Barking Dog: December 30, 2021

  • Betty Smith - Red Rosy Bush

    • From a 1975 album of traditional North Carolina songs

    • Smith was an educator and folksinger from Rowan County, NC

    • This is a love song from the southern mountains of NC

    • She learned it from the folksinger and actor Leon Bibb, who is the father of contemporary musician Eric Bibb

  • Ian & Sylvia - Some Day Soon

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

    • This is their own song from 1964

  • Dock Boggs - Davenport

    • Influential old-time musician from Norton, Virginia who recorded in 1927 and 1929 but worked as a coal miner much of his life

    • His music career was revived during the folk revival of the 1960s and he spent his later life playing folk festivals and making recordings for the Folkways record label

    • He learned this song from his oldest brother, John

    • He first heard him play it in 1906, when he was 8 years old

  • Wandering Boys - I Want Jesus To Walk With Me

    • They were a male gospel group that recorded four songs for Standard Records in 1943

    • This is an African American spiritual, and we’ll hear another version of it right after this

  • Algia Mae Hinton - I Want Jesus to Walk with Me

    • She was a Piedmont blues musician from North Carolina who learned to play the guitar from her mother, an expert in the Piedmont fingerpicking style who often played at local parties and gatherings

    • She met the folklorist Glenn Hinson in 1978, who arranged for her to perform at the North Carolina Folklife Festival

    • She gave several concerts outside of North Carolina after that, even travelling to Europe to perform in 1998

    • This is off the 1999 album Honey Babe

  • Josh White - Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday

    • Started playing music in the late 20s and by the end of the 30s he gained fame as a blues, jazz, and folk musician in New York City

    • Also acted in films and on Broadway

    • He recorded this one in New York City in 1940

    • We also hear Wilson Myers and Bill White on this track

    • It’s a chain gang song that tells the story of a rapid trial and sentencing of a Black man, and dramatizes the racist judicial system

    • Often these expedited trials were a sign that prisons were running low on labourers for work gangs, and officials would send Black people to work gangs over false or exaggerated charges

    • While many chain gang songs were forgotten as the work song tradition died, this song crossed into other genres, including into country

  • Stan Rogers - The Wreck of the Athens Queen

    • 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 1977 album Fogarty’s Cove

  • Cara Luft - The Ploughboy and the Cockney

    • From Winnipeg

    • Can be traced back to a 1670s broadside called “The Courageous Plow-Man”

  • Joe Hickerson - Drive Dull Care Away

    • Is a folk singer and songleader from Illinois

    • Was Librarian and Director of the Archive of Folk Song at the American Folklife Center of the Library of Congress for 35 years

    • He got this version from Sandy Ives, who collected folk music on the east coasts of the United States and Canada

    • Ives heard it from Charles Gorman of PEI in 1957, and it is an exceptionally rare song, though Hickerson found two other versions of it, one with a different tune that has been printed by The Sacred Harp since 1844, and another with only the words, from a 1775 edition of The Pennsylvania Ledger, so it is rather far reaching despite its uncommon nature

  • OJ Abbott - The Basketong

    • Abbott was 84 when this song was recorded for the album Lumbering Songs from the Ontario Shanties, compiled by Edith Fowke between 1957 and 1958

    • Canadian song that hadn’t reached the American shanties at the time of this recording

    • Belongs to a group of songs that describe life in a particular camp

  • Joan O’Bryant - The Butcher Boy

    • Kansas folksinger and folklorist who taught folklore and English at the University of Wichita

    • The album that song is from was recorded in 1958, when O’Bryant was only 26 years old

  • Peggy Seeger - The Butcher Boy

    • Peggy Seeger a member of the Seeger family - Mike and Pete Seeger brothers, father Charles Seeger, a folklorist and musicologist, mother Ruth Crawford Seeger, a composer and first woman to receive the Guggenheim Fellowship

    • She’s a popular folksinger who has lived in the UK for over 60 years

    • American ballad, but comes from older English ballads

  • Lonesome Ace Stringband - The Hills of Mexico

    • From Toronto

    • Also known as “On the Trail of the Buffalo” and “Buffalo Skinners”

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

  • Sam Hinton - The Cowboy’s Lament

    • Was an American folksinger, marine biologist, and visual artist

    • This recording is from his 1966 album The Wandering Folksong

  • Pete Seeger - Streets of Laredo

    • 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

    • Also known as “The Cowboy’s Lament” or “The Dying Cowboy,” an American cowboy ballad adapted from a sea song called "The Sailor's Grave” which was written by Edwin Hubbell Chapin, published in 1839

    • Became popular on ships and in lumber camps

  • Old Man Luedecke - Kingdom Come

    • From Chester, NS

    • Off his 2012 album Tender is the Night

  • David Francey - Belgrade Train

    • Scottish-born Canadian folksinger who worked as a railyard worker and carpenter for 20 years before pursuing folk music later in life

    • That song is from his 2003 album Skating Rink

  • Willie Dunn - John McLean

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

    • This is from the 2015 album Metallic

  • Roscoe Holcomb - Rocky Mountain

    • Was a construction worker, coal miner, and farmer much of his life

    • Not recorded until 1958, another older artist who became popular during the folk revival, though wasn’t known at all before then - discovered by John Cohen of the New Lost City Ramblers playing on his front porch in Daisy, Kentucky

    • This is from a new album of recordings of Holcomb’s 1972 performance at The Old Church in Portland, Oregon, which is a Carpenter Gothic church built in 1882

    • Those recordings were rediscovered in the archives of a local community radio station and released on Jalopy Records a couple weeks ago

    • This is his own song, based on a broadside ballad from the Crimean War

  • Blind Willie McTell, Kate McTell - Dying Gambler

    • He was a piedmont blues and ragtime artist who made many recordings with different companies under different names, but who never had a major hit

    • Despite his lack of commercial success, he actively played and recorded during the 40s and 50s, unlike many of his peers

    • He did not live to see the folk revival of the 1960s through which many other bluesmen were rediscovered, but he influenced many artists, including Taj Mahal and The White Stripes

    • Kate was his wife and a blues musician in her own right who joined him on several recordings

    • This recording is from 1935

  • Star Thistle - Starting Over

    • A project from the mind of Winnipeg artist Uncle Sinner

    • Off his debut album The Best of Star Thistle

  • Lillie Cogswell Knox - Got the Keys to the Kingdom

    • This is from an album of field recordings from the Gullah enclave of Murrells Inlet, South Carolina made by the Lomaxes in the 1930s

    • This seems to be a traditional gospel song, and we’ll hear what could possibly be a variant of the song by Washington Phillips after this

  • Washington Phillips - I’ve Got the Keys to the Kingdom

    • He was an interesting fella--an unordained or “jackleg” preacher, who spoke to spontaneous street gatherings and criticized the sectarianism of organized religion

    • While the instruments he plays on his recordings were listed only as “novelty accompaniment” by Columbia Records, he called them “manzarenes” or “dulceolas”, which he made out of broken instruments

    • The 78s he made for Columbia are coveted by record collectors, and in 2018 an album of his recordings, called Washington Phillips and His Manzarene Dreams was released, which received two Grammy award nominations

    • From 1929

  • Charles Wallace, H Brown, John Roberts - Dig My Grave Both Long and Narrow

    • From a 1959 album of Bahamian music

    • This was recorded at the Fresh Creek Settlement on the island of Andros in August of 1958

    • It’s a very old Bahamian song, and is almost always sung in three-part harmony

    • It may come from Anglican polyphonic hymnal traditions of the 18th century

  • Palmer Crisp - Roll On John

    • He was a musician who worked for the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad in Allen, Kentucky

    • He also had a radio show in West Virginia

    • This was recorded in Allen in 1946 for the Library of Congress

    • It’s included on an album of his father Rufus’s music

    • He stated that it was “only natural” that some of his father’s music rubbed off on him, and this is one of the songs he learned from his father

    • It’s a railroad song the origins of which are unknown

    • It seems to have been composed and become popular while the railroads were being constructed in the mountains during the end of the 19th century

  • Michael Hurley - Alabama

    • Member of the 1960s Greenwich Village scene, also a cartoonist and painter

    • This is from his new album, The Time of the Foxgloves

  • Luz Morales - Aking Bituin (My Star)

    • This is from an album of folk songs from the Philippines from 1960, sung by the Filipino soprano Luz Morales

  • Ferron - Shady Gate

    • She’s a Canadian musician and poet from the same generation as people like Leonard Cohen, Bob Dylan, and Bruce Cockburn, though she’s less widely known even within Canada

    • From her 2009 album Boulder, though she first released the song on a 1992 live album

  • Pharis & Jason Romero - I’m Just Here to Get My Baby Out of Jail

    • Married duo from Horsefly, BC

    • From their album A Passing Glimpse

  • John Greenway - Talking Miner (Talking Centralia)

    • American folklorist who specialised in social protest songs

    • Recorded an album called Talking Blues in 1958 on the Folkways label

    • Included 15 covers of songs by different artists

    • This is one of those songs from that album, and it’s one of three songs written by Woody Guthrie after the Centralia mine explosion in Centralia, Illinois, in 1947, in which 111 miners were killed

  • Son House - Yonder Comes My Mother

    • Mississippi delta blues artist who influenced Robert Johnson and Muddy Waters

    • He and his band were recorded for the Library of Congress by Alan Lomax in 1941 and 1942, and in 1943 he left Mississippi for New York and gave up music

    • In 1964, though, a group of record collectors rediscovered him and his music, and persuaded him to relearn his songs

    • He reestablished his music career, playing in coffeehouses, at folk festivals, and on tours

    • He also recorded several albums

    • This was recorded in 1969 in Rochester, NY

  • Smoky Babe - My Baby She Told Me

    • From an album of Louisiana Country Blues, recorded by the folklorist Harry Oster in the early 1960s

    • Smoky Babe was an itinerant musician originally from Mississippi who grew up working on farms in his region, then travelled around Alabama and Louisiana working on barges and as a mechanic during the day, and playing at clubs at night

  • Freddie Spruell - Milk Cow Blues

    • He was a Delta blues musician from Louisiana who is often considered the first Delta blues musician to be recorded

    • This was recorded in Chicago in 1926

  • Sandy Stoddard - Moose and Bear Calls

    • Album from 1956

    • This is the kind of thing you find when going through seemingly normal folk compilation albums of field recordings

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Barking Dog: January 13, 2022

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Barking Dog: December 23, 2021