Barking Dog: March 24, 2022

  • Ed and Dana McCurdy - Mountain Railroad

    • Folksinger and actor from Pennsylvania who spent part of his life as a CBC radio host

    • It was through his radio show that he developed friendships with folk musicians and started learning to play folk songs

    • He later moved to New York City, where he fell in with the Greenwich Village folk crowd and developed friendships with artists like Odetta, Josh White Jr., and Ramblin’ Jack Elliott

    • He’s known particularly for writing the anti-war song “Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream”

    • Dana McCurdy is his son, and they recorded this song for their 1977 album On Jordan's Stormy Banks I Stand: Sacred Songs of America

    • This is a hymn written by M.E. Abbey in the 1890s

  • Josh White - While the Blood Runs Warm in Your Veins

    • Extremely successful musician who started playing music in the late 20s and gained fame as a blues, jazz, and folk musician, as well as a film and Broadway actor

    • From 1935

    • Seems to be an African American hymn, first recorded in 1929 by Reverend AA Gundy

  • Alankan

    • From a 1962 album of freedom songs from around the world, performed by Mrs. Thelma Patel’s 6th Grade class in Woodmere, NY

    • This is a Somalian freedom song, the words of which are by Ismail Ahmed with music by Abdullah Kershi

    • The title means “blue” or “blue flag”

  • Sayyid Shâh Ewaz - Saram Qurbânat, Ay Mâh-E Yagâna (I Give Up Everything for You, My One and Only Moon)

    • Off an album of Afghani music between 1979 and 2001 from the UNESCO Collection of Traditional Music

    • Ewaz a professional dambura player who played in the orchestra of Radio Kabul

    • Recorded in Kayan

    • This is a Hazara song about unrequited love

  • Taj Mahal - Shake Sugaree

    • Taj is a Grammy-award-winning blues musician from New York City whose career has spanned over 50 years

    • This song is by Elizabeth Cotten, and the lyrics are by her great grandchildren

  • Sheesham and Lotus - F and D Rag

    • From Wolfe Island, ON

    • This seems to be their own tune

  • Roger Sprung - Malaguena

    • Is an American banjo player known for introducing traditional bluegrass banjo picking to folk musicians in the northern states

    • This one is from 1963, and it’s an old Iberian tune by Ernesto Luecona

  • Narcisse & Alice Cormier - Madeleine

    • From a 1977 album of Cajun home music field recordings

    • This one was recorded in September of 1975 in Church Point, Louisiana, with Narcisse on accordion and Alice accompanying on the triangle

  • Ian & Sylvia - Four Rode By

    • Married duo who recorded together from 1959 until their divorce in 1975

    • 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

    • This is their own song, and is based on the story of the Wild McLean Boys, three brothers who terrorized pioneers in the Kamloops area

  • Pleaz Mobley - Pretty Polly

    • Mid-eighteenth century American murder ballad that comes from the older “Gosport Tragedy” ballad

    • By the time “Pretty Polly” emerged from the older song, only the essential parts of the original remained

  • Cara Luft - The Blacksmiths

    • From Winnipeg

    • Off her 2003 album Tempting the Storm

    • A traditional English folk song first collected by Ralph Vaughan Williams in Herefordshire in 1909

  • Peggy Seeger, Ewan MacColl - The Ballad of Springhill

    • He was a well-known British folksinger and labour activist known for his involvement in the 1960s folk revival

    • He and Peggy Seeger were married

    • 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 been living in the UK for over 60 years, where she is a very well-known musician

    • They wrote this together about the mining disaster in Springhill, Nova Scotia, in 1958, which killed 75 people

    • Seeger learned of the disaster while living in France, and the two first performed the song together while on tour in Canada in 1959

    • It’s since been recorded by artists like Peter, Paul, and Mary and U2

  • Tom Waits - Gun Street Girl

    • We’re going to hear some contemporary songs now that come from the “Lost John” tradition

    • “Lost John” is an old-time song from the southern US

    • Several tunes that refer to “Lost John” tell the story of the folk trickster figure John, an escaped enslaved or incarcerated man who outwits possible captors by wearing shoes with backwards soles

    • None of the songs we’re about to hear are explicitly about the folk figure, though they seem to all be adaptations of that tradition

    • Waits a very well known American musician, composer, and actor who’s been playing professionally for 50 years

    • This is off his 1985 album Rain Dogs

  • Uncle Sinner - Long Gone

    • From Winnipeg

    • Off his 2020 album Trouble of This World

  • Old Man Luedecke - Lost John

    • From Chester, NS

    • It’s off his 2006 album Hinterland

    • It tells of the bank robber John Dean, who escapes in the same method as Lost John

    • This variant is also traditional, and has been recorded a number of times since the 1920s

  • Covered Wagon Musicians - Rattlesnake Junction

    • The Covered Wagon was a group of GIs from the Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho, who adopted their name from an Air Force security code used when coming upon suspected sabotage

    • Hearing it, everyone was required to "unite in the face of a common enemy"—in their case, war, racism, and injustice

    • This is off their 1972 album We Say No to Your War!

    • The words and music of this one are by Dave Davis, and it’s performed by Jim Schaffer

  • Unspecified - March Forward to Total Victory

    • This is from a 1971 album of Vietnamese songs of liberation, recorded in Vietnam

    • The songs celebrate the efforts of the National Liberation Front (NLF) against America’s involvement in the Vietnam war

    • This one is by Nguyen Thanh

    • It’s sung by a group of women and addresses the liberation fighters of the NLF

  • Sis Cunningham - No More Store Bought Teeth

    • Important member of the folk community for many years

    • Founding editor of Broadside Magazine, an important publication for the Greenwich Village folk scene

    • One of the first people to be blacklisted as a communist sympathiser in post WWII America

    • She wrote this song in 1976, and it’s also known as the “Medical Care Song”

  • Mark Cohen - The Thing That Fell Into Bill McCarthy’s Pond

    • He’s a folksinger from New York who recorded several albums for Folkways Records in the 1970s

    • This one is off Plutonium, from 1979

  • Unspecified - Zulu Music: Guitar Solo

    • From a 1956 album called Sounds of a South African Homestead

    • This is a Zulu guitar solo, and it’s noted that it’s the typical use of the instrument and is exactly how it would be heard in both the countryside and the city

  • Ed Young, Lonnie Young Sr., GD Young - Ida Reed

    • Ed was a musician from Mississippi

    • He’s joined by his brothers Lonnie Young Sr. on bass drum, and G.D. Young on snares

    • They later called themselves the Southern Fife and Drum Corps, and they appeared at the Newport Folk Festival and a Friends of Old-Time Music concert in the 1960s

    • American traditional song made popular in 1938 by Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys

    • Recorded in Como, Mississippi in 1959

  • Pete Seeger - Talking Atom Blues (Old Man Atom)

    • He was a folk singer and an activist who advocated for Civil Rights, environmental causes, and peace through his music

    • This song was written in 1946 by Vern Partlow, an American reporter and folksinger

    • Unlike many protest songs at the time, this one became well-known through the many recordings made of it

  • Glasgow Song Guild - I Shall Not Be Moved

    • From the 1962 album Ding Dong Dollar: Anti-Polaris and Scottish Republican Songs by the Anti-Polaris Singers, who started a musical movement in protest of an American nuclear submarine that sailed into the Holy Loch in the early 1960s

    • Polaris was the United Kingdom’s first submarine-based nuclear weapons system

    • This version of “I Shall Not Be Moved” was workshopped on one of the early marches

    • The traditional version is a spiritual that became popular as a protest song and a union song during the Civil Rights Movement

  • Cindy Mapes - Buffalo Holler

    • Words and music by Peggy Seeger

    • Mapes was a full-time preschool teacher in Ohio at the time this was recorded in the 1970s

    • This song is about the time a giant coal waste dam broke in 1972, which sent 130 million gallons of water down Buffalo Hollow

    • It killed 150 people and left 4,000 homeless

    • The mine companies then stalled efforts by families to gain compensation until 1974

  • Selah Jubilee Singers - What He Done for Me

    • An American gospel vocal quartet active from 1927-1953

    • Many popular doowop groups of the 50s were musically descended from prewar groups like the Selah Jubilee Singers

    • This seems to be a traditional African American spiritual

  • Sister Rosetta Tharpe - What He Done for Me

    • She was a musician from Arkansas who was extremely important in the creation of rock and roll music

    • This one is from 1942

  • Snooks Eaglin - Down by the Riverside

    • Eaglin an American musician who played a wide range of styles and claimed to know about 2500 songs

    • This was recorded in 1958

    • American spiritual that dates to before the American Civil War

    • Has often been used as an anti-war song

  • El Teatro Campesino - El Picket Sign

    • The Farm Workers' Theater was a satirical theatre company formed by the strikers of the Delano grape strike, which protested the exploitation of farm workers

  • Stanley G Triggs - The Lookout in the Sky

    • Born in Nelson, BC in 1928

    • Worked for the BC Forest Service and attended the Brooks Institute of Photography in Santa Barbara

    • Studied folk songs and oral history and captured photos of those who he learned songs from

    • Later returned to school to pursue a degree in both Fine Arts and Anthropology

    • He wrote the tune for this song, the lyrics of which are a poem by the trapper Harold Smith

    • He wrote it about Bob Wallace, who was the lookout man in Duncan for the BC Forest Service for nine seasons, a position that Triggs also held for two seasons

  • Gary Shearston - Put a Light in Every Country Window

    • He was an Australian folksinger and priest

    • This is a song by Don Henderson, an Australian songwriter

    • It was written around 1961

  • Rev. WM Mosley - Oh Death Spare Me Over Till Another Year

    • A preacher who was recorded in Atlanta, Georgia between 1926 and 1931 for Columbia records

    • It is possible that this song originated from Lloyd Chandler’s 1920s song “A Conversation with Death”

    • We’ll hear a couple other versions of it after this

  • Sarah Ogan Gunning - Oh, Death

    • She was a folksinger from Kentucky, as were her half-sister Aunt Molly Jackson and brother Jim Garland

    • She was briefly involved in the New York folk scene in the 1930s, but her siblings’ work received more attention than hers

    • She was later rediscovered in Detroit in the 1960s, and played at Newport Folk Festival in 1964

    • Version is from 1965

  • The New Lost City Ramblers - Oh Death

    • A traditional stringband that played music taken from 78s from the 20s and 30s

    • This is from their 1997 album There Ain't No Way Out, which was their first new recording in 20 years

  • Harry McClintock - Poor Boy

    • American singer and poet known for his song “Big Rock Candy Mountain”

    • Ran away from home as a boy to join the circus

    • Lived an adventurous life from then on and apparently “never lost his sense of humour”

  • Alan Mills - I Ride An Old Paint

    • Mills a 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

    • A traditional American cowboy song, first collected and published in Carl Sandburg’s American Songbag in 1927

    • From 1954

  • Mississippi John Hurt - Avalon Blues

    • American country blues singer and guitarist from Avalon, Mississippi

    • He made a couple of recordings for OkEh Records in the late 1920s but they were commercial failures, and when OkEh Records closed shop during the Great Depression, Hurt returned to his work as a sharecropper, continuing to play music at local events

    • His OkEh recordings were included on the incredibly influential 1952 Anthology of American Folk Music, and in 1963 a copy of “Avalon Blues” was discovered, which led the musicologist Dick Spottswood to find Hurt in Avalon

    • Hurt performed at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival, which brought further attention to his music, and he toured extensively throughout the US and recorded 3 albums

    • This is from the series of recordings he made for the Library of Congress in 1963

  • Mrs. Peter Kelly - Tsimshian Song

    • This is from an album of Haida music recorded by the musicologist Ida Halpern and released in 1987

    • Halpern was originally from Austria, but arrived in Canada in 1944 to flee Nazism

    • She’s known mainly for her work with the First Nations people of British Columbia, which she conducted at a time when the government was working against efforts to celebrate and preserve Indigenous cultures in Canada

    • Reading her biography, it seems as though her work reflected more recent efforts for reciprocal relationships between ethnographers and the people whose work they study, which was pretty unusual for an ethnographer working in the 40s and 50s

    • She also seems to have built relationships enough to be entrusted with these songs, which were largely withheld from people outside of the communities from which they came

    • That was partially a response to Haida visual art being exposed by European missionaries in the 19th century, which understandably caused Haida elders to more firmly protect their creative heritage from western influence

    • At the same time, it’s noted that Halpern’s work is criticized for its “cultural material”, probably meaning the contextual information for the music, including misspellings and improper citation of the songwriters

    • Her work on the music itself is described as “flawless” though, and her contributions and many recordings are extremely valuable for the preservation of these older songs, though her work has been largely overlooked by anthropologists, folklorists, and ethnomusicologists even in recent years

    • This recording was made in 1974 with Mrs. Peter Kelly (the only name given)

    • She was the wife of a missionary and the daughter of a missionary, and was brought up accepting the social attitudes of church authorities, but also retained a strong belief in the importance of her traditional culture

    • Her main reason for speaking with Halpern was the fear that the old songs would be lost if they weren’t recorded

    • We’ll hear her talk about the song and translate the words in this recording

  • Lonesome Ace Stringband - Highlander’s Farewell / Monroe’s Farewell to Long Hollow

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Barking Dog: March 17, 2022