEW >> [music] >> WHAT TIRED PEOPLE DO.
Chicago [music] blues ain't always late.
Sometimes they wake and wait.
That girl selling [music] coffee at dawn knew how off comes through.
Some mornings rise because one soul pours [music] courage in a paper bowl.
>> [music] [singing] [music] [music] [screaming] [music] >> I CARRIED THAT CUP two blocks down.
Feeling [music] richer than my town.
Funny how little heat >> [music] >> can put a rhythm in your feet.
>> [music] >> Ain't every sunrise made by sun.
SOME BY SOMEONE [music] GETTING UP and done.
And meeting strangers in the cold.
[singing and music] With something hot to hold. [singing] That girl selling [music] coffee at dawn [singing] still [music] starts >> [singing] >> my day.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> Rain on Halsted Avenue at 10:00 past [music] 2:00.
Street lights making rumors [singing] blue.
Taxi tires [music] saying low.
Whole town shining like so.
>> [music] >> I WALK WITH COLLAR TURNED up high.
Questions I could not outwalk by.
Some nights [music and singing] the weather gets your side and speaks what you keep inside.
>> [music] >> Past closed bars and laundromats.
OLD DOGS sleeping on the mats.
Young [music] men laughing too damn loud trying to outshout the clouds.
I used to think pain needed words.
>> [music] >> Now I trust the soul curves.
Her certain [music] streets can tell you [singing] plain what your chest can't explain.
[music] That rain on Halsted Avenue knew what restless people do.
Chicago blues [music] ain't always sound.
Sometimes they're water hitting ground.
[singing and music] That rain on Halsted Avenue knew HOW TO WASH ME THROUGH.
Some truths arrive in weather first before they reach [music] the word.
>> [singing] [music] [music] >> By morning all the roads were dry.
But not the [music] thoughts inside.
[singing] Cuz once a city rains on you it leaves [music] a different view.
>> [singing] >> Ain't every cleansing soft or sweet.
Some [music] comes cold through midnight streets.
AND RINSES [music] PRIDE enough to show what still needs room to grow.
THAT RAIN ON [screaming] HALSTED Avenue still falls [music] in me. [singing] >> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> Sunday noon outside the church yard gate old man played while families ate.
Hand cranked [music] organ monkey [singing] gone still it wound the old songs on.
>> [music] >> Kids laughed, grandmas dropped loose change.
Sky looked washed and strange.
Whole block's softened for a while by one stubborn smile.
I asked him why KEEP HAULING THAT >> [music] >> HEAVY BOX in weathered hat.
HE SAID "WORK is lazy, [music] son.
Sometimes it must be wound."
Then turned the handle slow again.
Music spilling thin [music] but thin don't mean it can't be true.
>> [music] >> I learned that listening through that organ grinder on Sunday noon >> [music] >> what old hope can do.
Chicago blues ain't always [music] new.
Sometimes they're hand cranked through and through that organ grinder on Sunday [music] noon how she comes through.
Some souls drag weight from street to street [music] so strangers feel less beat. [music] >> [music] [music] [music] >> When he left the block SELF-CLEANED LIKE AFTER SUMMER rain funny [music] how one simple tune can widen [music] afternoon.
Ain't every organ gilded horse.
>> [music] >> SOME SQUEAK THROUGH ALLEY walls and keep [music] a tired neighborhood remembering something good.
That organ grinder on Sunday [music] still turns [singing] in me.
>> [music] [music] [music] >> Saw man loading ice behind a bar at noon.
July heat hard as June. [singing] >> [music] >> Blocks of frozen blue white weight lifted clean and stacked up straight.
[music] Shirt [music] soaked dark, jaw set tight.
Working in punishing light >> [music] >> still he moved with careful art.
Cold cues, warm heart.
>> [music] >> PEOPLE INSIDE WOULD NEVER KNOW >> [music] >> what keeps their glasses cold.
>> [music] >> How many backs and hidden hands >> [music] >> support the ease [singing] of plans.
>> [music] >> I ASKED IF SUMMER PAID ENOUGH.
HE LAUGHED "NOT for this stuff."
Then hoisted one more slab with grace like GRIT HAD [music] FOUND A FACE.
>> [music] >> THAT MAN LOADING ICE KNEW WHAT UNSEEN labor do.
Chicago [music] blues ain't all guitars.
SOMETIMES [music] THEY'RE FORK lift sweat and scars.
That man loading ice knew how burdens [music] move through.
Some comfort [music] comes to richer rooms [singing] >> [music] >> by workers in the noon.
I drank water slower that day [singing] >> [music] >> with more respect [singing] in play.
Certain sights can make you see what luxury [music] cost secretly.
Ain't every weight emotional.
Some are clear and physical.
Yet the folks who [music] bear them long still [music and singing] belong in song.
That man >> [music] >> loading ice still chills my pride.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> Little alteration shop on Kingdom [music and singing] Lane.
Needles dancing in >> [singing] >> the rain.
>> [music] >> Woman bent beneath a lamp.
>> [music] >> Turning torn to something stand.
Work coats, church coats, school [music] coats, too.
She knew what fabric had been through.
[music] Every patch sewed clean [music] [singing] and tight.
Like wrongs corrected [music] overnight.
>> [music] >> I brought my father's winter coat.
>> [music] >> Pocket ripped and buttons broke.
She ran her hand across the sleeve.
>> [music] >> Like grief was cloth she could perceive.
Said, "This one's worth the saving, [music] son."
Then smiled and got it done.
[music and singing] Some things survive because one heart refuses [music] them depart.
That woman who mended coats knew [music] what cold seasons do. [music] Chicago blues ain't always farewell.
>> [music] >> Sometimes they're stitching stories well.
That woman who mended [music] COATS KNEW HOW LOVE comes through. [music] Some walk this path from hand to hand.
And fix where [music] time had planned.
>> [music] [music] [music] >> When I wore [music] it home that night, it fit me brave and [singing] right.
Funny how repaired threads can straighten [music] out [singing] a man.
Ain't every legacy [music] gold or land.
Some come in sleeves and working hands.
And live [singing] because [music] somebody cared.
Enough to keep [music and singing] them there.
>> [music] >> That woman [singing] who mended coats still holds me warm.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> When the washer above us all at ten, swinging over suited men.
Bucket rope and fearless shoes.
Skyline [music] [singing] full of mirrored blues.
HE WIPED THE GLASS in steady arcs.
Making noon [singing] out of his dogs.
>> [music] >> Folks inside on calls all [singing] day.
Never looking his [singing] way.
>> [music] >> I watched FROM STREET WITH COFFEE STEAM.
>> [music] >> Thinking of a stranger's dream.
HOW MANY LIVES HANG BY A THREAD?
WHILE others tied instead.
[music and singing] He stopped halfway.
And looked around.
Like king of all that ground.
>> [music] >> Then went back to his patient line.
>> [music] >> Cleaning other people's shine.
>> [music] >> That window >> [music] >> washer [singing] knew what invisible people do. [music] Chicago blues AIN'T ALWAYS GLASS.
SOMETIMES THEY'RE COURAGE IN THE SKIES.
That window washer knew how [screaming] clear comes through. [music] Some men brighten worlds they'll never [music] own.
Then ride the scaffold home.
I ended work less proud that day.
>> [music] >> With new respect in place.
Certain views can shift a man >> [singing] >> MORE than any plan.
>> [music] >> Ain't every ladder built below.
>> [music] >> SOME DANGLE WHERE COLD WINDS BLOW.
>> [music] >> And every soul who risks that height deserves [music] more than passing sights.
That window washer knew above us [music] all >> [singing] >> still [music] clears my eyes.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> Janitor before sunrise in the marble halls.
Pushing yesterday >> [music] >> along the wall.
>> [music] >> Bucket water, radio low, >> [music] >> whole place shining where no bosses go. [music] He moved around the office desks [music] like he knew what mattered best.
Not the memos, not the suits, but [music] showing up in working boots. [singing] >> [music] >> I ASKED HIM ONCE WHY mornings early.
He said, [music] "Less noise, see people [singing] clearly."
Then laughed and rung the mop out [music] slow, like patience was the thing to know.
He [music] said, "Most folks chase what fades away.
I like making clean [singing and music] a gray."
That line stayed longer than it should because it hit too good. That [screaming] janitor before sunrise [music] knew what honest people do.
Chicago [music] blues ain't always pain.
Sometimes they're making space again.
[music and singing] That janitor before sunrise knew how [screaming] peace [music] comes through. Some men polished floors at dawn and helped the world [singing] move on.
>> [music] [music] [music] >> But ain't the lobby filled with pride.
[music] TUXEDOS AND HER SWIFT STRIDE.
No one saw what made it shine.
That's [music] how grace works half the time.
Ain't every builder raising steel [music] some men what others feel.
>> [music] >> Ain't every quiet, faithful task can say more than folks asked.
THAT JANITOR before sunrise still cleans me out.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> Young boy pushing groceries home through sleet, [music] plastic bags around his feet. [music] Too small for what he had to haul.
>> [music] >> Still it wouldn't let one fall.
>> [music] >> Milk and bread and paper [singing and music] towels when came wind and freezing [music and singing] house.
He leaned his shoulder, bent down low, like struggle >> [music] >> was a road to tow.
>> [music] >> I offered help, he shook HIS HEAD.
SAID, "GOT IT, SIR." Then moved ahead.
NOT A RUDE, JUST PROUD AND honest ways.
Older than his years and days.
I WATCHED HIM TURN ON 79, DRAGGING [music] weight through winter white, and felt ashamed [music] of things I named AS HEAVY IN MY BRAIN.
THAT BOY [screaming] WITH A GROCERY CART knew >> [music] [music] >> what carrying can do.
>> [singing] >> Chicago [music] blues ain't always songs.
Sometimes they're kids staying strong. [music] That boy with a GROCERY CART KNEW HOW GRIT COMES THROUGH. [music] Some lessons wear a hooded [music] coat, push more than they should.
I HOPE LIFE lightened up somewhere >> [singing] [music] >> after all that weather there.
>> [music] >> But if it didn't, he'll still [music] stand.
CUZ STRENGTH WASN'T HIS HANDS.
AIN'T EVERY HERO TALL OR GROWN.
SOME walk home alone and teach [music] for men with one heart seen >> [music] >> what courage really means.
>> [music] >> That boy with [singing] a grocery cart >> [music] >> still pulls at me. [singing] >> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> Every Thursday through the alley wall, >> [music] >> a piano starts around nightfall.
Wrong notes first, then something [music] right, growing brave in borrowed light.
Never seen who plays in there, only hear persistence in the air.
Somebody [music] learning late in life against fatigue and second shifts of strife.
>> [music] >> Scales [music] stumble, chords would slide, and come back [music] stronger second try.
I'd sit smoking by the sink, thinking more [music] than drink.
Cuz hearing someone fail and stay [music] can heal a man some way more than hearing polished things [music] that never glad for strings. [music] That piano through the alley wall knew what trying [music] hard can do.
Chicago blues ain't always smooth.
Sometimes [music] [singing] they're earned and bruised.
That piano through the alley wall knew how hope sounds [music] true.
Some songs begin [singing] with clumsy hands [music] and still become [singing] what stands.
>> [music] [music] >> One week [music] there came a melody clean and whole and free.
[music and singing] I LAUGHED OUT LOUD THERE by myself.
LIKE PRIDE HAD FOUND NEW HEALTH. [music] Ain't every miracle sudden bright.
Some practice [music] through the night and rise from wrong note after wrong till one day [singing] they're sung.
[music] That piano through the alley wall >> [music] >> still plays me on.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> Every Tuesday through the wall at six [music] I hear a kid miss a lick.
Then hear a teacher laugh and say [music] again now, better way.
Scales stumble, strings complain.
Then slowly turn the gain.
Whole apartment building learns how patience sounds when it returns.
>> [music] >> SOME NIGHTS THE CHILD GETS mad and [music] stops.
Chair scrapes, little [singing] anger drops.
Then one soft [music] chord and back they go.
There's growth more than they [music and singing] know.
I sit there with my unpaid bills listening through the thin old seals [music and singing] and somehow hearing someone try keeps my own HOPES ALIVE.
THAT [music] GUITAR lesson next door knew what trying daily [singing] do.
Chicago blues [music] ain't always born.
Sometimes they're practiced into form.
>> [singing] >> That guitar lesson next door knew how courage [music] comes through.
Some songs begin with awkward hands [music] and still become what stands.
>> [music] [music] >> One week the student nailed a run bright as moon and winter sun.
>> [music] >> I clapped alone inside my room like flowers [music] in the gloom.
Ain't every miracle grand or [music] fast.
SOME ARRIVE NOTE AFTER last >> [music] >> and teach a man who almost quit to stay a little [singing] WITH IT. THAT GUITAR LESSON NEXT DOOR still [music] tunes me up.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] [music] >> He sold newspapers [music] laid outside [singing] Union Gate long after what counts is late.
>> [music] >> Stacked headlines in a milk crate [music] row calling names in winter smoke.
[singing and music] Everybody thought the day [music] was done.
He was starting one for bakers, [music] guards, and nurses tired.
People daylight never admired.
>> [music] >> I bought a copy just to hear him talk.
You seen a whole block walk.
Said bad news loud, good news slow.
[music] That's something worth [singing] to know.
THEN LAUGHED AND THE evening page like wisdom don't need [music] age.
Some men read the world for years >> [music] >> and boil it down to what clears.
That man who sold newspapers [music] late news what fear [music] will do.
Chicago blues ain't all regret.
Sometimes [music] they're perspective in the way.
That [music] man who sold newspapers late news how mornings push on [music] through.
Some prophets stand in salted shoes [music] [singing] and sell tomorrow's news.
>> [singing] [music] >> STANDS GONE NOW, SCREENS glow blue.
>> [music] >> Still I hear his truth come through.
Whenever panic fills the room, good [singing] grows [music] slow but blooms.
Ain't [music] every teacher found in schools.
Some freeze beside commuter pools [music and singing] and hand out paper wrapped in string >> [singing] >> with wiser things between. That man who sold newspapers late still starts my night.
>> [music] [music] [music] [music] >> Taxi stand in January, [singing] breath like smoke. [music] Drivers trading bitter jokes. [music] >> [music] >> Engines silent, heaters weak.
>> [music] >> Not too cold for pride to speak. [music] Coffee cups on yellow hoods. [music] Stories told like working [singing] men should about ex-wives, Bulls, bad knees, rent >> [music] >> and where the good years went.
>> [music] >> I stood there waiting for a ride.
[music] They made room by the side.
One said, "You look like weather friend."
>> [music] >> They laughed and looked again.
NO ONE ASKED WHAT HURT [music] MY FACE.
They gave me warmth and space. [music] Some kindness knows enough to know >> [music] >> not every wound should show. That taxi stand [music] in January [singing] knew >> [music] >> WHAT COLD hearts [screaming] go through.
Chicago blues ain't all alone.
>> [music] >> Sometimes they're circles around [singing] chrome.
>> [music] >> That taxi stand in January knew how men pull through.
>> [music] >> Some brotherhoods are built at night on engines, jokes, and light.
>> [music] >> My cab [music] arrived, I almost stayed.
>> [music] >> There's comfort in the frayed. [singing] Places where nobody pretends [music] and strangers call you friend. [music] Ain't every shelter built indoors.
SOME GATHER BY FOUR DOORS >> [music] >> AND KEEP THE WINTER OFF YOUR MIND TILL IT'S your time [music] to ride.
That taxi stand >> [music] >> in January [singing] >> [music] >> still warms me up.
>> [music] [music] [music]
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