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The Mississippi Moaner

Country blues singer and guitarist, who lived in Carlisle, MS (in Claiborne County) in 1936, but nothing is known about him after that date. Two of his four recordings for Vocalion in Jackson, Mississippi, on October 20, 1935 was released under the pseudonym The Mississippi Moaner (the other two remain unissued). His "It's Cold in China Blues" is a version of Blind Lemon Jefferson's "Long Lonesome Blues".

More detail:
Isaiah Nettles (b. c. 1912, d. Unknown), known by his recording alias The Mississippi Moaner, was a country blues singer and guitarist. Accurate information about Nettles is sparse but he is best remembered for his recording session in 1935, which was conducted during an era when the output of blues music drastically declined.

Nettles was active around a train station in Rockport, Mississippi, a small town 20 miles southeast of Crystal Springs, when he was discovered by talent scout H. C. Speir. Although local residents could not recall Nettles when queried in the 1960s, he surely hailed from a community close to Rockport, according to blues historian Gayle Dean Wardlow, and appealed to listeners by tap dancing barefoot as he played. In October 1935, Nettles participated at a recording session located in the second floor of a building near Speir's Farish Street Music Store. Robert Wilkins and Will Shade also performed during the same studio session, all supervised Speir, Art Satherley, and W. R. Calloway. Nettles recorded as "The Mississippi Moaner", an alias most likely bestowed upon him by Satherly. Four songs resulted from the session but only two, "Mississippi Moan" and "It's Cold in China Blues", were distributed on Vocalion Records; Blind Lemon Jefferson's influence on the songs were highly apparent to writer Paul Oliver. "Unfortunately", wrote Wardlow, Nettles never recorded again but his "forceful brand of dance music" was a highlight of an era that saw blues recordings significantly decline. Nettles may have served during the Second World War and later lived in Mount Olive and Taylorsville. He was last heard of when he planned to move, remarking he was going "up north".

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By Steve Leggett
The Mississippi Moaner was the name used by Isaiah Nettles when he recorded five sides for Vocalion Records in Jackson, MS, on October 20, 1935. Only one 78 from the session was ever officially released, "Mississippi Moan" b/w "It's Cold in China Blues" (a crisp version of Blind Lemon Jefferson's "Long Lonesome Blues"). A credible singer and a fine guitar player, Nettles lived in Carlisle, MS (in Claiborne County), as late as 1936, but his trail vanishes after that date.