Show Me the Way Home, Honey

subota, 22.02.2014.

Clifford Hayes - Clifford Hayes & The Dixieland Jug Blowers

Styles: Pre-War Country Blues, Jug Band, Early Jazz
Label: Yazoo
Released: 1991
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 100,0 MB
Time: 42:35
Art: front + back

1. Please Don't Holler Mama - 3:04
2. Try And Treat Her Right - 2:21
3. You're Ticklin' Me - Take 1 - 3:11
4. Love Blues - 3:09
5. Blue Guitar Stomp - 3:01
6. If You Can't Make It Easy, Sweet Mama - 2:41
7. National Blues - Take 3 - 2:43
8. Barefoot Stomp - 3:18
9. Bye Bye Blues - 2:55
10. Hey! I Am Blue - 2:53
11. Clef Club Stomp - 3:12
12. Dance Hall Shuffle - 3:14
13. You'd Better Leave Me Alone, Sweet Papa - 3:19
14. Everybody Wants My Tootelum - 3:25

1927-28 (rec); 1976 (comp); 1991 (reissue)

Personnel:
Clifford Hayes - Violin (all except 9,11), Alto Sax (9,11)
Cal Smith - Banjo (4,7,13), Guitar (all except 13)
Fred Smith - Guitar (1,2)
Johnny Gatewood - Piano (4,6,8,9,11,13)
Earl Hines - Piano (3,10,12,14)
Dan Briscoe - Piano (5,7)
Earl McDonald - Jug (1,2,4,6,7,13)
Hess Grundy - Trombone (3-5,7-14)
Lockwood Lewis - Alto Sax (4,7,13)
George Allen - Soprano Sax (4,7,13), Alto Sax (4,7,13), Clarinet (1,2)
Elizabeth Washington - Vocals (4,13)
William B. Ferguson - Vocal (1,2)
Prince LaVaughn - Vocals (6)

Notes: The Louisville, Kentucky-based Dixieland Jug Blowers were one of the first jug bands to record. Led by violinist Clifford Hayes and jug player Earl McDonald, the Chicago-based group, which featured clarinetist Johnny Dodds, left a legacy of twenty-three tracks, including "Boodle Am Shake", "Memphis Shake" and "Skit, Skat, Doodle-Do", recorded between December 1926 and June 1927. Recording as the Louisville Jug Band, they cut such tunes as "She's In The Graveyard Now".
South Carolina-born McDonald moved to Louisville, at the age of two, in 1885. He formed the Louisville Jug Band while still in high school. The product of a musical family, Glasgow, Kentucky-born Hayes moved to Jeffersonville, Indiana in his teens. He joined McDonald's band in 1913.
Although McDonald and Hayes formally separated, over financial conflicts, by 1919, they continued to hire each other to play on recordings and live performances. ~ Craig Harris

Clifford Hayes & The Dixieland Jug Blowers



Gus Cannon - Walk Right In
Various - Good For What Ails You: Music Of The Medicine Shows



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Clifford Hayes, The Dixieland Jug Blowers, Prewar Blues, Jug Band

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četvrtak, 06.02.2014.

Gus Cannon - Walk Right In [Stax]

Styles: Jug Band, Pre-War Blues, Minstrel, Folk-Blues, Acoustic Memphis Blues
Recorded: 1963
Released: 1999
Label: Stax
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 72,2 MB
Time: 31:31
Art: full

1. Narration - 2:58
2. Kill It - 2:10
3. Walk Right In - 2:29
4. Salty Dog - 2:22
5. Going Around The Mountain - 1:58
6. Ol' Hen - 2:33
7. Gonna Raise A Ruckus Tonight - 2:19
8. Ain't Gonna Rain No More - 2:50
9. Boll-Weevil - 2:42
10. Come On Down To My House - 1:24
11. Make Me A Pallet On The Floor - 3:07
12. Get Up In The Morning Soon - 2:06
13. Crawdad Hole - 2:26

Personnel:
Gus Cannon - Banjo, Vocals
Milton Roby - Washboard
Will Shade - Jug

Notes: In June of 1963, 79-year-old Gus Cannon went into the studio in Memphis to cut his first recording in close to seven years, all a result of the Rooftoop Singers having made his "Walk Right In" into a number one single. The producers didn't ask for too much out of Cannon, to judge from the results -- just that he sit there with his banjo and old friends Will Shade (jug) and Milton Roby (washboard) backing him, and do his favorite songs. He introduces a few of them in separately indexed spoken passages, and runs through them in leisurely if dedicated fashion: the title track (which is much bluesier than the hit in Cannon's hands), "Salty Dog" (the best track here), "Gonna Raise a Ruckus Tonight," "Make Me a Pallet on Your Floor," and "Crawdad Hole." The album is almost an audio documentary tour through different corners of Cannon's life and career that, ideally, might've run to several volumes. ~ Bruce Eder

Walk Right In [Stax]



Gus Cannon - Jug Band Blues Essentials
Various - Jugband Specials



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Folk-Blues, Gus Cannon, Jug Band, Memphis Blues, Minstrel, Pre-War Blues

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petak, 20.12.2013.

Carolina Chocolate Drops - Dona Got A Ramblin' Mind

Styles: Neo-Traditional Country, Contemporary Country, String Bands, Jug Band, Neo-Traditional Folk
Label: Music Maker
Released: 2007
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 109.7 MB
Time: 47:55
Art: front

1. Starry Crown - 2:57
2. Dona Got a Ramblin' Mind - 2:47
3. Rickett's Hornpipe - 2:34
4. Ol' Corn Likker - 4:10
5. Little Sadie - 3:36
6. Little Margaret - 2:06
7. Dixie - 1:41
8. Black Annie - 3:15
9. Tom Dula - 3:29
10. Georgie Buck - 3:01
11. Old Cat Died - 2:29
12. Another Man Done Gone - 2:15
13. Black-Eyed Daisy - 3:58
14. Short Life of Trouble - 2:47
15. Sally Ann - 3:19
16. Sourwood Mountain - 3:21


Personnel:
Rhiannon Giddens - fiddle, banjo
Dom Flemons- guitar, jug, harmonica, percussion, banjo
Justin Robinson - fiddle
and
Sule Greg Wilson - percussion

Notes: Some 80 years after its initial era, traditional string-band/jug-band folk music of the kind played by Gid Tanner and Uncle Eck Dunford in the 1920s and '30s was a rarity in itself, but the fact that the Carolina Chocolate Drops are young African-Americans rather than aged Caucasians makes them stand out even more. The trio employs fiddle, acoustic guitar, banjo, and--yes--jug, for a sound that's full of reverence for first-generation string-band music but breathes with plenty of sonic vitality. Unsurprisingly, there are traditional tunes aplenty on the band's debut album, DONA GOT A RAMBLIN' MIND, and the Chocolate Drops tear into them with the same reckless abandon that made their musical heroes' music so immediately appealing so many years earlier.

Dona Got A Ramblin' Mind



The 2nd South Carolina String Band - Southern Soldier: Favorite Camp Songs of the Civil War
Old Crow Medicine Show - Carry Me Back



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Carolina Chocolate Drops, Contemporary Country, String Bands, Jug Band, Contemporary Folk

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utorak, 17.12.2013.

Old Crow Medicine Show - Old Crow Medicine Show

Styles: Jug Bands, String Bands, Neo-Traditional Folk, Contemporary Folk
Label: Nettwerk Records
Released: 2004
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 83,7 MB
Time: 36:17
Art: front

1. Tell It To Me - 2:48
2. Big Time In The Jungle - 2:50
3. Poor Man - 3:35
4. Tear It Down - 2:11
5. Hard To Love - 2:30
6. CC Rider - 3:50
7. Trials & Troubles - 2:57
8. Hard To Tell - 3:15
9. Take 'Em Away - 3:35
10. We're All In This Together - 4:51
11. Wagon Wheel - 3:52

Personnel:
Critter Fuqua - Banjo, Guitar, Vocals, Bottleneck Guitar
Kevin Hayes - Guitar
Morgan Jahnig - Bass (Upright)
Ketcham Secor - Banjo, Fiddle, Harmonica, Vocals
Willie Watson - Banjo, Guitar, Vocals
and
David Rawlings - Guitar, Producer
Gillian Welch - Drums


Notes: Old Crow Medicine Show is an all-acoustic quintet from four states whose members met in New York City and currently reside in Nash Vegas. Their storied beginnings include a North American cross-continent ramble while they learned their instruments and how to play together, eventually ending up playing on the street in front of the Grand Ole Opry before being asked to the stage some weeks later. Their self-titled debut album is equal parts Woody Guthrie's dust bowl weariness and Cisco Houston's rambling code of the road, Phil Ochs' view of a passing America, the Kingston Trio's wide-eyed enthusiastic earnestness, the New Christy Minstrels' sense of community, Doc and Merle Watson's home-grown blues as informed by Bill Monroe, Beat Generation lamentations, forlorn 1960s idealism, and the musical mindset that fueled America's original folk revival from the 1950s as it moved toward rockabilly. In other words, this record is informed by ghosts but executed in flesh, blood, sweat, and laughter. Whether the tunes are covers from antiquity ("CC Rider," "Poor Man," "Tell It to Me") or originals by fiddler and vocalist Ketch Secor and his songwriting and singing partner, Willie Watson ("Trials & Troubles," "Hard to Tell," "We're in This Together"), the feel is the same: passion, humor, and relentless drive to get to the heart of the tune and put it across. There is so much enthusiasm here, so much willingness and fire, that it would be hard to do anything but want to sing along. Thoroughly enjoyable, wonderfully raw and sinewy, Old Crow Medicine Show may be evoking the sounds of the old string bands, but they do it with a crackling rock & roll energy. ~ Thom Jurek

O.C.M.S.



Abbie Gardner - Hope
Jeff Lang - Half Seas Over



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Old Crow Medicine Show, Jug Band, String Bands, Contemporary Folk

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petak, 13.12.2013.

Eden & John's East River String Band - Take A Look At That Baby

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 49:30
Size: 113.3 MB
Styles: String bands, Jug Bands
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:30] 1. Where You Been So Long
[3:10] 2. Next Week Sometime
[3:03] 3. Too Tight Rag
[3:08] 4. Pony Blues
[3:43] 5. Got A Letter From My Darling
[3:08] 6. I'm So Glad
[2:19] 7. Old Jaw Bone
[5:28] 8. Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams
[3:19] 9. Take A Look At That Baby
[3:53] 10. Baby How Can It Be
[3:17] 11. Big Road Blues
[3:42] 12. Diamond Joe
[3:02] 13. How You Want You Rollin' Done
[3:43] 14. Nothing In This World For Me


Helmed by intrepid guitarist, mandolinist, vocalist and dedicated record collector John Heneghan along with kazoo, resonator ukulele and fetching vocalist Eden Brower, the East River String Band’s delightful fourth CD release is, once again, introduced to us by some inventive cover art courtesy of the legendary cartoonist and Cheap Suit Serenader, Robert Crumb. Crumb also adds his infectious fretwork to four of the fourteen traditional titles revived here, including entertaining renditions of both the James Cole String Band’s eternal question “Where You Been So Long?” and “Too Tight Rag,” originally committed to shellac in the early 1930’s by a group of Muhlenberg County, Kentucky coal miners led by one Everett Eugene Hack. Other old-time influenced musicians accompanying the irrepressible Brower and Heneghan include harmonica whiz Ernesto Gomez (Brotherhood Of The Jug Band Blues), Pat Conte and Blind Uncle Otis (Massapequa Parkaneers), banjo and quills ace Dom Flemons (Carolina Chocolate Drops) and mouth-harpist Joe Bellulovich of the Otis Brothers. Jackson Lynch of the Down Hill Strugglers also adds fiddle accents to a rousingly good-timey recall of Bo Carter’s “Baby How Can It Be.” Heneghan and company particularly shine on their blues numbers – favorites are Charley Patton’s “Pony Blues,” Tommy Johnson’s “Big Road Blues” and Skip James’ “I’m So Glad” – as well as on all-out shenanigans like “Old Jaw Bone,” “Diamond Joe” and “Got A Letter From My Darling.” Recalls the wildly energetic and appealingly eclectic music created by the Alan Wilson-helmed Canned Heat outfit in the 1960’s, record collectors all as well. ~Gary von Tersch

Take A Look At That Baby

Mo' Albums...
Dave Van Ronk - Two Sides Of
Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five - Mama Mama Blues: The Best Of Louis Jordan



Posted by azzul

Oznake: Eden & John's East River String Band, String Bands, Jug Band

- 23:25 - Comments (1) - Print - Link for this post

utorak, 26.11.2013.

Memphis Jug Band with Cannon's Jug Stompers (4 Disc Box set)

Styles: Jug Band, Pre-War Country Blues, Acoustic Memphis Blues
Recorded: 1927-1930
Released: 2005
Label: JSP
Art: full


Among the recorded members were (at various times) Will Shade (vocals, guitar, harmonica), Charlie Burse (pronounced Bursey) (guitar, mandolin, and vocals), Charlie Nickerson (piano and vocals), Charlie Pierce (violin), Charlie Polk (jug), Tewee Blackman (vocals, guitar), “Hambone” Lewis (jug), Jab Jones (jug), Johnny Hodges/Hardge (piano), Ben Ramey (vocals and kazoo), Casey Bill Weldon (guitar and vocals), Memphis Minnie (guitar and vocals), Vol Stevens (vocals, violin, and mandolin), Milton Robie (violin), Otto Gilmore/Gilmer (drums and woodblocks), and Robert Burse (drums). Vocals were also provided by Hattie Hart, Memphis Minnie, Jennie Mae Clayton (Shade’s wife), and Minnie Wallace, with Charlie Burse often contributing beautiful harmony parts to Shade’s lead vocal lines. In the case of Memphis Minnie, the Memphis Blues Band accompanied her on two sides for Victor Records, recorded in 1930 when the band's career was "winding down".
The attributed names of the group led by Will Shade on various recording labels vary quite a bit, but recent scholarly consensus has led writers to compile all of these works under the over-arching rubric of the Memphis Jug Band. In addition to that name, alternative names found on record labels include the Picaninny Jug Band, Memphis Sanctified Singers, the Carolina Peanut Boys, the Dallas Jug Band, the Memphis Sheiks, the Jolly Jug Band and recordings credited to the individual performers Hattie Hart, Minnie Wallace, Casey Bill Weldon, Charlie Nickerson, Vol Stevens, Charlie Burse, “Poor Jab” Jones, and Will Shade, but actually performed with accompaniment by other Memphis Jug Band members.
The Memphis Jug Band played wherever they could find engagements, and busked in local parks. They were popular among white as well as black audiences. Musically they were flexible, playing a mixture of ballads, dance tunes, knock-about novelty numbers, and blues. Some of their songs mention hoodoo magical beliefs, and some members also contributed to gospel recordings, either uncredited or as part of the Memphis Sanctified Singers. In total, they made more than eighty recordings, first for Victor Records, then—as the Picaninny Jug Band—for the Champion-Gennett label, and finally for OKeh Records. The Victor recordings were made in Memphis and Atlanta, Georgia between 1927 and 1930, the Champion-Gennetts in Richmond, Indiana in August 1932, while the final sessions on Okeh were held in Chicago in November 1934. By that time, their style of music was no longer in demand, and Will Shade was no longer able to keep the musicians assembled as a group, although many of the individuals carried on working around Memphis until the 1940s.
In 1963 Will Shade recorded one last time with another Memphian, 79-year-old Gus Cannon, former leader of Cannon’s Jug Stompers, another popular jug band. They recorded the album Walk Right In, on Stax Records, a result of The Rooftop Singers having made Cannon's "Walk Right In" into a number one single. Will Shade on jug and Milton Roby on washboard perform a series of thirteen traditional songs, plus Cannon's great hit "Walk Right In," including "Narration," "Kill It," "Salty Dog," "Going Around," "The Mountain," "Ol' Hen", "Gonna Raise A Ruckus Tonight," "Ain't Gonna Rain No More," "Boll-Weevil," "Come On Down To My House," "Make Me a Pallet on Your Floor," "Get Up In The Morning Soon," and "Crawdad Hole." The album is almost an audio documentary tour through different corners of Cannon's life and career that, ideally, might've run to several volumes.

Booklet




Disc A: Memphis Jug Band with Will Weldon & Vol Stevens

File: flac
Size: 183.6 MB
Time: 76:13

1. Sun Brimmer's Blues - 3:26
2. Stingy Woman Blues - 3:11
3. Memphis Jug Blues - 3:09
4. Newport News Blues - 3:12
5. Sometimes I Think I Love You - 3:07
6. Sunshine Blues - 2:42
7. Memphis Boy Blues - 2:58
8. I'm Looking For The Bully Of The Town - 2:48
9. I Packed My Suitcase, Started To The Train - 3:15
10. State Of Tennessee Blues - 3:20
11. Bob Lee Junior Blues - 3:12
12. Kansas City Blues - 2:55
13. Beale Street Mess Around - 3:05
14. I'll See You In The Spring, When The Birds Begin To Sing - 3:08
15. Turpentine Blues - 3:25
16. Hitch Me To Your Buggy And Drive Me Like A Mule - 3:07
17. Vol Stevens Blues - 3:20
18. Baby Got The Rickets (Mama's Got The Mobile Blues) - 2:55
19. Snitchin' Gambler Blues - 3:23
20. Evergreen Money Blues - 3:24
21. Coal Oil Blues - 3:33
22. Papa Long Blues - 3:12
23. Peaches In The Springtime - 3:07
24. She Stays Out All Night Long - 3:06

Personnel:
Memphis Jug Band
Will Shade - harmonica, guitar, vocal
Ben Ramey - kazoo
Will Weldon - guitar, vocal
Charlie Polk - jug, vocal
'Shakey Walter' - harmonica
Vol Stevens - banjo, mandolin, guitar
Jennie Clayton - vocal

Tracks 15,16,17 and 18
Casey Bill Weldon - guitar (15,16,17,18), vocal (15,16)
Vol Stevens - guitar (15,16), banjo, mandolin & vocals (17,18)

Disc A: Memphis Jug Band with Will Weldon & Vol Stevens


Disc B: Memphis Jug Band with Will Shade, Minnie Wallace & Hattie Hart

File: flac
Size: 164.9 MB
Time: 67:51

1. Lindberg Hop - 2:51
2. Sugar Pudding - 2:45
3. A Black Woman Is Like A Black Snake - 2:50
4. On The Road Again - 2:50
5. Whitehouse Station Blues - 2:45
6. Stealin', Stealin' - 2:58
7. Jug Band Waltz - 2:53
8. Mississippi River Waltz - 2:53
9. Better Leave That Stuff Alone - 3:26
10. She Stabbed Me With An Ice-Pick - 3:23
11. I Can't Stand It - 2:30
12. What's The Matter? - 2:54
13. Dirty Butter - 3:02
14. Old Folks Started It, The - 2:45
15. Won't You Be Kind To Me? - 3:22
16. You Wouldn't, Would You Papa? - 3:18
17. Feed Your Friend With A Long Handled Spoon - 2:54
18. I Can Beat You Plenty - 2:55
19. Taking Your Place - 3:14
20. Tired Of You Driving Me - 2:42
21. Memphis Yo Yo Blues - 2:53
22. K.C. Moan - 2:34
23. I Whipped My Woman With A Single Tree - 3:02

Personnel:
Memphis Jug Band
Will Shade - harmonica, guitar, vocal
Ben Ramey - kazoo
Charlie Burse - guitar, vocal
Vol Stevens - banjo, mandolin
Jab Jones - jug
Milton Roby - violin
Tewee Blackman - guitar
Charlie Nickerson - piano
Hattie Hart - vocal

Tracks 9 and 10
Will Shade - vocal, guitar
Jab Jones - piano
Tracks 13 And 14
Minnie Wallace - vocal
? Will Shade - harmonica, guitar
? Milton Roby - violin
? Jab Jones - piano, jug
Charlie Burse - vocal, guitar
Tracks 15 and 16
Hattie Hart - vocal
? Milton Roby - violin
? Johnny Hardge (Hodges) - piano
? Will Shade or Charlie Burse - guitar

Disc B: Memphis Jug Band with Will Shade, Minnie Wallace & Hattie Hart


Disc C: Memphis Jug Band with Memphis Minnie & Hattie Hart

File: flac
Size: 176.7 MB
Time: 75:20

1. Everybody's Talking About Sadie Green - 3:10
2. Oh Ambulance Man - 2:43
3. Cocaine Habit Blues - 2:50
4. Jim Strainer Blues - 3:20
5. Cave Man Blues - 3:08
6. Fourth Street Mess - 3:18
7. It Won't Act Right - 2:33
8. Bumble Bee Blues - 2:55
9. Meningitis Blues - 3:13
10. Aunt Caroline Dyer Blues - 3:08
11. Stonewall Blues - 3:28
12. Spider's Nest Blues - 3:07
13. Papa's Got Your Water On - 2:31
14. Going Back To Memphis - 2:27
15. He's In The Jailhouse Now - 3:13
16. Got A Letter From My Darlin' - 3:01
17. Round And Round - 3:04
18. You May Leave, But This Will Bring You Back - 3:06
19. Move That Thing - 3:09
20. You Got Me Rollin' - 2:32
21. Son Brimmer's Blues - 3:12
22. Stingy Woman Blues - 3:17
23. Newport News Blues - 3:11
24. Snitchin' Gambler Blues - 3:13
25. Lindberg Hop - 2:19

Personnel:
Memphis Jug Band
Will Shade - harmonica, guitar, vocal
Ben Ramey - kazoo
Will Weldon - guitar, vocal
Charlie Polk - jug, vocal
Vol Stevens - banjo, mandolin
Charlie Burse - guitar, vocal, mandolin
Jab Jones - jug
Hambone Lewis - jug
Charlie Nickerson - vocal
Hattie Hart - vocal
Milton Roby - violin
Memphis Minnie - vocal, guitar

Tracks 16,17,18,19 and 20
Memphis Jug Band as Memphis Sheiks* and Carolina Peanut Boys
Will Weldon, Ben Ramey, Charlie Nickerson, Will Shade and Charlie Burse
Rec. Memphis, Tennessee, November 26 and 28, 1930.

* you have two releases by 'Memphis Sheiks' during '90's.
Band members:
Robert Nighthawk - Organ, Harmonica, Piano
Delta Joe Sanders - Guitar, Vocals
Of course this is not the same band

Disc C: Memphis Jug Band with Memphis Minnie & Hattie Hart


Disc D: Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers with Noah Lewis, Hosea Woods & Elijah Avery

File: flac
Size: 172.3 MB
Time: 78:13

1. Minglewood Blues - 3:47
2. Big Railroad Blues - 3:19
3. Madison Street Rag - 3:15
4. Springdale Blues - 3:08
5. Ripley Blues - 3:03
6. Pig Ankle Strut - 3:04
7. Noah's Blues - 2:54
8. Hollywood Rag - 3:04
9. Heart Breakin' Blues - 3:06
10. Feather Bed - 3:13
11. Cairo Rag - 2:59
12. Bugle Call Rag - 3:03
13. Viola Lee Blues - 3:07
14. Riley's Wagon - 2:58
15. Last Chance Blues - 3:17
16. Tired Chicken Blues - 2:55
17. Going To Germany - 2:34
18. Walk Right In - 2:58
19. Mule Get Up In The Alley - 2:49
20. Rooster's Crowing Blues, The - 3:02
21. Jonestown Blues - 2:50
22. Pretty Mama Blues - 2:42
23. Bring It With You When You Come - 2:47
24. Wolf River Blues - 2:39
25. Money Never Runs Out - 2:50
26. Prison Wall Blues - 2:37

Personnel:
Gus Cannon - banjo, jug, vocal, whistle
Ashley Thompson - guitar, vocal
Noah Lewis - harmonica
Elijah Avery - banjo, guitar
Hosea Woods - guitar, vocal, kazoo

Disc D: Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers with Noah Lewis, Hosea Woods & Elijah Avery



Maria Muldaur - Garden Of Joy
Dave Van Ronk - Ragtime Jug Stompers

Posted by muddy

Oznake: Cannon's Jug Stompers, Country Blues, Jug Band, Memphis Blues, Memphis Jug Band, Prewar Blues

- 23:41 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

srijeda, 20.11.2013.

Gus Cannon - Jug Band Blues Essentials

Styles: Jug Band, Pre-War Blues
Label: Master Classics Records
Released: 2010
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 178.0 MB
Time: 77:46
Art: front

1. Wolf River Blues - 2:38
2. Ripley Blues - 3:02
3. Hollywood Rag - 3:04
4. Minglewood Blues - 3:45
5. Cairo Rag - 2:58
6. Mule Gets Up In The Alley - 2:49
7. Tired Chicken Blues - 2:55
8. Prison Wall Blues - 2:37
9. Heart Breakin' Blues - 3:04
10. Pig Ankle Strut - 3:03
11. Bugle Call Rag - 3:01
12. Noah's Blues - 2:52
13. Pretty Mama Blues - 2:40
14. Big Railroad Blues - 3:18
15. Viola Lee Blues - 3:05
16. Feather Bed - 3:12
17. Going To Germany - 2:33
18. Walk Right In - 2:57
19. Riley's Waggon - 2:57
20. Jonestown Blues - 2:50
21. Money Never Runs Out - 2:49
22. Madison Street Rag - 3:14
23. Springdale Blues - 3:06
24. Bring It With You When Come - 2:45
25. The Rooster's Crowing Blues - 3:01
26. Last Chane Blues - 3:16


Notes: A remarkable musician (he could play five-string banjo and jug simultaneously), Gus Cannon bridged the gap between early blues and the minstrel and folk styles that preceded it. His band of the '20s and '30s, Cannon's Jug Stompers, represents the apogee of the jug band style. Songs they recorded, notably the raggy "Walk Right In," were staples of the folk repertoire decades later, and Cannon himself continued to record and perform into the 1970s.
Self-taught on an instrument made from a frying pan and a raccoon skin, he learned early repertoire in the 1890s from older musicians, notably Mississippian Alec Lee. The early 1900s found him playing around Memphis with songster Jim Jackson and forming a partnership with Noah Lewis, whose harmonica wizardry would be basic to the Jug Stompers' sound. In 1914, Cannon began work with a succession of medicine shows that would continue into the 1940s, and where he further developed his style and repertoire.
His recording career began with Paramount sessions in 1927. He continued to record into the '30s as a soloist and with his incredible trio, which included Noah Lewis along with guitarists Hosea Woods or Ashley Thompson. (Side projects included duets with Blind Blake and the first ever recordings of slide banjo.) Often obliged to find employment in other fields than music, Cannon continued to play anyway, mostly around Memphis. He resumed his stalled recording efforts in 1956 with sessions for Folkways. Subsequent sessions paired him with other Memphis survivors like Furry Lewis. Advancing age curtailed his activities in the '70s, but he still played the occasional cameo, sometimes from a wheelchair, until shortly before his death. ~ AMG

Jug Band Blues Essentials



Maria Muldaur - Garden Of Joy
Various - Jugband Specials: 25 Great Original Recordings 1926-1935



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Gus Cannon, Jug Band, Prewar Blues

- 23:28 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

Various Artists - Fonotone Records 1956-1969 (5 Disc Box set)

Styles: Folk, Blues, Gospel, Traditional, Old-Time Music, Country, Bluegrass, Spirituals, Jug Bands, String Bands
Recorded: 1956-1969
Released: 2005
Label: Dust-to-Digital
File: mp3; 320 Kbps
Size: 886.0 MB
Time: 354:00 min.
Art: full


Joe Bussard (born Joseph E. Bussard, Jr. in Frederick, Maryland, July 11, 1936) is an American collector of 78-rpm records.
Based in Frederick, Maryland, Bussard maintains a collection of more than 25,000 records, primarily of American folk, gospel, and blues from the 1920s and 1930s, believed to be the largest in the world.
He was the subject of a documentary film, Desperate Man Blues, and his collection was mined for a compilation CD, Down in the Basement. He has gleefully shared his collection, which includes many only-known-copies of records (not to mention best-known-copies) with numerous reissue labels as well as with individuals for whom he has taped recordings from his collection for a nominal sum for decades.
From 1956 until 1970, he ran the last 78 rpm record label, Fonotone, which was dedicated to the release of new recordings of old-time music. Among these were the first-ever recordings by guitarist John Fahey, as well as hundreds of other performers.

In 1956 teenaged record collector Joe Bussard decided to track some of his guitar-playing National Guard buddies in his parent's basement in Frederick, MD, and Fonotone Records, America's last operating 78 rpm label, was born. Deliberately anachronistic, Bussard sought to emulate the jug band, blues, and early country 78s that he so treasured (and collected) from the 1920s and 1930s, and he and his friends took on pseudonyms that echoed the names of the artists who recorded during that fabled era at the very dawn of the American recording industry, essentially creating a mythical musical landscape that was stubbornly (even defiantly) out of touch with the technology and musical trends of the 1950s. Part hobby, part hoax, and partly a statement on what Bussard saw as the ongoing degradation of pop music, Fonotone released an impressive number of handmade 78s before Bussard finally officially folded the label in 1969. This elaborate five-disc box set, it comes housed in a cigar box with postcards, an extensive booklet, and even a Fonotone church key bottle opener, finally brings the work of Bussard's little lost label into the digital light of the 21st century. It has to be viewed as a little ironic, given Bussard's aversion to the technological advancements of the recording industry and his complete disgust at almost anything recorded after 1934, but here you have it, all laid out in zeros and ones, and what emerges is an at times brilliant facsimile of Harry Smith's Anthology of American Folk Music. But where Smith's anthology, which collects actual 78s from the 1920s and 1930s (the 1997 reissue of the anthology on CD actually drew on nearly pristine 78s from Bussard's vast personal collection), shines with the mysterious glow of a half-remembered vernacular past, the Fonotone set, which attempts to re-create that era, replaces the mystery with what amounts to cleverness and creative mischief. That doesn't mean that the music presented here isn't interesting, it frequently bursts forth with a wonderfully chaotic energy, but it is a bit like building a scale model of the Grand Coulee Dam out of Popsicle sticks. The end result is fascinating to look at, but being a re-creation, it lacks the intangible presence (and no doubt the utility) of the original. Still, the Fonotone records were a lot of fun, and discovering the real identities behind the pseudonyms is a big part of that fun. Birmingham Bill is actually Mike Seeger. Kid Future is a young Stefan Grossman. B. Sam Firk is Mike Stewart. Blind Robert Ward is Bob Coltman. And the first recordings of iconoclast John Fahey are here, under the name Blind Thomas, in what is a sort of dress rehearsal for his Blind Joe Death persona. Bussard himself appears as part of a whole range of jug and string band groups with names like the Mississippi Swampers, the Tennessee Mess Arounders, the Back Alley Boys, and so on. There are some actual field recordings here, as well, including a pair of tracks from black Appalachian banjo player Clarence Fross that could slip undetected into any Alan Lomax collection. There is also a good deal of bluegrass music, the only postwar musical style ever allowed on a Fonotone record, which is a further irony, since bluegrass probably did more than even rock & roll to kill off the jug and string band tradition that Bussard so admired. Arguably the most effective cuts are a trio of songs that drop the old-time façade long enough to comment directly on contemporary events. Bussard and Bob Coltman's "The Death of John Kennedy," recorded immediately after Kennedy's assassination in November of 1963, is particularly arresting, as is Bussard's "The Flight of Astronaut John Glenn" and Coltman's (as Blind Robert Ward) "The Voyage of Apollo 8" (which Bussard mischievously couples with "Don't Ask for the Moon" on the flip side). By stepping out of the 1920s and addressing the present (yet in a manner and style that mimics the past), Bussard and company actually accomplish what they had been after all along, making the old-time music speak in a contemporary context. In the end, though, most of the music in this fascinating box fails to match its template, but as a stubborn attempt to turn back the musical hands of time, Bussard and Fonotone Records created a brilliant faux universe that works much like that replica of an 18th century schooner perfectly re-created to scale inside a clear glass bottle. The marvel is in the attention to detail, and by default, the imaginary sea it conjures. So here you have it, a mythical 78 rpm universe that mimics a real one, all set forth under the glass of 21st century digital technology. Just suspend belief, add some imagination, and sail away. Don't expect sonar, though, or, heaven forbid, an electric guitar. Steve Leggett, All Music Guide

Booklet




Cd 1: Jug In The Shade

01. Chinese Breakdown - Joe Bussard & Oscar Myers
02. Power in the Blood - Sunny Side Sacred Singers
03. Wanda Russell's Blues - Blind Thomas
04. Foggy Bottom Shuffle - Danville Dan
05. I Love You Mama - Tennessee Mess Arounders
06. Soldier's Joy - Happy Johnnie & Family
07. Carry Me Back to the Mountains - Blue Ridge Partners
08. Fox Chase - W. R. Barnes/W. E. Barnes
09. Swing Low, Sweet Chariot - Various Artists
10. Baker's Breakdown - Adcock Family
11. Alley Strut - Back Alley Boys
12. Boweavil - Lee Moore
13. Bugle Call Banjo - Bluegrass Travellers
14. Tator Patch Blues - Tennessee Mess Arounders
15. We Need More Rattle Snakes - Milo Way
16. Jug in the Shade - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
17. Lost Indian - Welch Brothers
18. Love Old Memphis - Various Artists
19. Old Country Rock - Backwards Sam Firk
20. The Death of John Kennedy - Bob Coltman/Joe Bussard
21. Onions - Three Blues Boys
22. Paint Brush Blues - Blind Thomas
23. Helter Skelter - Welch Brothers
24. Green Blues - Mississippi Swampers
25. Hannah Open the Door - Georgia Jokers
26. Wildwood Flower - Hillbilly Boys
27. Down on the Delaware - Whitacre Family

Jug In The Shade


Cd 2: Flight of Fonotone

01. Crazy Arms - Various Artists
02. Bluegrass - Lucky Chatman & The Ozark Mountain Boys
03. Rome Georgia Bound - Georgia Jokers
04. Blind Blues - Blind Thomas
05. Bluegrass Shuffle - Bluegrass Travellers
06. Cider Time Rag - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
07. Sugar Babe - Happy Johnnie & Family
08. Tearing Down the Laurel - Welch Brothers
09. Up Jumped the Devil - Possum Holler Boys
10. Fox Chase - Clarence Fross
11. Virginia Ramble - Virginia Ramblers
12. Sow Good Seeds - Joe Bussard
13. Nobody's Darling But Mine - Beachley Sisters
14. Everlasting Joy - Brother Smith/Brother Amos
15. Backlander's Hornpipe - Miles Kranssen
16. Jokin' Georgia Rag - Georgia Jokers
17. Stir It Now - Jackson Jug Jumpers
18. Kid Future's Blues - Kid Future
19. R.G. Chimes - Rocky Ridge Ramblers
20. Back Alley Wiggle - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
21. Pig Tail Fling - Possum Holler Boys
22. Down Where the River Bends - Rocky Ridge Ramblers
23. The Flight of Astronaut John Glenn - Joe Bussard & Oscar Myers
24. Hillbilly's Guitar - Hillbilly Boys
25. Memphis Hambone Blues - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
26. Mandolin Blues - Tennessee Mess Arounders
27. Cheat Mountain - Welch Brothers

Flight of Fonotone


Cd 3: Some Summer Day

01. Shady Grove - Adcock Family
02. Cumberland Gap - Birmingham Bill
03. Fisher's Hornpipe - Bob Coltman
04. Cackling Hen - Joe Burchfield & Family
05. Barefoot Mamlish Blues - Backwards Sam Firk
06. Black Jack Rag - Two Black Jacks
07. Hot Corn Cold Corn - Adcock Family
08. Tear It Down - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
09. Father Put the Cow Away - Lucky Chatman & The Ozark Mountain Boys
10. Whitacre's Hornpipe - Whitacre Family
11. Banjo Stretch - Bluegrass Travellers
12. Coal Tipple Blues - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
13. Some Summer Day No.2 - Mississippi Swampers
14. Hopalong Peter - Mash Mountain Boys
15. The Crowing Rooster - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
16. Little Boy Stole My Jacket - Whitacre Family
17. Black Cat Blues - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
18. Frankie - Tennessee Joe
19. Striped Stockings - Whitacre Family
20. Short String Strut - Guitar Rascals
21. Voyage of Apollo 8, The - Blind Robert Ward
22. Black Jack Drag - Two Black Jacks
23. Rory Mae - Kid Future
24. Silver Bells - Bob Coltman
25. Weissman Blues - Blind Thomas

Some Summer Day


Cd 4: Basement Blues

01. Sara Jane - Adcock Family
02. What She's Got - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
03. Susie - Georgia Jokers
04. Round Town Gals - Robert H. Hubbage & Round Top Mountain Boys
05. Ramblin' Blues - W. E. Barnes
06. Pretty Little Girl - Sizemore
07. Scattin' Rag - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
08. Please Love Me - Joe Bussard
09. Delta Moodish Blues - Backwards Sam Firk
10. Busted Boiler Blues - Oscar Myers
11. Big Legged Mama - Ted Kreh
12. Leather Breeches - Happy Johnnie & Family
13. Dark and Lonely Night Blues - Mississippi Swampers
14. I Don't Love Nobody - Blue Ridge Partners
15. Borrow Love and Go - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
16. Hen Pecked Man - Birmingham Bill
17. Treastle Blues - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
18. Train to Danville - Danville Dan
19. No Special Rider Blues - Backwards Sam Firk
20. Basement Blues - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
21. Drunk Song No.2 - Damien
22. If You Don't Love Me Mama - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
23. Stone Pony - Mississippi Swampers
24. Pueblo's Crew, The - Blind Robert Ward
25. Confessin' - Wild Mountain Boys
26. Poor Boy Blues - Blind Thomas

Basement Blues


Cd 5: Wild Mountain Ramble

01. Cripple Creek - Bill Bailey & Frank Stuart
02. Put My Little Shoes Away - Lucky Chatman & The Ozark Mountain Boys
03. Hoppin' the Frets - Adcock Family
04. John Henry - Blind Thomas
05. Nine Pound Hammer - Adcock Family
06. Birmingham Tickle - Birmingham Bill
07. Atlanta Rag - Georgia Jokers
08. Old Hypocrite - Clarence Fross
09. Sugar in the Gourd - Bald Knob Chicken Snatchers
10. I Hear Mother Calling - Lee Moore
11. It's Only the Wind - Beachley Sisters
12. Maple Sugar - Whitacre Family
13. Preach the Gospel - Brother Smith & Brother Amos
14. My Savior Died For Me - W. E. Barnes
15. Sunflower Strut - Danville Dan
16. Hand Me Down My Walking Cane - Joe Bussard & Oscar Myers
17. Lay My Armor Down - Gabriel's Holy Testifiers
18. Old Folks Started It, The - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
19. Done Gone - Whitacre Family
20. Got to Get a Little More - Bob Coltman
21. Wild Mountain Ramble - Wild Mountain Boys
22. Money Green No.2 - Backwards Sam Firk
23. Didn't They Crucify My Lord - Sunny Side Sacred Singers
24. I'm Rollin' On - Carolina Pine Knots
25. Delta Crapatation - Kid Future
26. Jolly Joe's Blues - Jolly Joe's Jug Band
27. Knoxville Blues - Birmingham Bill
28. Gospel Train's a-Comin - Gabriel's Holy Testifiers
29. Sugar Tree Stomp - Possum Holler Boys

Wild Mountain Ramble

Recorded between 1956 & 1969
Compiled by Joe Bussard
Produced by David Anderson, Joe
Bussard & Steven Lance Ledbetter
© 2005 Dust-to-Digital Records



Jim Kweskin - Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think)
Jack Klatt and the Cat Swingers - Mississippi Roll

Posted by muddy

Oznake: Bluegrass, Gospel, Jug Band, Old-Timey, String Bands, Traditional Country, Traditional Folk, Various

- 23:07 - Comments (1) - Print - Link for this post

utorak, 12.11.2013.

Maria Muldaur - Barnyard Dance: Jug Band Music For Kids

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 38:26
Size: 88.0 MB
Styles: Jug Band
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[2:58] 1. Mama Don't Allow No Jugband Music 'round Here
[2:55] 2. I Like To Ride A Camel
[2:28] 3. The Barnyard Dance
[2:59] 4. Don't Let It Bother You
[3:02] 5. Threw It Out The Window
[3:10] 6. Singing In The Bathtub
[3:33] 7. All By Myself
[2:55] 8. Under The Chicken Tree
[3:04] 9. Everybody Eats When They Come To My House
[3:22] 10. The Circus Song
[2:54] 11. Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its Flavor
[5:01] 12. Relax Your Mind


As Maria Muldaur puts it in her liner notes, jug band music is, by its very nature, a "happy, snappy, lighthearted, humorous, goofy, wacky, high-spirited" sound, which certainly would appeal to any child. Why this now-marginalized genre -- born in the '20s and popularized in the '60s via acts such as the Jim Kweskin Jug Band and the Even Dozen Jug Band (of which Muldaur was a member) -- was never marketed with kids in mind is a good question, but Muldaur hits the perfect note with this collection. Played on washboards, spoons, kazoo, and other fun instruments -- as well as guitar, banjo, bass, fiddle, etc. -- these old songs, with titles like "I Love to Ride My Camel" (wonder if it's the same camel Muldaur sent to bed on her '70s hit "Midnight at the Oasis"), "Under the Chicken Tree," and "Singing in the Bathtub" are whimsical and silly, yet never condescending as so much children's music tends to be. Muldaur's voice is huskier than it was back when she was making her popular albums in the '70s, but it's well-suited to these tunes. This is what she started out doing half-a-century ago, and adults with a soft spot for the jug band-folk style, and for Muldaur's output in recent years, will undoubtedly enjoy this music -- much of it from the traditional folk canon -- as much as their little ones. ~ Jeff Tamarkin

Maria Muldaur (vocals, kazoo); Kit Stovepipe (guitar); Devin Champlin (banjo, mandolin); Suzy Thompson (fiddle); Lucas Hicks (whistle, washboard, spoons, pans, bells); Jim Rothermel (pennywhistle, horns).

Recording information: Dragonfly Studios; Laughing Tiger Studios; Toolshed Sound Lab.

Barnyard Dance: Jug Band Music For Kids

Mo' Albums...
Keith B. BROWN - Down The Line
Smoky Babe - Hottest Brand Goin'



Posted by azzul

Oznake: Maria Muldaur, Jug Band

- 23:30 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

utorak, 22.10.2013.

Maria Muldaur - Garden Of Joy

Styles: Jug Bands, Folk-Blues
Released: 2009
Label: Stony Plain Music
File: mp3@320K/s
Size: 108.7 MB
Time: 46:54
Art: front

1. The Diplomat - 3:49
2. Shake Hands and Tell Me Goodbye - 3:07
3. Shout You Cats - 3:02
4. The Ghost of St Louis Blues - 3:50
5. Let It Simmer - 4:36
6. Sweet Lovin' Ol' Soul - 4:18
7. Medley: Life's Too Short/When Elephants Roost in Bamboo Trees [Medley] - 5:13
8. Garden of Joy - 2:23
9. He Calls That Religion - 4:08
10. I Ain't Gonna Marry - 2:57
11. Bank Failure Blues - 5:24
12. The Panic Is On - 4:03

Personnel:
Maria Muldaur - Vocals, Producer
Bowen Brown - Percussion, Drums
Danny Caron - Guitar
Ruth Davies - Bass
Pete Devine - Percussion
Jim Rothermel - Clarinet, Slide Whistle
Bob Schwartz - Trumpet
Suzy Thompson - Fiddle
Kevin Porter - Trombone
And guests
David Grisman - Mandolin, Mandola
Taj Mahal - Banjo, Guitar
Fritz Richmond - Bass
Dan Hicks - Guitar


Notes: "America's First Lady of Roots Music," Maria Muldaur, returns to her original roots - Jug Band Music! Maria first recorded in the early 60's with both The Even Dozen and The Jim Kweskin Jug Bands. Here she has reunited with several of her former jug band mates and recorded many tunes from the classic jug band era (early 30's), as well as two hilarious newly penned gems by Dan Hicks.Special guests include John Sebastian, David Grisman, Taj Mahal, Dan Hicks, Fritz Richmond and sensational discovery Kit Stovepipe. This is happy, lighthearted, "Good Time Music for Hard Times" indeed!

Garden Of Joy



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



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Maria Muldaur, Jug Band, Folk-Blues

- 23:48 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

subota, 19.10.2013.

Maria Muldaur - Sweet Lovin' Ol' Soul

Styles: Acoustic Blues, Folk-Blues, Piano Jazz, Jug Band
Released: 2005
Label: Stony Plain
File: mp3@320K/s
Size: 104.0 MB
Time: 45:42
Art: front + back

1. I Am Sailin' - 3:43
2. Long As I Can See You Smile - 2:46
3. Sweet Lovin Ol' Soul - 4:19
4. Ain't What You Used To Have - 6:00
5. Lookin' The World Over - 2:47
6. Empty Bed Blues - 6:22
7. Tricks Ain't Walkin' - 4:33
8. Crazy Cryin' Blues - 3:05
9. She Put Me Outdoors - 3:03
10. Decent Woman Blues - 3:59
11. I'm Goin' Back - 2:25
12. Take A Stand - 2:35

Personnel:
Maria Muldaur - vocals
Taj Mahal - vocals, guitar, banjo (3,4,12)
Alvin 'Youngblood' Hart - vocals, guitar (9)
Tracy Lee Nelson - vocals (11)
Steve James - guitar, mandolin (1,2,5,7,8)
Del Rey - guitar (1,2,5,7,8)
Steve Freund - guitar (10)
Suzy Thompson - fiddle (3)
Dave Mathews - piano (6)
Pinetop Perkins - piano (10)
Paul Revelli - drums
Roly Salley - bass (2)
Fritz Richmond - jug (3)
Kevin Porter - trombone(6)


Notes: This superior release finds Maria Muldaur returning to her roots and paying special tribute to Memphis Minnie. Assisted by such notables as singer-guitarist Taj Mahal and guitarist Del Rey, Muldaur really excels on the vintage material and in this acoustic setting. Rather than sounding like a revivalist, her sensitive and witty vocals show a real understanding for the music and make her sound like a veteran of the era even though she is about 50 years too young! For listeners who might find it difficult to get into early blues due to the primitive recording quality, Maria Muldaur's Sweet Lovin' Ol' Soul will serve as the perfect transition. This is one of her finest recordings overall. ~ Scott Yanow

Sweet Lovin' Ol' Soul



Big Boy Henry - Carolina Blues Jam
Brownie McGhee - The Story Of The Blues



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Acoustic Blues, Del Rey, Folk-Blues, Jug Band, Maria Muldaur, Steve James, Taj Mahal

- 23:36 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

srijeda, 16.10.2013.

Various - Jugband Specials: 25 Great Original Recordings 1926-1935

Styles: Jug Band
Label: Retrospective Records
Released: 2009
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 179,3 MB
Time: 76:10
Art: front

1. Memphis Jug Band - Memphis Shakedown - 3:05
2. Cannon's Jug Stompers - Walk Right In - 2:58
3. Jimmie Rodgers & The Louisville Jug Band - My Good Gal's Gone Blues - 2:48
4. Memphis Jug Band - Stealin', Stealin' - 2:59
5. Johnny Dodds & The Dixieland Jug Blowers - Hen Party Blues - 3:19
6. Clarance Williams & His Jug Band - Chizzlin' Sam - 3:08
7. Cannon's Jug Stompers - Bring It With You When You Come - 2:47
8. Hattie Hart & The Memphis Jug Band - Cocaine Habit Blues (Take A Whiff On Me) - 2:51
9. The Dixieland Jug Blowers - Boodle-Am-Shake - 3:13
10. Cannon's Jug Stompers - Pig Ankle Strut - 3:07
11. Elder Richard Bryant & His Sanctified Singers - Come Over Here - 3:06
12. Earl Mcdonald & His Original Louisville Jug Band - Louisville Special - 3:05
13. Memphis Jug Band - K.C. Moan - 2:33
14. Bobbie Leecan And His Need-More Band - Washboard Cut Out - 2:58
15. Jack Kelly & His South Memphis Jug Band - Red Ripe Tomatoes - 3:09
16. Daddy Stovepipe - The Spasm (You Rascal, You) - 2:53
17. Whistler & His Jug Band - The Jug Band Special - 3:10
18. Cannon's Jug Stompers - Viola Lee Blues - 3:10
19. Birmingham Jug Band - Giving It Away - 3:07
20. Memphis Jug Band - You May Leave But This Will Bring You Back - 3:06
21. King David's Jug Band - Tear It Down - 3:09
22. Cannon's Jug Stompers - Minglewood Blues - 3:44
23. Memphis Jug Band - Little Green Slippers - 2:57
24. Brother Williams Memphis Sanctified Singers - He's Got The Whole World In His Hands - 2:48
25. Jed Davenport & His Beale Street Jug Band - Beale Street Breakdown - 2:50


Notes: This collection is very much the cream of the crop for Jug Band Music from the 20's and 30's. So many of the classic Jug Bands are here: The Memphis Jug Band, Gus Cannon's Jug Band, King David's Jug Band, The Dixieland Jug Band... For a one-disc collection, it packs a lot classics: "Walk Right In", Cocaine Habit Blues, Minglewood Blues, Tear It Down, Boodle Am Shake, so many songs later covered by the likes of the Jim Kweskin Jug Band, Maria Muldar, the New Christy Minstrels, the Lovin' Spoonful, the Grateful Dead, this CD is a great introduction to Jug Band Music without drifting all the way into the Hokum of Tampa Red and/or Barbecue Bob. Larger doses may be found in the JSP Box Sets Memphis Jug Band with Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers and Memphis Shakedown: More Jug Band Classics as well as Ruckus Juice & Chitlins, Vol. 1and Ruckus Juice & Chitlins, Vol. 2.

Jugband Specials: 25 Great Original Recordings 1926-1935



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



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Jug Band, Various

- 22:19 - Comments (1) - Print - Link for this post

petak, 27.09.2013.

Various - Good For What Ails You: Music Of The Medicine Shows (1926-1937)

Styles: Old-Timey, Appalachian, Minstrel, String Bands, Acoustic Blues, Jug Band, Songster
Label: Old Hat Records
Released: 2005
File: mp3 @320K/s
Size: 167,4 + 163,2 MB
Time: 73:07 + 71:16
Art: front

Disc 1
1. Daddy Stovepipe & Mississippi Sarah - The Spasm - 2:52
2. Gid Tanner & Riley Puckett - Tanner's Boarding House - 3:05
3. Lil McClintock - Don't Think I'm Santa Claus - 3:06
4. Dallas String Band with Coley Jones - Hokum Blues - 3:14
5. Shorty Godwin - Jimbo Jambo Land - 2:57
6. Fiddlin' John Carson & His Virginia Reelers - Gonna Swing On The Golden Gate - 2:57
7. Pink Anderson & Simmie Dooley - Papa's 'Bout To Get Mad - 2:59
8. Charlie Parker & Mack Woolbright - The Man Who Wrote Home Sweet Home Never Was A Married Man - 3:14
9. Jim Jackson - Bye, Bye, Policeman - 3:03
10. Walter Smith - The Bald-Headed End Of A Broom - 2:56
11. Allen Brothers - Bow Wow Blues - 3:21
12. Beans Hambone & El Morrow - Beans - 2:53
13. Stovepipe #1 and David Crockett - A Chicken Can Waltz The Gravy Around - 3:08
14. Grant Brothers & Their Music - Tell It To Me - 2:57
15. Carolina Tar Heels - Ain't No Use Working So Hard - 3:08
16. Walter Cole - Mama Keep Your Yes Ma'am Clean - 2:47
17. Kirk McGee & Blythe Poteet - C-H-I-C-K-E-N Spells Chicken - 2:54
18. Banjo Joe - My Money Never Runs Out - 2:53
19. Henry 'Ragtime Texas' Thomas - Railroadin' Some - 3:19
20. Prince Albert Hunt's Texas Ramblers - Traveling Man - 2:55
21. Johnson-Nelson-Porkchop - G. Burns Is Gonna Rise Again - 3:01
22. Blue Ridge Mountain Entertainers - Baby All Night Long - 2:47
23. Chris Bouchillon - Born In Hard Luck - 3:19
24. Memphis Sheiks - He's In The Jailhouse Now - 3:11

Disc 2
1. Pink Anderson & Simmie Dooley - Gonna Tip Out Tonight - 3:09
2. Sam McGee - Chevrolet Car - 3:09
3. Gid Tanner & His Skillet-Lickers - It Ain't Gonna Rain No Mo' - 2:58
4. Cannon's Jug Stompers - Bring It With You When You Come - 2:45
5. Blind Sammie - Atlanta Strut - 3:11
6. Uncle Dave Macon & His Fruit Jar Drinkers - Go Along Mule - 3:07
7. Earl McDonald's Original Louisville Jug Band - Casey Bill - 2:48
8. Frank Stokes - I Got Mine - 3:06
9. Chris Bouchillon - Hannah - 2:57
10. Bogus Ben Covington - Adam & Eve In The Garden - 2:42
11. Alec Johnson & His Band - Mysterious Coon - 3:15
12. Carolina Tar Heels - Her Name Was Hula Lou - 2:59
13. Three Tobacco Tags - Reno Blues - 2:39
14. Papa Charlie Jackson - Scoodle Um Skoo - 3:17
15. Frank Hutchison - Stackalee - 3:05
16. Walter Smith - The Cat's Got The Measles, The Dog's Got The Whooping Cough - 2:59
17. Hezekiah Jenkins - Shout You Cats - 3:08
18. Tommie Bradley - Nobody's Business If I Do - 2:58
19. Charlie Poole & The North Carolina Ramblers - Sweet Sixteen - 2:52
20. Charlie Parker & Mack Woolbright - Ticklish Reuben - 2:40
21. Jim Jackson - I Heard The Voice Of A Porkchop - 2:52
22. Dallas String Band with Coley Jones - Shine - 3:01
23. Emmett Miller & His Georgia Crackers - The Gypsy - 3:21
24. J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers - Kiss Me Cindy - 2:06

Notes: Before motion pictures... before radio... before television... the traveling medicine shows brought entertainment to America. Flamboyant pitch doctors roamed the land, hawking their tonics, elixirs, and miracle cures, and with them came a host of singers, dancers, comedians, banjo pickers, blues shouters, jug blowers, string ticklers, and minstrel men. The shows died out by mid-20th century, but not before a handful of seasoned veterans left their musical legacy on phonograph records. Here are 48 classic performances by such colorful names as Pink Anderson, Daddy Stovepipe, Shorty Godwin, Gid Tanner, Banjo Joe, the Three Tobacco Tags, and many more—well over two hours of this extraordinary music. A 72-page color booklet details the fascinating history of the medicine shows with a profusion of rare photographs, artifacts, illustrations, full discography, and song descriptions. Three years in the making, the new release from Old Hat Records is a groundbreaking survey of music from the American medicine show, that peculiar form of theater that merged entertainment with merchandising. Good For What Ails You is a two-CD set that delivers a generous mix of 48 songs, many available nowhere else, first recorded nearly 80 years ago and now remastered with digital clarity.

Good For What Ails You was nominated for two Grammy Awards: Best Album Notes and Best Histornical Album. ~ Old Hat Records

“Like Harry Smith’s Anthology of American Folk Music, these 48 tracks provide a fine introduction to what Greil Marcus called ‘the old, weird America.’ If nothing else, such a cornucopia of delights will cure the modern day blues.” –Casper Llewellyn Smith, Guardian Unlimited, July 16, 2006

Bluebird“Factor in assorted skillet lickers, jug stompers, fruit jar drinkers, ramblers, crackers, tarheels and tobacco tags, and you have a buried history of vernacular music, therapeutic culture and politics second to none. Recommended; or rather, prescribed.” –Brian Morton, The Wire, November 2005

“When you go out on tour and play with different bands every day, or you play in bars all the time, your tastes start to become very selective... What I’m listening to most of the time at present is an album called Good For What Ails You, which is an album of songs that people used to listen to at medicine shows all over the States. It’s quite an interesting album and I think that people would be well advised to pick it up.” –Jack White, White Stripes, December 2005

Good For What Ails You: Music of the Medicine Shows 1926-1937



Old Crow Medicine Show - Carry Me Back
The Juggernaut Jug Band - Jugstaposition



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Various, Old-Timey, Appalachian, Minstrel, String Bands, Acoustic Blues, Jug Band, Songster

- 16:27 - Comments (0) - Print - Link for this post

utorak, 17.09.2013.

In loving memory of Cyril Davies

Cyril Davies: Father of British Blues Harmonica

Born at St Mildred's, 15 Hawthorn Drive, Willowbank, Denham, Buckinghamshire, near London, he was the son of William Albert Davies, a labourer, and his wife Margaret Mary (née Jones). He had an elder brother named Glyn, and the family is believed to have come from Wales.
Cyril Davies began his career in the early 1950s first within Steve Lane's Southern Stompers, then as part of an acoustic skiffle and blues group with Alexis Korner.[citation needed] He began as a banjo and 12-string guitar player before becoming Britain's first Chicago-style blues harmonica player.[citation needed]
In 1962, Davies and Korner opened a club called the Ealing Club in London, adding bassist Jack Bruce, saxophonist Dick Heckstall-Smith and drummer Charlie Watts, to form the electric band Blues Incorporated. The album R&B from the Marquee features both Davies and Korner.
Many young musicians visited the Ealing Club and 'guested' with Blues Incorporated, including Rod Stewart, Paul Jones, Ronnie Wood, Keith Richards, Eric Burdon, Mick Jagger, Brian Jones and Ginger Baker.
Soon there was musical tension in the band, as some members wanted to play crowd-pleasers like Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley tracks while Cyril Davies was a blues purist who wanted to play what he saw as only genuine Chicago-style R&B. Following the dissolution of Blues Incorporated in October 1962, Davies formed the Cyril Davies All-Stars in November 1962 and recorded five tracks for Pye Records, who had announced an R&B label featuring music imported from Davies' favourite Chicago musicians ("Country Line Special", "Chicago Calling", "Preaching the Blues", "Sweet Mary" and "Someday Baby").[4] The original line-up, largely recruited from Screaming Lord Sutch's Savages, was later subject to frequent changes, particularly after Davies' death.
A number of 'R&B All-Stars' tracks with various line-ups, including Carlo Little, Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck and Nicky Hopkins, are to be found on different record labels and anthologies - the name apparently continuing for several years. Those compilations include, A Shot of Rhythm and Blues (Sequel Records), Stroll On (Sony Music), and Dealing With the Devil (Sony Music).
Davies died of acute leukemia in January 1964.

More about Cyril Davies at cyrildavies.com



Cyril Davies - Cyril Davies & Roundhouse Jug Four

Styles: Jug Band
Released: 1961
Label: Kenton
File: mp3@192K/s (from vinyl)
Size: 14.1 MB
Time: 10:16
Art: front

Side 1
1. K.C. Moan (Teewee Blackman)
2. Hesitation Blues (W.C. Handy)

Side 2
3. It's the Same Thing (Will Shade)
4. Short Legs Shuffle (Jeff Bradford)

Personnel:
Cyril Davies (harmonica, 12 string guitar and vocals)
Jeff Bradford (mandoline, guitar on Short Legs Shuffle, and kazoo)
Reg Turner (jug)
Lisa Turner (banjo and vocalist)

Recorded in Kenton, Middlesex, August 3, 1961.
Directed by Cyril Davies
Released: Aug 3rd, 1961 (VJM, VEP10 )
Liner Notes by Brian Rust


Notes: Jug bands there have been a-plenty on records, made exclusively in America, chiefly in the cities of Memphis, Louisville, and Atlanta, mainly during the classic era of jazz from 1922 to 1931. There origin is as old as the blues; to the big companies operating in America today, they are not a commercial proposition any more, it seems. But this group, resident in London's folk-song club, the Roundhouse, in London's Wardour Street, is the first British jug band ever to make a record for commercial release.
The leader and general all-rounder (no pun intended!), Cyril Davies, used to play with our Steve Lane's Famous Southern Stompers and is the composer of that strangely attractive minor-key melody THE STAGGERS which has been recorded for us by Colin Kingwell's Jazz Bandits (VEP-11). On the session that produced the above tracks, he knelt before the microphone, the better to record the instrumental number SHORT LEGS SHUFFLE, which suggested its name. The rippling folksy banjo by petite Lise Turner, wife of the jug player Reg, is one of the most attractive and unusual sounds on any VJM record.
The first track on each side is a tribute to the Memphis Jug Band and its leader, Will Shade, who for nearly four years (February 1927 to November 1930) directed many sessions in Memphis and some in Atlanta, playing all the instruments used by Cyril Davies and Jeff Bradford. K.C. Moan was actually issued here on Regal-Zonophone in February 1937, but while a good sale of such a record could probably be expected now, it meant nothing to the public then. A more thoroughly satisfying blues performance has seldom been recorded, and this version echoes that mood.
W.C. Handy's HESITATION BLUES is a well-tried folk song, with countless variations on the lyrics. Lise Turner sings with Cyril Davies on this and IT'S THE SAME THING, and the effect is quite remarkably close to the sound of the country blues bands that made records "on location" in the South upwards of three decades ago.
This is not a skiffle group as the term as the term came to be misused by the Tin Pan Alley men in 1956 and a couple of years thereafter; it is a group of four enthusiastic and artistically sensitive people, mature in years, not teenagers, who have steeped themselves in their idiom with these happy results. ~ Brian Rust


Cyril Davies & Roundhouse Jug Four


Cyril Davies & His R & B All Stars - The Sound of Cyril Davies

Styles: British Blues
Released: 1964
File: mp3@192K/s (from vinyl)
Size: 13.6 MB
Time: 9:53
Art: front

Side 1
A1. Country Line Special - 2:17
A2. Chicago Calling - 2:27

Side 2
B1. Preachin' The Blues - 2:10
B2. Sweet Mary - 2:57

Personnel Side One:
Cyril Davies - Vocals and Harmonica
Rick Brown - Bass
Bernie Watson - Guitar
Nicky Hopkins - Piano
Carlo Little - Drums
Produced by Peter Knight Jr. at Pye's Marble Arch studios on 27 Feb 1963.

Personnel Side Two:
Cyril Davies - Vocals and Harmonica
Cliff Barton - Bass
Geoff Bradford - Guitar
Keith Scott - Piano
Micky Waller - Drums
Madeline Bell & Alex Bradford - Vocal Backings


Notes: In Nov. '62 harpist Cyril Davies left Alexis Korner and Blues Incorporated, wanting a tougher city blues sound. He formed Cyril Davies R & B All Stars, taking Long John Baldry with him from Blues Incorporated and recruiting Screaming Lord Sutch's backup musicians Rick Brown (bass) and Carlo Little (drums). The All Stars also listed talented guitarist Geoff Bradford among their members.
The All Stars evolved into Long John Baldry's Hoochie Coochie Men in January '64 after Cyril Davies's death. Still Geoff Bradford on guitar - and Rod Stewart as one of the vocalists.


The Sound of Cyril Davies


Cyril Davies - The Legendary Cyril Davies

Styles: British Blues, Acoustic Blues, Folk-Blues
Released: 1970
File: mp3@192K/s (from vinyl)
Size: 46.4 MB
Time: 33:47
Art: front

Side 1
1. Leaving Blues - 3:14
2. Roundhouse Stomp - 2:53
3. Rotten Break - 3:47
4. K.C. Moan - 2:53
5. Skip To My Lou - 1:54
6. It's The Same Old Thing - 2:19

Side 1
1. Alberta - 2:43
2. Hesitation Blues - 2:28
3. Ella Speed - 2:57
4. Good Morning - 2:35
5. Boll Weevil - 3:25
6. Short Legs Shuffle - 2:34

Personnel:
Cyril Davies - 12-string guitar (except 3,9,10,11), vocal (except 2,3), harmonica (2,4,6,8,12)
Alexis Korner - guitar (2,3,10,11), vocal (3,5), mandolin (2,5,9)
Mike Collins - washboard (2,9,11)
Terry Plant - bass (2,5)
Jeff Bradford - mandolin, guitar and kazoo (4,6,8,12)
Reg Turner - jug (4,6,8,12)
Lisa Turner - banjo and vocal (4,6,8,12)


Notes: Early in the morning of January 8th, 1964, I received a telephone call from John Martin: "I'm sorry to be the one who has to tell you this, John, but Cyril died last night." Cyril had been taken to hospital at six in the evening and within five hours was dead. I just could not believe it - he had been ill for some months, that I knew, but the suddenness of his death threw me. Some days before, as we were crossing the footbridge from our old stamping ground Eel Pie Island, he had said something that flashed back into my mind at that moment. "You know, John, I think this will be the last time I'll walk on this bridge".
As it happened, that particular evening at the Island was to be his last public appearance.
The first time I ever met Cyril Davies was a few weeks before the earliest tracks on this album were recorded. I was only a young kid just out of school at that time, just playing guitar and singing a little and very much in love with the blues. Although I had been listening to records by Bill Broonzy, and Muddy Waters among others since I was twelve, I had never heard English people playing and singing the blues until the evening I walked into the Roundhouse (the pub in Soho, not Arnold Wesker's ex-railway turntable shed) and heard Cyril and Alexis Korner. I used to go every Thursday evening and they would invite me to join them on the piece of lino between the piano and the bar, which served as the bandstand, encouraging me in my desire to be part of the blues scene. Those were great days, because apart from Cyril, Alex and myself performing, there were visits to the club by Big Bill, Muddy, Memphis Slim, Otis Spann, Ramblin' Jack Elliot and Derroll Adams and many more.
Of course, Cyril was better known then as a twelve-string guitarist than as a harmonica player. But later, in the days of the "Blues Incorporated" and the All Stars", he never played guitar on stage, so naturally became absolutely identified with harmonica. I have always thought it a great pity that his guitar playing was never utilized on his recordings for Decca and Pye. However, this situation can now be rectified as we listen to this collection of memorable recordings thanks to Doug Dobell.
As I listen, I look back and think of the little black Alsatian Uschi (still alive and well and monstrous in Kent) that he gave me from the litter of his scrapyard watchdog Kim. The entire barful of dockers on Teesside for whom he bought drinks all night. The inimitable way he curbed a tribal civil war in the back of a Timpson's coach outside Middlesbrough Infirmary. My sudden arrival back to sobriety one night in Burslem with a well-aimed harmonica hurled at my head from the stage. But there's not enough room on this sleeve to tell it all. Perhaps Doug might let me record an album one day so that I can tell you the WHOLE story of the Legendary Cyril Davies. ~ Long John Baldry


The Legendary Cyril Davies

John 'Spider John' Koerner - Spider Blues
Josh White - Bluesman, Guitar Evangelist, Folksinger

Posted by muddy

Oznake: Cyril Davies, Alexis Korner, Acoustic Blues, Folk-Blues, British Blues, Jug Band, England, Biography

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nedjelja, 15.09.2013.

Dave Van Ronk - Ragtime Jug Stompers

Styles: Jug Band
Released: 1964
Label: Vendor Mercury Records
File: mp3@320K/s
Size: 96.8 MB
Time: 35:21
Art: front + back

1. Everybody Loves My Baby - 3:00
2. Stealin - 3:15
3. Saint Louis Tickle - 3:38
4. Sister Kate - 2:20
5. Take I Slow And Easy - 2:29
6. Mack The Knife - 2:35
7. Diggin' My Potatoes - 2:47
8. Temptation Rag - 3:11
9. Shake That Thing - 2:55
10. K. C. Moan - 3:41
11. Georgia Camp Meeting - 2:50
12. You'se A Viper - 2:36


Personnel:
Guitar, Vocals – Dave Van Ronk
Backing Vocals, Jug, Bass [Washtub] – Sam Charters
Banjo – Barry Kornfeld
Guitar – Danny Kalb
Mandolin – Artie Rose

Notes: Dave Van Ronk plus folk-boom stalwarts Danny Kalb (co-founder of Blues Project), Barry Kornfeld (sideman for Tom Paxton, Patrick Sky), Sam Charters (author, producer, ethnomusicologist), Bob Brill (Foc'sle Singers), and Artie Rose. This is a true jug band, with actual jugs and kazoo. Most of the material is classic jug-band fare (New Orleans style jazz, Piedmont blues), but they also do three rags (A3, B2, and B5), all instrumental, plus "You'se a Viper" (a Fats Waller tune about reefer -- pretty unusual for 1964), and a version of "Mack the Knife" that hews much more closely to the Three Penny Opera than to Bobby Darin's Sinatrified version. ~ fatpidgeon

Folk singer Dave Van Ronk did several collaborations with "Traditional Jazz" and "Jug Bands" in the New York City 1960s - very fun interpretations of old New Orleans Jazz, Traditional Blues and Jug Band favorites which were later done by groups like the Jim Queskin Jug Band. This is some outstanding American Music that should be available to everyone.

Too bad this recording is now only available as a rare import - it should be generally re-issued, maybe as a double album with the Red Onion Jazz Band LP he did. ~ Studebaker Hawk

Ragtime Jug Stompers



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



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Dave Van Ronk, Jug Band

- 14:19 - Comments (1) - Print - Link for this post

četvrtak, 05.09.2013.

The Juggernaut Jug Band - Jugstaposition

Styles: Jug Band, Folk-Blues, Swing, Ragtime
Released: 2002
Label: Independent
File: mp3@320K/s
Size: 117.0 MB
Time: 51:05
Art: front

1. Jug Band Music - 4:37
2. Old Joe's Hittin' The Jug - 3:15
3. Bring It With You When You Come - 2:59
4. Clef Club Stomp/Petter's Stomp - 4:07
5. Desolation Row - 4:38
6. Jug Band Tango - 4:22
7. Washboard Man - 2:13
8. Town Pump/Variety Stomp - 5:17
9. Hamburger Pie - 2:42
10. Wash Your Face And Leave - 2:14
11. On The Road Again - 3:21
12. Washboard Highway - 3:16
13. Georgia Crawl - 3:31
14. The Sheik of Araby - 4:25


Notes: If the mention of "Emmet Otter's Jugband Christmas" starts you humming "Barbecue" or chuckling at the Riverbottom Nightmare Band, then you are a tailor-made fan for the Juggernaut Jug Band. Even if you have no idea who Emmet Otter is (shame on you!), you still need to hear Jugstaposition, simply because you'll walk away with a bigger smile on your face.
The JJB has been around in various incarnations for about 30 years, and anyone remotely familiar with the Louisville music scene knows the JJB's reputation for providing good music and a good time. That joyous feeling is captured well on Jugstaposition. The quartet - Gil Fish, Roscoe Goose, World Wide Webb and Big Daddy - throw a smorgasbord of musical styles and instruments into the pot and cook up a mighty tasty musical stew.
The band's throwback sound is in perfect harmony with the style made popular on the "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" soundtrack, which will hopefully be an avenue for the JJB to welcome new fans. First-timers will find a lot to their liking: the peppy "Old Joe's Hittin' the Jug," the sweet-sounding "Hamburger Pie" and even a creative rendition of Bob Dylan's "Desolation Row," part of which is sung to the tune of "Ghostriders in the Sky."
Don't think for a second that there's anything gimmicky about the band's musical repertoire. The JJB is able to combine a freewheeling spirit and infectious looseness with seriously honed musical abilities. The result is a music experience that's not only fun, but is well done. It's refreshing to listen to a band of any musical style that can have this kind of serious fun. ~ Kory Wilcoxson (louisvillemusicnews.net)

Jugstaposition

The Even Dozen Jug Band - Jug Band Songs Of The Southern Mountains
Washboard Sam - Washboard Sam 1936-1947



Posted by muddy

Oznake: Folk-Blues, Jug Band, The Juggernaut Jug Band

- 23:04 - Comments (0) - 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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