Barking Dog: January 20, 2022

  • Dave Van Ronk - Tell Old Bill

    • A member of the Greenwich Village folk scene in New York City, known as the “Mayor of MacDougal Street”, MacDougal Street being where practically every coffeehouse was located in the 60s

    • Ronk got this from Bob Gibson, who likely got it from Carl Sandburg’s American Songbag

    • Soon became a standard for Van Ronk

    • One of my favourite recordings, ever

  • Pharis & Jason Romero - Ballad of Old Bill

    • From Horsefly, BC

    • This is from their album A Wanderer I’ll Stay from 2015

  • Robert Russell - Froggie Went A-Courtin’

    • From a 1978 album of British ballads recorded in Virginia

    • This recording was made in November of 1936, and Robert Russell was a member of a musical family–his father was a well-known fiddler in the region, and he played with his father and grandfather in a stringband

    • Folk song of Scottish origin, the most early musical version of which was published in 1611

    • It has been popular in the southern United States since settlers brought it from Britain, with over 40 different versions of it collected by the mid-20th century

  • Willie Dunn - School Days

    • Was a Mi’kmaq musician, film director, and politician from Montreal

    • This is from his 1999 album Metallic

    • It’s based on an American popular song of the same name which was written in 1907 by Will D. Cobb and Gus Edwards

  • Two Gospel Keys - This Heart of Mine

    • 1940s gospel duo, with Emma Daniels singing and playing guitar and Mother Sally Jones singing and playing tambourine

    • Next to nothing to find about this song, other than the fact that it’s a traditional spiritual

  • The Stanley County Cutups - Lonesome River

    • A bluegrass group from Winnipeg that’s been playing together in some form or another for nearly 20 years

    • This is a Stanley Brothers song from 1951

  • Artus Moser - I Went Up On the Mountain

    • He was a folklorist and musician from North Carolina who is known for the folksongs he collected in the Appalachian mountains

    • This is an Appalachian tall-tale song, the lyrics to which vary widely between versions

    • The only real lyrical throughline between versions seems to be that the singer is a successful hunter

  • Annie Watson - The FFV

    • There are a number of American train wreck songs from the early days of the steam locomotive

    • This one is based on the true story of the wreck of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway’s Fast Flying Virginian on October 23, 1890

    • Mother of Doc Watson, whom I often play on the show

  • Lonesome Ace Stringband - Long Hot Summer Day

    • From Toronto

    • This recording is from their new live album, Lively Times, recorded in Vancouver in 2019

    • It’s a John Hartford song

  • Fraser Union - Kettle Valley Line

    • They’re a BC folk group that formed in 1983

    • This song is from their 2009 album BC Songbook

    • About a train line that ran across southern BC

  • Fisk Jubilee Singers - Swing Low Sweet Chariot

    • They are an a cappella ensemble consisting of students from the historically Black Fisk University of Nashville, Tennessee, which formed in 1871 as a fundraising effort for the university

    • They are named after the biblical year of jubilee, during which enslaved people began to be emancipated

    • They decided the name was apt, as most of the students at the university and their families were only recently emancipated from slavery

    • Their recording of “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot,” is from 1909, and it was the first recording made of the song

  • The Taylor Sisters - Swing Low, Sweet Chariot

    • From the second in a set of albums of field recordings from Union County, North Carolina from 1980

    • “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” is one of the best-known African American spirituals, and it was written around 1865 by an unknown composer

    • It was popularised by the Hampton Singers and the Fisk Jubilee Singers, who we heard right before the Taylor Sisters recording

  • Margaret MacArthur - The Fair Maid by the Shore

    • She was an American singer and dulcimer player

    • This song is from her 1975 album The Old Songs

    • Likely originated in Scotland, and has been found in Ireland and England as well, but it is much more widely spread in the US and particularly in Canada

  • Eric Bibb, Habib Koité - Send Us Brighter Days

    • Bibb is an American musician who grew up around well-known musicians like Peter Seeger, Paul Robeson, and Bob Dylan, because his father, Leon Bibb, was a musical theatre singer who was part of the 1960s New York folk scene

    • He’s been playing guitar since he was seven, when he was given his first steel-string guitar

    • He’s lived in Sweden for many years, and has continued collaborating with artists like Taj Mahal, Odetta, and Habib Koité, who appeared on that song with him

    • Habib Koité is a Malian musician who comes from a line of traditional troubadours who provide entertainment and wisdom at gatherings and events

    • He’s been performing since 1988, and met Bibb in 1997 while recording an album called Mali to Memphis

    • They stayed in touch and decided to record together again, which resulted in the 2012 album Brothers in Bamako

    • This song is from that album

  • John Greenway, Aunt Molly Jackson - Dreadful Memories

    • Greenway was an American folklorist who specialised in social protest songs

    • Jackson was a folksinger and union activist from Kentucky who was first arrested at the age of ten due to her family’s involvement in union organization

    • Her first husband was killed in a mine accident in 1917, and her brother and father were blinded in another mining accident later on

    • After these events, she became a member of the United Mine Workers and began writing protest songs

    • She was arrested again because of her involvement in protests, and her second husband, a miner, was forced to divorce her to keep his job

    • She became known as a singer through her performances at protests, and began recording in 1931

    • Jackson travelled to New York and got involved in the Greenwich Village folk scene during the 1930s, and spent the rest of her life in New York City, dying in 1960

    • This song is sung to the same tune as “Precious Memories,” though its theme is much different

  • Flora Molton, The Truth Band - What’s the Matter Now

    • She was a partially blind American gospel street musician known for singing and playing slide guitar on the streets of Washington, DC

    • She was born in 1908, but her first scheduled performance was at a coffee shop in 1963

    • She proceeded to give concerts, perform at folk festivals, and record her music after that first coffee shop performance

    • The Truth Band were her backing band on this recording, but it’s unclear who the band consisted of

    • This was recorded on October 7, 1980 in Washington, DC by Siegfried Christmann

  • Ian & Sylvia - Nancy Whiskey

    • Ian & Sylvia performed together from 1959 until their divorce in 1975

    • Song is a Scottish ballad that first appeared in print in the early 1900s

    • Title does not refer to a woman, but to the drink

    • This is from the 2019 album The Lost Tapes, a collection of professional live recordings from the early 70s that Sylvia found in her attic early in 2019 while gathering memorabilia for the National Music Centre in Calgary

  • Stan Rogers - Free in the Harbour

    • Born and raised in Ontario, but known for his maritime-influenced music that was informed by his time spent visiting family in Nova Scotia during the summers of his childhood

    • This is from his 1981 album Northwest Passage

  • John L Handcox - Mean Things

    • He was a tenant farmer and union activist from Arkansas, known for his songs and poetry

    • Charles Seeger and Sidney Robertson recorded him for the Library of Congress in 1937, and other political folksingers began performing his songs

    • He receded back into obscurity after these recordings, but reemerged in the 1980s for the 50th anniversary of the Southern Tenant Farmers Union in Memphis

    • Some of his popular songs include “Planter and the Sharecropper,” “Roll the Union On,” and this song, “Mean Things”

    • It’s related to the earlier song ​​"Strange Things Happening In This Land"

  • The Union Boys - Hold the Fort / We Shall Not Be Moved

    • They were a folk supergroup that formed in 1944 to record for the album Songs for Victory: Music for Political Action

    • Its members were Josh White, Pete Seeger, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee, Burl Ives, and Tom Glazer

    • The music to Hold the Fort is by Philip Bliss, and the lyrics are based on a song sung by the British Transport Workers Union which was adapted from an American Civil War song

    • “We Shall Not Be Moved” is a spiritual and protest song that was first sung in the early 19th century American south

    • It was popular during the Civil Rights Movement as a protest and union song

  • Pete Seeger - Let Them Wear Their Watches Fine

    • He was a folk singer and an activist who, though blacklisted during the McCarthy era, remained a prominent public figure who advocated for Civil Rights, environmental causes, and international disarmament through his music

    • This song is from around 1910 and it’s about the misery of working in a textile mill

  • Kaia Kater - Moonshiner

    • Grenadian-Canadian folksinger based on Toronto

    • Origins of this song are disputed—some believe it comes from Ireland and made its way over to the US, some believe it’s the other way around completely

    • Her version is from her 2015 album Sorrow Bound

  • Old Man Luedecke - Lass Vicious

    • From Chester, NS

    • This is from his 2010 album My Hands Are on Fire and Other Love Songs

  • The Wakami Wailers - How We Got Back to the Woods Last Year

    • They’re a band that formed in 1981 when four employees at Wakami Lake Provincial Park, near Chapleau, Ontario, started playing Canadian folk music together

    • They have continued playing since then, and have released four albums

    • This is off their 1985 album The Last of the White Pine Loggers

    • Song is from the northern Ontario woods, though it was brought to American camps by migrant shantyboys

  • Lord Invader - God Made Us All

    • He was a prominent calypso musician from Trinidad who began his music career in the 1930s

    • His tailor gave him his stage name when he commented, "You should call yourself Lord Invader so when you go up to the city you’ll be invading the capital”—so he did, and headed to the capital city Port of Spain in 1937, where he performed in many calypso competitions and recorded for RCA’s Bluebird label

    • He later travelled to NYC to record with Decca and promote calypso music to wider audiences

    • After a few years he returned to Trinidad where he continued to write music and opened his own calypso club

    • This was recorded in May of 1946 at an event called the Union Hootenanny in New York City

    • We’ll hear Pete Seeger introduce the song, which Lord Invader composed himself

  • Willy Mitchell - Call of the Moose

    • Indigenous musician born in New York in the 50s after his Algonquin and Mohawk parents were refused admittance to a hospital in Cornwall, Ontario

    • In January 1969 a police officer shot him in the head during a situation involving stolen Christmas lights

    • He used the money from the resulting settlement to buy a guitar, and formed the Desert River Band, with whom he recorded and toured during the 1970s

    • This song is included on the 2014 compilation album Native North America

  • Reverend Pearly Brown - I Know the Lord Will Make a Way

    • He was a blues musician from Georgia who was known mainly as a street performer

    • He was blind from birth, but received an education at a school for blind people and completed eight grades in six years

    • He was later ordained a minister and began singing on the streets in 1939

    • Off his 1975 album It's A Mean Old World To Try To Live In

  • Alan Mills - Cod Liver Oil

    • Canadian folk singer, writer, and actor from Lachine, Quebec who was made a member of the Order of Canada in 1974 for his contributions to Canadian folklore

    • This is from an album of music recorded at the Newport Folk Festival in 1959 and 1960

    • Mills adapted the song from a 19th century music hall song that was especially popular in Newfoundland and Ontario

  • Isaac Curry - Casey Jones

    • This is from a 1978 album of non-blues secular Black music from Virginia

    • Curry was known as “Uncle Boo” in his region, and while he played guitar and banjo, he was particularly known for his accordion playing

    • He learned that song from his father, William Curry, who also played it on accordion

    • Traditional American song about how Casey Jones and his fireman Sim Webb raced their locomotive to make up for lost time on April 30, 1900, not knowing that there was another train ahead of them on the line

    • Jones’s friend, Wallace Saunders, started singing the song soon after Jones’s death, to the tune of a popular song known as Jimmie Jones

  • Uncle Sinner - Shady Grove

    • Winnipeg

    • 2008 album Ballads and Mental Breakdowns

    • Traditional Appalachian folk song

    • There are many variations of this song, with at least 300 stanzas recorded by the early 21st century

  • Babe Stovall - The Ship is at the Landing

    • Babe an American Delta blues singer and guitarist from Mississippi

    • He likely recorded this one in 1968 in New Orleans

    • There isn’t really any information available about this song, and it only seems to have been recorded by one other group, the Silver Leaf Quartette of Norfolk, in 1928

  • Dan Tate - Cluck Old Hen

    • This is from an album of field recordings made of the banjo player Dan Tate of Fancy Gap, Virginia, in the 1960s

    • Traditional Appalachian fiddle and banjo tune

  • Glenn Smith - Little Love

    • From a 1962 album of tunes and songs collected in Grayson and Carroll counties, Virginia, between 1958 and 1961

    • Smith an old-time fiddler from Hillsville, Virginia who was around 75 when this was recorded

  • Belton Reese - The McKenzie Case

    • A field recording made by the folklorist Charles Seeger at the Brevard Plantation in South Carolina in 1939

    • It’s about the shooting death of Henry L. Garland by S.W. McKenzie in 1910

  • Glen Neaves - Death of the Lawson Family

    • A member of the Virginia Mountain Boys from Fries, Virginia

    • The composer of this song is unknown, though it relates the story of Charlie Lawson, who killed his family and then himself on Christmas in 1929

  • David Francey - Lonely Road

    • Scottish-born Canadian folksinger who worked as a railyard worker and carpenter for 20 years before pursuing folk music at the age of 45

    • From his 2018 album, The Broken Heart of Everything

  • Hobart Smith - The Devil’s Dream

    • An old- time musician who was rediscovered during the 1960s folk revival

    • Played in bands with many well-known musicians, including Clarence Ashley, who he had met first at a medicine show in the 30s

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Barking Dog: January 27, 2022

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Barking Dog: January 13, 2022