:50:05
I am a man of constant sorrow
:50:08
I've seen trouble all my days
:50:17
I'll say goodbye to Colorado
:50:21
Where I was born and partly raised
:50:43
Through this open world
I'm a-bound to ramble
:50:47
Through ice and snow, sleet and rain
:50:55
I'm a-bound to ride that morning railroad
:50:59
Perhaps I'll die upon that train
:51:22
He was playing at some party or something
and it was like a whole different guy.
:51:26
You hear those stories
about the blues men...
:51:27
who go out to the crossroads
and sell their soul to the devil...
:51:30
and come back,
all of a sudden able to do stuff...
:51:32
Robert Johnson, Tommy Johnson,
that whole mythology.
:51:36
It was one of those kind of deals, almost.
:51:38
When he left Minneapolis
he was just average.
:51:40
There was five, six other guys
doing the same thing.
:51:43
When he came back he was doing Woody...
:51:45
and he was doing Van Ronk
and he was fingerpicking.
:51:48
He was playing cross harp,
and this is a matter of a couple of months.
:51:51
I mean, this is not like
he was gone a year or anything.
:51:54
He was gone a couple of months
and apparently whatever he got into...
:51:57
he got into so intensely that
he was like a real interesting performer.