Showing posts with label Dock Walsh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dock Walsh. Show all posts

December 21, 2021

In The Pines: Tar Heel Folk Songs & Fiddle Tunes

Old-Time Music of North Carolina 1926-1936
Old-Time Music of North Carolina 1926-1936
Old Hat Records – CD1006

Format: CD, Album, Compilation
Country: US
Released: 2008
Genre: Folk, World, & Country
Style: Folk, Old Time
[Tracklist]
01 In The Pines: Dock Walsh (3:08)
02 Mountain Sweetheart: The Red Fox Chasers (2:56)
03 Mistreated Blues: Carolina Buddies (3:10)
04 Johnson City Hop: Carolina Ramblers String Band (2:46)
05 DAre You Sure?: Dixon Brothers & Mutt Evans (3:14)
06 The Rose With A Broken Ste: North Carolina Cooper Boys (3:02)
07 Jack Of Diamonds: Ben Jarrell (2:43)
08 Otto Wood: Thompson & Cranford (2:36)
09 Richmond Square: The Highlanders (2:58)
10 Will, The Weaver: Charlie Parker & Mack Woolbright (2:52)
11 Lindy: Proximity String Quartet (2:56)
12 Working On The Railroad: Blankenship Family (2:41)
13 Carolina's Best: The Grady Family (3:12)
14 Banjo Sam: Wilmer Watts & The Lonely Eagles (3:05)
15 New River Train: Cauley Family (2:39)
16 Little Bunch Of Roses: Clarence Greene (2:42)
17 That Lonesome Valley: Carolina Ramblers String Band (2:52)
18 Honeysuckle Rag: Blue Ridge Mountain Entertainers (2:57)
19 A Pretty Gal's Love: Whitter - Hendley - Small (2:42)
20 Tom Dooley: Grayson & Whitter (3:08)
21 The Longest Train: J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers (3:10)
22 Sweet Freedom: E.R. Nance Family with Clarence Dooley (2:27)
23 Sunny Home In Dixie: Frank Jenkins' Pilot Mountaineers (3:10)
24 My Home's Across The Blue Ridge Mountains: Carolina Tar Heels (3:20)
[Credits]
Producer: Marshall Wyatt, Liner Notes: Wayne Martin, Photographers: Tony Russell & Kip Lornell, Engineers: Christopher C. King & Jeff Carroll
[Notes]
In the early days of the recording industry, North Carolina was a hotbed of string bands playing traditional Appalachian folk-rooted music. This compilation collects 24 such recordings from the era immediately preceding and following the onset of the Depression, many of them quite obscure. Listeners with a general knowledge and appreciation of early American folk recordings might have heard of the Dixon Brothers and Mainer's Mountaineers, but for the most part, these performers will probably be unfamiliar to everybody except scholars and aficionados in the field. While they might have originated in the same region, this music shares many of the characteristics of early American recordings of what was then marketed as hillbilly music: plaintive heartfelt singing (and sometimes harmonizing); lively ensemble playing by varying combinations of guitar, fiddle, and banjo; and a repertoire growing out of traditional folk songs, even if the songs were sometimes written by the musicians (such as the one penned by Cranford & Thompson in honor of outlaw Otto Wood). The most renowned of these specific tracks by far is the first recorded version of "Tom Dooley" (by Grayson & Whitter in 1929), about 30 years before the Kingston Trio took it to the top of the charts, though both the tune and arrangement are much different in this early guise. Some other songs continue to echo as standards in the American popular music consciousness, such as "That Lonesome Valley" (here done by Carolina Ramblers String Band), "In the Pines" (here performed by "Dock" Walsh), and a variation of "In the Pines," "The Longest Train" (here presented by Mainer's Mountaineers). The 24-page booklet is of exceptional quality, with historical liner notes that comment upon each track and even offer a history of outlaw Otto Wood, as well as superb vintage photos of North Carolina folk musicians.-- AllMusic Review by Richie Unterberger

October 17, 2021

Ragtime2: The Country- Mandolins, Fiddles, and Guitars

RBF Records – RBF 18
RBF Records – RBF 18

Format: Vinyl, LP, Compilation
Country: US
Released: 1971
Genre: Ragtime, World, & Country
Style: Ragtime & Old Time
[Tracklist]
A1 Dallas Rag: The Dallas String Band (2:55)
A2 No Use Workin' So Hard: The Carolina Tar Heels (3:09)
A3 Old Weary Blues: Jesse Young's Tennessee Band (3:10)
A4 Atlanta Rag: Cow Cow Davenport (3:09)
A5 Hungry Man's Scuffle: Walter Roland and Lucille Bogan (2:47)
A6 Downtown Blues: Frank Stokes (3:13)
A7 They Go Wild Simply Wild Over Me: The Leake County Revelers (2:59)
B1 Hale's Rag: Theron Hale & Daughters (2:49)
B2 Laughing Rag: Sam Moore and Horace Davis (2:45)
B3 Lindy: The Proximity String Quartet (2:57)
B4 Kansas City Dog Walk: Charlie Turner (2:59)
B5 Ozark Rag: The East Texas Serenaders (3:09)
B6 Dill Pickles Rag: The Kessinger Brothers (3:17)
B7 Rag Mama Rag: Blind Boy Fuller, Gary Davis, and Bull City Red (3:07)
[Credits]
Dallas String Band: Marco Washington (bass/cello) Sam Harris (guitar) Coley Jones (mandolin), Carolina Tar Heels: Dock Walsh (banjo) Tom Ashley (guitar) Garley Foster (harmonica), Cow Cow Davenport (piano), Walter Roland (piano) Lucille Bogan (speech), Frank Stokes (guitar/vocals), Leake County Revelers: Dallas "Casey" Jones (guitar/vocals) Jim "Smoky" Wolverton (banjo) Will Gilmer (fiddle) R. O. Mosley (mandolin banjo), Theron Hale (fiddle) Elizabeth Hale (mandolin) Mamie Ruth Hale (piano), Horace Davis (harp guitar) Sam Moore (steel guitar), Charlie Turner (12 string guitar), Blind Boy Fuller (guitar) Gary Davis (guitar) Bull City Red (washboard)
Compiled & Annotated by Samuel Charters, Designer: Ronald Clyne
[Notes]
This collection features country ragtime from 1917 to 1935—a genre that mixes the syncopation of African-American rhythms with the melodic structure of European dance music. As these recordings demonstrate, musicians created different mixtures of these elements: some rags sound more like the blues, while others are closer to European quadrilles.

July 3, 2021

The Carolina Tar Heels

Folk-Legacy Records – FSA 24
Folk-Legacy Records – FSA 24

Format: Vinyl, LP Country: US
Released: 1964
Genre: Folk, World, & Country
Style: Folk, Old Time
[Tracklist]
A1 Goin' To Georgia (3:22)
A2 My Brushy Mountain Home (3:48)
A3 Courtin' In The Rain (2:30)
A4 Dango (1:50)
A5 I Was Born Four Thousand Years Ago (1:50)
A6 Garley's Fox Chase (1:51)
A7 If I Was A Mining Man (1:49)
A8 This Morning, This Evening, Right Now (2:57)
B1 Mama Scolds Me For Flirtin' (3:15)
B2 Crescent Limited (1:52)
B3 Go Wash In That Beautiful Pll (2:20)
B4 Knockin' On The Henhouse Door (1:55)
B5 Ain't Gonna Be Treated This-A-Way (3:11)
B6 Jimmie Settleton (1:41)
B7 Drake's Reel (1:07)
B8 Bull Dog Down In Sunny Tennessee (2:20)
B9 Hide-A-Me (3:23)
[Credits]
Dock Walsh (banjo/vocals) Drake Walsh (fiddle) Garley Foster (guitar/harmonica/vocals)
Recorder and Liner Notes: Archie Green and Eugene W. Earle
[Notes]
The first incarnation of the Carolina Tar Heels, featuring the group’s mainstay, Dock Walsh, first performed and was recorded in the late 1920s. Featuring a shifting line-up in the coming years, a recording of Walsh and company, billed as the Tar Heels, was featured on the groundbreaking 1952 compilation the Anthology of American Folk Music. On this recording, originally released by Folk-Legacy Records in 1962, Walsh is joined by his son Drake and longtime collaborator Garley Foster for a program of old-time music and Appalachian folk songs. In addition to four original compositions, the 17 tracks have Anglo-American or African American origins, reflecting the context of "race records" and "hillbilly music" surrounding the group’s first performances decades earlier. Filled with feeling, this collection stands in good company with other great Appalachian field recordings of the era, and is a special title in Folk-Legacy's early catalog. Extensive liner notes include comments detailing the history of the group and songs.

April 6, 2018

Original Folkways Recordings of Doc Watson and Clarence Ashley

Smithsonian Folkways SF CD 40029/30

Format: 2-CD, Album, Compilation
Country: US
Released: 1994
Genre: Folk, World, & Country
Style: Folk, Country
[Tracklist]
Disk One
101 Crawdad Song (3:35)
102 Sitting on Top of the World (3:09)
103 Lee Highway Blues (1:44)
104 Free Little Bird (2:09)
105 The Coo-Coo Bird (2:36)
106 Rising Sun Blues (2:58)
107 Looking Towards Heaven (2:30)
108 Rambling Hobo (1:30)
109 Rambling Hobo (1:38)
110 Shady Grove (1:31)
111 Cumberland Gap (2:23)
112 Tough Luck (2:28)
113 Humpbacked Mule (1:30)
114 My Home's Across the Blue Ridge Mountains (2:50)
115 Way Down Town (2:31)
116 Banks of the Ohio (4:14)
117 Little Sadie (2:22)
118 Carroll County Blues (1:42)
119 Cluck Old Hen (1:48)
120 Chilly Winds (Lonesome Road Blues) (2:40)
121 Sweet Heaven When I Die (2:40)
122 Fire on the Mountain (1:24)
123 Will the Circle Be Unbroken (3:23)
124 Daniel Prayed (2:56)
125 Amazing Grace (3:53)
Disk Two
201 Sally Ann (2:34)
202 Richmond Blues (1:36)
203 Old Ruben (2:03)
204 Willie Moore (3:34)
205 Walking Boss (1:51)
206 Shout Lulu (1:27)
207 Keep My Skillet Good and Greasy (2:08)
208 Pretty Little Pink (2:29)
209 Run, Jimmie Run (3:09)
210 Hick's Farewell (5:25)
211 The Old Man at the Mill (1:58)
212 A Short Life of Trouble (3:22)
213 Brown's Dream (1:43)
214 Footprints in the Snow (2:45)
215 I'm Going Back to Jericho (1:54)
216 Peg and Awl (2:14)
217 Maggie Walker (2:56)
218 God's Gonna Ease My Troublin' Mind (3:07)
219 I Saw a Man at the Close of Day (2:41)
220 Handsome Molly (2:16)
221 John Henry (3:44)
222 Honey Babe Blues (3:46)
223 Wayfaring Pilgrim (2:45)
[Credits]
Doc Watson (guitar/banjo/harmonica/vocals) Clarence Ashley, Dock Walsh and Jack Burchett (banjo/vocals) Fred Price (fiddle/vocals) Arnold Watson (banjo/harmonica/vocals) Gaither Carlton (banjo/fiddle) Garley Foster (harmonica/guitar/vocals) Clint Howard (guitar/vocals) Jack Johnson (banjo) Tommy Moore (washboard) Jean Ritchie (vocals) Ralph Rinzler (guitar)
Field Worker, Recorder, Producer, Compiler and Liner Notes: Ralph Rinzler, Producer and Compiler: Matt Walters, Photographer and Recorder: Eugene Earle, Producer and Compiler: Jeff Place, Designer: Carol Hardy, Mastering Engineer: Alan Yoshida
[Notes]
With 20 previously unreleased performances, many rare photos, and producer Ralph Rinzler's comprehensive notes, this is the definitive collection of two earlier volumes entitled Old Time Music at Clarence Ashley's. These LP's introduced the world to Doc Watson and played an important role in the folk revival of the '60s. Featured are Gaither Carlton, Clint Howard, Fred Price, Jack Burchett, and others. Compiled by Ralph Rinzler, Matt Walters and Jeff Place. Annotated by Ralph Rinzler.

February 26, 2017

Classic Mountain Songs From Smithsonian Folkways

Smithsonian Folkways SFW CD 40094

Format: CD, Compilation
Country: US
Released: 2002
Genre: Folk, World, & Country
Style: Folk, Country
[Tracklist]
01 Omie Wise: Doug Wallin (3:03)
02 Sugar Baby: Dock Boggs (2:50)
03 I Am A Poor Pilgrim Of Sorrow: Old Regular Baptists (5:24)
04 Sixteen Tons: George Davis (3:05)
05 John Henry: Lesley Riddle (2:25)
06 Lost Indian: Marion Sumner (0:51)
07 Southbound: Doc And Merle Watson (2:39)
08 High On A Mountain: Ola Belle Reed (3:02)
09 Coal Creek March: Pete Steele (1:23)
10 Coal Miner Blues: Hazel Dickens And Alice Gerrard (2:42)
11 Railroad Blues: Sam McGee (2:45)
12 Cuckoo Bird: Clarence Ashley (2:33)
13 Conversation With Death: Berzilla Wallin (5:03)
14 Lone Prairie: Wade Ward (0:52)
15 Rain And Snow: Dillard Chandler (2:23)
16 Mole In The Ground: Bascom Lamar Lunsford (3:19)
17 Moonshiner: Roscoe Holcomb (1:59)
18 Wildwood Flower: Kilby Snow (1:23)
19 Barbry Ellen: Jean Ritchie (5:01)
20 Daniel Prayed: Watson, Price, And Howard (2:54)
21 Wreck Of The Number Nine: Ernest V. Stoneman (2:48)
22 Red Jacket Mine Explosion: The Phipps Family (4:00)
23 Kingdom Come: Norman Edmonds (2:02)
24 Amazing Grace: Horton Barker (4:16)
[Credits]
Liner Notes: Jeff Place & Jacob Love, Coordinator: Mary Monseur, Mastered by: Pete Reiniger, Technician: Nathaniel Berndt
[Notes]
Riding the wave of the renewed interest in traditional American music, Classic Mountain Songs From Smithsonian Folkways Recordings showcases a handful of the greatest mountain ballads as performed by some of the most influential folk singers and songwriters of the 20th century. This collection features many classic performances from a wide variety of regional instrumental and song styles. These diverse styles and songs from the mountain communities of North Carolina, Virginia, and Tennessee include old-time fiddle and banjo pieces, early bluegrass, and traditional ballads, with a special emphasis on Appalachian vocal traditions. Doc and Merle Watson, Roscoe Holcomb, Clarence Ashley, and Dock Boggs are just a few of the revered roots artists who appear on this stellar compilation. This album is essential for both old and new fans of American mountain music. Compiled and annotated by Jeff Place.

September 19, 2015

A Collection of Mountain Banjo Songs & Tunes

County Records‎ COUNTY–515

Format: Vinyl, LP, Compilation
Country: United States
Released: 1968
Genre: Folk, World, & Country
Style: Old Time, & Country
[Tracklist]
A1 Don't Get Weary Children: Uncle Dave Macon (banjo/vocals) acc. Sam & Kirk McGee
A2 Charming Betsy: Land Norris (banjo/vocals)
A3 Coal Creek March: Marion Underwood (banjo)
A4 Railroad Bill: Riley Puckett (banjo/vocals) Gid Tanner (fiddle)
A5 American & Spanish Fandango: R. B. Smith & S. J. Allgood (banjo duet)
A6 Cheat 'Em: Red Headed Fiddlers, Wolter "Red" Graham (banjo) A. L. Steeley (fiddle)
B1 Leather Breeches: W. A. Hinton (banjo)
B2 Going Back To Jericho: Dock Walsh (banjo/vocals)
B3 Little Turtle Dove: Bascom Lamar Lunsford (banjo/vocals)
B4 Home Sweet Home: Frank Jenkins (banjo)
B5 The Orphan Girl: Buell Kazee (banjo/vocals)
B6 Shortenin' Bread: Fisher Hendley & J. Small (banjos) Henry Whitter (guitar)
[Credits]
Liner Notes: John Burke
[Notes]
Original Recordings made in 1925-1933

August 16, 2015

Old Time Music At Clarence Ashley's Part 2

Old Time Music At Clarence Ashley's, Vol. 2
Folkways Records FA-2359

Format: Vinyl, LP, Album
Country: United States
Released: 1963
Genre: Folk, World, & Country
Style: Bluegrass, & Country
[Tracklist]
A1 Free Little Birds
A2 Little Sadie
A3 Way Downtown
A4 Tough Luck
A5 Hump Backed Mule
A6 Daniel Prayed
A7 Walking Boss
A8 My Home's Across The Blue Ridge Mountains
B1 Coo-Coo Bird
B2 Crawdad
B3 Rising Sun Blues
B4 Lee Highway
B5 Shady Grove
B6 Corinna
B7 Omie Wise
B8 Amazing Grace
[Credits]
Clarence Ashley (banjo/vocals) Doc Watson (guitar/harmonoca/vocals) Fred Price (fiddle) Garley Foster (harmonica/guitar/vocals) Dock Walsh (banjo/vocals) Clint Howard (guitar/vocals) Jack Burchett (banjo) Jean Ritchie (vocals)
Recorded by Eugene Earle, Ralph Rinzler and Mike Seeger