Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Mother Earth (Memphis Slim song)

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B-side
  
"Really Got the Blues"

Format
  
10" 78 rpm record

Genre
  
Blues

Released
  
January 1951 (1951-01)

Recorded
  
1950

Length
  
2:42

"Mother Earth" is a blues song recorded by Memphis Slim in 1951. A slow twelve-bar blues, it is one of Slim's best-known songs and reached number seven in the Billboard R&B chart in 1951.

"Mother Earth" features an unusual descending chromatic figure and an often-quoted chorus:

Don't care how great you are, don't care what you're worth When it all ends up you got to, go back to mother earth

Although an early review called it a "Blues moralizer, with group harmonizing in back of Slim's chanting, [having] a haunting effect, but [it] is on the tedious side", it has been described as "an uncommonly wise down-tempo blues" and "one of the finest down-tempo blues songs ever recorded". Memphis Slim recorded several studio and live versions of the song during his career.

The 1960s San Francisco band Mother Earth, which featured the vocals of Tracy Nelson, took their name from the song. They showcased the song on their 1968 album Living with the Animals.

Eric Burdon & War included the song as part of the "Blues for Memphis Slim" medley for their 1970 debut album Eric Burdon Declares "War". In 1995, an edited version retitled "Mother Earth", was released on The Best of Eric Burdon and War.

Two days before his death, Jimi Hendrix joined the band as an accompanist for the song at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in London, making "Mother Earth" one of his last public performances.

Gov't Mule covered the song on their self-titled 1995 debut album.

References

Mother Earth (Memphis Slim song) Wikipedia