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This lost-tape tribute captures the echo of those nights — the lonely mattress, the pounding heart, the restless fire that won’t burn out even when the music stops. Crafted in the style of vintage Delta blues sessions, it nods to an era when singers didn’t just perform, they survived through the song. Step inside a smoke-hazed juke joint sometime around 1951, where heartbreak hit harder than whiskey and the night only ended when the band collapsed. Pound My Pillow, Don’t Stop — credited to Lillian Mae Walker on the original reel — is said to be one of the final recordings she made before club owners and local radio stations began insisting she switch to the more “stage-friendly” name Lillian Dixie Walker to appeal to Southern circuits. In this fictional tribute, the name change became a symbol of the blues world’s harsh reality — identity was a luxury, survival was not. Set to the pulse of a stomping Southern rhythm section with weeping slide guitar and a harmonica that sounds like it’s crying through the night, this track bleeds longing, sweat, and sheets that won’t stay still. Lillian’s vocal performance (reimagined here through AI from a fully human-written composition) channels the sound of a woman caught between hunger, hope, and a bed that holds more secrets than sleep. Please like and subscribe. Thank you for watching. Disclaimer: A make-believe lost blues session — crafted by human hands, voiced with AI soul. The legend is fictional, the blues are real. This channel is built on tribute, nostalgia, and resurrecting sounds that never were… but should have been.