Show Me the Way Home, Honey

utorak, 08.04.2014.

Jim Kweskin - Relax Your Mind

Styles: Folk Revival, Traditional Folk
Label: Vanguard
Released: 1965
File: mp3 @256K/s
Size: 82,6 MB
Time: 45:06
Art: front

1. Three Songs - A Look At The Ragtime Era (Sister Kate's Night Out) - 3:22
2. Hannah - 4:08
3. Bye And Bye - 3:39
4. The Cuckoo - 4:04
5. I Ain't Never Been Satisfied - 2:38
6. Eight More Miles To Louisville - 3:01
7. I Got Mine - 3:38
8. Buffalo Skinners - 5:28
9. Make Me A Pallet On Your Floor - 3:10
10. Guabi Guabi - 3:12
11. My Creole Belle - 4:41
12. Relax Your Mind - 3:58

Personnel:
Jim Kweskin - Guitar, Vocals
Mel Lyman - Harmonica
Fritz Richmond - Washtub Bass, Vocals (10)
Marilyn Kweskin - Vocals (5)

Notes: Released in 1966, Relax Your Mind finds Jim Kweskin taking a break from his jug band for a mellow solo effort. He's joined by harp player Mel Lyman and washtub bassist Fritz Richmond for what amounts to a stripped-down jug band on a dozen tracks. Two of the tracks, "I Got Mine" and a long version of "Buffalo Skinners," were recorded live at Club 47 in Cambridge. Even stripped down, the arrangements of traditional songs like "The Cuckoo" are quite lively when placed side by side with the one-singer/one-guitar approach preferred by some revivalists. Kweskin's guitar and Richmond's bass keep time and fill in the background while Lyman adds asides and flourishes to Mississippi John Hurt's "My Creole Belle" and Grandpa Jones' "Eight More Miles to Louisville." Richmond helps out on the vocal of "Guabi Guabi," an African folk song recorded a couple years earlier by Ramblin' Jack Elliott, and Marilyn Kweskin sings a fine lead on "I Ain't Never Been Satisfied." Overall, Relax Your Mind is a subdued recording, and lacks the irresponsible hijinks fans had come to expect from the Jim Kweskin Jug Band. Compared to other more traditional folk with barebones arrangements, however, Relax Your Mind is a lively affair. The album also shows that good folk recordings continued to be made after Dylan supposedly pulled the plug on the folk revival in 1965. The packaging of the 2003 reissue by Universe reprints the original liner notes and looks great. ~ AMG
More info (front and back Lp cover)

Relax Your Mind



Sippie Wallace - Mighty Tight Woman
Jim Kweskin - Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think)



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Jim Kweskin, Folk Revival, Traditional Folk

- 00:41 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

utorak, 01.04.2014.

Dave Van Ronk - Down in Washington Square (3 disk set)

Styles: British Folk, Folk Revival, Folk-Blues
Label: Folkways
Released: 2013
Art: full

Notes: Called “The Mayor of MacDougal Street,” Dave Van Ronk (1936-2002) was a leading figure in the Greenwich Village music scene for more than four decades. He epitomized the urban “folksinger”— apprenticing through immersion in the music revival’s New York City epicenter of Washington Square Park. Drawing from and developing a wide repertoire of songs, guitar techniques, and performing skills, he mentored younger musicians and songwriters such as Bob Dylan, Jack Hardy, Suzanne Vega, Christine Lavin, and many others. Down in Washington Square includes 16 never-before-released recordings coupled with tracks from the Smithsonian Folkways archive, spanning early live recordings made in 1958 (one year before his first Folkways album) to his final studio recordings in 2001, just months before his death. It paints a musical mosaic of Van Ronk’s artistry and expands his legacy, keeping alive the genius of a legendary performer who inspired audiences, musicians, and a major motion picture — Inside Llewyn Davis, written and directed by Joel and Ethan Coen. Three CD box set, 54 tracks, nearly three hours of music, 40-page booklet with extensive notes.~Folkways
The very template of the urban folk singer in the late '50s and early '60s, Dave Van Ronk was born and grew up in Brooklyn, learning to play ukulele, banjo, and guitar at an early age. Initially drawn to jazz, he was influenced, like so many others, by Harry Smith's Anthology of American Folk Music, and began spending time at the famous impromptu Washington Square Park folk jam sessions. He developed a gruff, bluesy, intelligent, and authentic-sounding urban folk style that made him the Dean of New York's folk singers. This three-disc set spans Van Ronk's career, beginning with early live recordings he made in 1958 in advance of his first Folkways album, through his final studio recordings in 2001 just months before his death.~AMG
Read liner notes at Smithsonian Folkways Recordings

Disc 1

1. Duncan and Brady - 3:06
2. River Come Down (Bamboo) - 3:48
3. Spike Driver Blues - 3:15
4. John Henry - 2:29
5. Backwater Blues - 3:04
6. K.C. Moan - 3:03
7. Haul on the Bowline - 1:21
8. Just a Closer Walk With Thee - 3:03
9. Gambler's Blues - 2:46
10. Sweeet Substitute - 2:34
11. Bed Bug Blues - 2:48
12. Winin' Boy - 2:40
13. Georgie and the IRT - 3:33
14. Betty and Dupree - 3:38
15. Come Back, Baby - 3:55
16. My Baby's So Sweet - 2:36
17. Black Mountain Blues - 4:04
18. Ya-Yas-Yas - 2:06

File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 125,2 MB
Time: 53:57

Down in Washington Square [Disc 1]



Disc 2

1. Willie the Weeper - 2:51
2. Dink's Song - 3:46
3. Santy Anno - 1:46
4. Leave Her, Johnny - 1:31
5. Tell Old Bill - 4:30
6. Careless Love - 2:58
7. Standing by My Window - 4:58
8. Please See That My Grave is Kept Clean - 2:58
9. Had More Money - 3:09
10. If You Leave Me, Pretty Mama - 3:09
11. Hesitation Blues - 2:35
12. In the Pines - 3:09
13. Oh, What a Beautiful City - 3:16
14. Mean Old Frisco - 2:58
15. Stackalee - 2:46
16. How Long - 3:52
17. Aint No Grave Can Hold My Body Down - 4:53
18. House of the Rising Sun - 6:10

File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 142,2 MB
Time: 61:24

Down in Washington Square [Disc 2]

Disc 3

1. Hootchie Kootchie Man - 3:15
2. Reckless Blues - 2:31
3. Trouble in Mind - 2:26
4. Oh Lord, Search My Heart - 3:57
5. God Bless the Child - 3:18
6. Losers - 3:19
7. Another Time and Place - 4:30
8. Garden State Stomp - 2:53
9. Motherless Children - 3:13
10. Don't You Leave Me Here (I'm Alabama Bound) - 4:43
11. Spike Driver Blues - 6:50
12. Down South Blues - 5:12
13. St. James Infirmary (Gambler's Blues) - 4:26
14. Ace In the Hole - 4:23
15. Going Down Slow - 3:30
16. Buckets of Rain - 3:55
17. Jelly Jelly - 3:03
18. Sometime (Whatcha Gonna Do) - 2:37

File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 157,6 MB
Time: 68:08

Down in Washington Square [Disc 3]



Dave Van Ronk - Ragtime Jug Stompers
Dave Van Ronk - Two Sides Of

Posted by muddy

Oznake: British Folk, Folk Revival, Folk-Blues, Dave Van Ronk

- 23:59 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

utorak, 18.03.2014.

Dave Van Ronk - Sunday Street

Styles: British Folk, Folk Revival, Folk-Blues
Label: Philo
Released: 1976/1999
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 101,9 MB
Time: 44:07
Art: front

1. Sunday Street - 3:31
2. Jesus Met the Woman at the Well - 5:38
3. Nobody Knows the Way I Feel This Morning - 3:55
4. Maple Leaf Rag - 4:04
5. Down South Blues - 4:41
6. Jivin' Man Blues - 3:08
7. That Song About the Midway - 3:37
8. The Pearls - 4:33
9. That'll Never Happen No More - 3:53
10. Mamie's Blues - 4:24
11. Would You Like to Swing on a Star? - 2:38

Notes: This album, originally released in 1976, may or may not be, as annotator (and former Dave Van Ronk guitar student) Elijah Wald claims, "Dave's greatest single album" (frankly, Van Ronk has made so many albums for so many fly-by-night labels that it is hard to endorse so sweeping a statement), but it is certainly a very good one. Van Ronk had made various efforts in recent years to accommodate pop and rock music on his albums, but this one was a return to his usual repertoire of folk-blues tunes and jazz and ragtime transcriptions for guitar, with one Joni Mitchell song ("That Song About the Midway") and an original, the title song, thrown in. And it was a solo album on which Van Ronk sang and accompanied himself on acoustic guitar. Thus, it approximated what a good set in a club by this artist would sound like, minus the singer's witticisms, of course. Van Ronk never hid his influences, but he never sounded exactly like them, either, and on this album he was very much himself. Maybe it is his greatest single album; it is certainly one of his most representative.

Sunday Street



Dave Van Ronk - Two Sides Of
Jim Kweskin - Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think)



Posted by muddy

Oznake: British Folk, Folk Revival, Folk-Blues, Dave Van Ronk

- 23:04 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

ponedjeljak, 02.12.2013.

Dave Van Ronk - Two Sides Of

Styles: Folk Revival
Label: Fantasy
Released: 1963/1981
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 179,1 MB
Time: 78:13
Art: front + back

1. Cake Walkin' Babies From Home - 2:59
2. Ace In The Hole - 2:53
3. St.Louis Tickle - 3:25
4. Death Letter Blues - 4:48
5. All Over You - 3:33
6. Whoa Back Buck - 3:39
7. Sister Kate - 3:04
8. Kansas City Blues - 2:10
9. Green, Green Rocky Road - 3:39
10. See See Rider - 5:18
11. Rocks And Gravel - 4:28
12. Hesitation Blues - 3:32
13. God Bless The Child - 4:25
14. Sunday Street - 3:20
15. Sportin' Life - 4:56
16. Cocaine - 4:30
17. St. James Infirmary - 5:00
18. You've been A Good Ole Wagon - 2:52
19. Spike Driver Blues - 4:15
20. Gaslight Rag - 2:13
21. Candy Man - 3:04

Recorded in London at Livingstone Studios, 1963, 1981
Remastered Fantasy Studos Berkeley, 2002.

Personnel:
Dave Van Ronk (guitars, vocals)
with
Red Onion Jazz Band (1, 2, 5, 7, 10, 12)

Notes: This two-on-one single-CD pairing of sessions from 1963 and 1981 isn't the most logical chronological mating, but Van Ronk's style was consistent enough throughout his career that it's not jarring, though neither album is among his very best. The first half of the disc is devoted to the whole of the 1963 In the Tradition album, which was evenly split between tracks on which the singer is backed by the Dixieland jazz-style combo the Red Onions and by more customary acoustic folk-blues solo guitar. That 1963 session isn't too much different from much of the rest of his catalog, other than in the balanced mixture between jazz and folk approaches. Of the trad jazz cuts, the item that might attract the most collector interest is the jaunty "All Over You," which is certainly one of the most obscure (and atypical) early Bob Dylan covers; Dylan would never release his own version, though a demo he did of the tune in 1963 has appeared on bootlegs. It's not much of a song, but its basic joie de vivre fits in well with the jazz segment of this program, on which Van Ronk's gravelly vocals credibly echo (especially for a white singer) the spirit of early New Orleans jazz vocalists like Louis Armstrong. Among the acoustic numbers are "Green, Green Rocky Road" and "Rocks and Gravel," both of which would be recorded by several other major talents of the '60s folk scene. The CD also contains all but two songs ("In the Midnight Hour" and "Stagolee") from a solo acoustic album he recorded in a single-night session in London in 1981, Your Basic Dave Van Ronk. If you'd been following Van Ronk up to that point, it wouldn't have contained anything in its approach that you hadn't heard before; indeed, some of the songs ("God Bless the Child," "Cocaine," "St. James Infirmary," "Candy Man") had been included on Van Ronk albums released many years prior to 1981. Still, Van Ronk's powers as an excellent folk-blues interpreter were fully intact, and it did include two original Van Ronk compositions in "Sunday Street" and "Gaslight Rag," the latter an homage to the famed Gaslight club in Greenwich Village. ~ Amg

Two Sides Of



The Even Dozen Jug Band - Jug Band Songs Of The Southern Mountains
Dave Van Ronk - Ragtime Jug Stompers



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Dave Van Ronk, Folk Revival

- 23:39 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

ponedjeljak, 09.09.2013.

Jim Kweskin - Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think)

Styles: Traditional Folk, Folk Revival, Old-Timey
Label: Blix Street Records
Released: 2009
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 106,5 MB
Time: 45:26
Art: front

1. Some Of These Days - 4:34
2. Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives To Me - 3:15
3. Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think) - 4:45
4. John Henry - 5:22
5. Blue Skies - 3:42
6. C Jam Blues - 3:26
7. Brother Can You Spare A Dime? - 5:26
8. Junco Partner - 3:54
9. Choo Choo Ch'Boogie - 3:14
10. Exactly Like You - 3:45
11. Sweet Sue - 3:57


Personnel: im Kweskin (vocals, guitar, banjo); Samoa Wilson (vocals); Titus Vollmer's Bluezzboat (guitar, dobro); Bruce Millard (mandolin); Matt Leavenworth (fiddle); Leo Blanco (piano); John Ramsey, Jerry Deupree (drums); Mickey Bones (snare drum).

Notes: On National Public Radio’s Fresh Air, rock historian Ed Ward listed, among the most important bands of the early 60’s, the Rolling Stones, the Beatles, the Byrds, “and the Jim Kweskin Jug Band.” Ward added: “I’m not kidding.”

Listening to the music here, you’ll understand why he wasn’t kidding. Jim Kweskin continues to perform his vast repertoire of folk, blues, swing, jug band and early standards with his own brand of infectious personal interpretations. His guitar finger picking of songs like Some of These Days and Exactly Like You is recognized by his peers and fans as some of the best there is. His selection of songs is vividly evocative of his many diverse influences such as Louis Jordan, Clancy Hayes, Fats Wallter, Milton Brown, Duke Ellington, Bing Crosby and Pete Seeger.

Backed by the Jim Kweskin Band, a group of extraordinary musicians, this album features four tracks taken from Jim’s Now And Again album and three tracks from Samoa Wilson’s Live The Life album.

We feel confident that when you listen to this wonderful collection of songs you will certainly “enjoy yourself.”

Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think)



Kristina Olsen - The Truth Of A Woman
John Hammond - John Hammond



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Jim Kweskin, Folk Revival, Old-Timey, Traditional Folk

- 09:44 - Comments (1) - Print - Link for this post

srijeda, 04.09.2013.

The Even Dozen Jug Band - Jug Band Songs Of The Southern Mountains

Styles: Country Blues, Ragtime, Novelty, Folk Revival, Jug Band
Released: 2009
Label: Elektra
File: mp3@320K/s
Size: 60.0 MB
Time: 26:13
Art: front

1. Come On In - 2:39
2. Mandolin King Rag - 1:43
3. Evolution Mama - 3:16
4. The Even Dozens - 2:51
5. I Don't Love Nobody - 2:53
6. Rag Mama - 2:11
7. France Blues - 2:40
8. The Original Colossal Drag Rag - 2:56
9. All Worn Out - 2:50
10. Sadie Green - 2:10


Personnel:
Banjo [5 String] - Frank Goodkin (tracks: 6), Pete Siegel (tracks: 10)
Banjo [6 String] - Pete Jacobson (tracks: 4, 6), Stefan Grossman (tracks: 2, 3, 8)
Blues Harp - John Benson (tracks: 7)
Fiddle - Fred Weisz (tracks: 4, 6, 8)
Guitar - Pete Jacobson (tracks: 2, 3), Pete Siegel (tracks: 5), Stefan Grossman (tracks: 1, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10)
Guitar [Second] - Pete Jacobson (tracks: 9)
Jug - Danny Lauffer (tracks: 1-3, 5-10)
Jug [First] - Danny Lauffer (tracks: 4)
Jug [Second] - Peggy Haines (tracks: 4)
Kazoo - John Benson (tracks: 8), Josh Rifkin (tracks: 1, 5-7, 10)
Mandolin - Dave Grisman (tracks: 2, 4-8, 10)
Piano - Josh Rifkin (tracks: 3, 4, 6, 8, 9)
Trumpet - Bob Gurland (tracks: 3, 5, 6, 8)
Vocals - Pete Jacobson (tracks: 3, 6, 9), Pete Siegel (tracks: 5), Steve Katz (tracks: 1, 7, 10)
Voice [Second] - Josh Rifkin (tracks: 3, 9), Maria D'Amato (tracks: 1, 7)
Washboard - Steve Katz (tracks: 2-9)

Notes: The Even Dozen Jug Band was founded in 1963 by the great country blues and ragtime guitarists Stephan Grossman and Peter Siegel in New York City. An old timey super-group of sorts, its members included John Sebastian (who later formed the Lovin' Spoonful), mandolinist extraordinaire David Grisman, guitarist Steve Katz (later with Blues Project and Blood, Sweat and Tears), vocalist Maria D'Amato (who later became singing star Maria Muldaur), and famed American musicologist and pianist Joshua Rifkin. The band was short lived and in 1964 released their only album, the highly influential "Jug Band Songs Of The Southern Mountains". The group made numerous appearances on television and performed at the famed Carnegie Hall in New York City. All selections newly remastered. ~ amazon


Jug Band Songs Of The Southern Mountains



Big Bill Broonzy - One Beer One Blues
Marshall Lawrence - House Call

Posted by muddy

Oznake: The Even Dozen Jug Band, Stefan Grossman, David Grisman, Folk Revival, Jug Band, Country Blues, Rag

- 00:30 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

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a few words
  • Jan 23, 2014
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    Become a regular visitor of our garret.


    We are a group of friends from different parts of the world which has one important thing in common, our love for the blues. We are here to promote blues and blues musicians who we think deserve more attention and that is the only purpose of this blog.
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