Barking Dog: August 11, 2022

  • Kings of Harmony Quartette - Trees Are Bending

    • Gospel quartet that first recorded in 1943 for King Solomon Records

    • That’s the year that this one is from

    • It seems to be a version of Sinnerman, a traditional African American spiritual that’s related to the older spiritual No Hiding Place Down Here

    • They call it Trees Are Bending

  • Bessie Jones & the Georgia Sea Island Singers - Blow Gabriel

    • From an album of Alan Lomax recordings from the southern states from between 1959 and 1960

    • Bessie Jones known for spreading folk music to a wider audience in the 20th century

    • She was one of the most popular performers of folk music in the 60s and 70s, often appearing with the Georgia Sea Island Singers, a folk music ensemble that’s been around since the early 1900s

    • That one was recorded October 12, 1959 in Saint Simons, Georgia

    • Urges the Gabriel to blow his trumpet on the Day of Judgement;

    • It’s the antecedent of later spirituals on the same theme

    • We heard a related song before it, Trees Are Bending by the Kings of Harmony Quartette

  • Otis Taylor, Guy Davis - Hey Liza Jane

    • Taylor is a blues musician from Colorado who left the music industry in the late 70s to become an antique dealer

    • He started playing professionally again in the mid 90s and has now released 15 albums

    • Davis is a musician from New York City who grew up hearing about life in the rural south from his parents and his grandparents

    • He first learned about the blues at a summer camp in Vermont that was run by Pete Seeger’s brother John Seeger

    • He also learned to play the banjo there

    • Popular American song that has become a standard piece performed by brass bands and folk, bluegrass, and jazz groups

  • Kenichi Nagira - “Like Someone”

    • He’s a Japanese folksinger, actor, storyteller, and essayist, and is also an expert on traditional Japanese pubs

    • He was inspired by slightly earlier Japanese folk artists like Tomoya Takaishi and Wataru Takada, both of whom we’ve played before on the show

    • Since the late 1990s, much of his music has been influenced by bluegrass and country music

    • Off his 1972 album Man'nendoko

    • Uses the same tune as I Ain’t Got No Home in This World Anymore by Woody Guthrie, a version of which we’ll hear after this

  • Cisco Houston - I Ain’t Got No Home in This World Anymore

    • Folksinger and singer of cowboy songs born in Delaware and raised in California

    • This song is by Woody Guthrie

    • He based it on the old gospel song “Can’t Feel at Home”

    • It reflects more specifically the plight of those made homeless by the Dust Bowl that afflicted prairie states and provinces in the 1930s

    • Guthrie included it on his first album, Dust Bowl Ballads, from 1940

  • Nora Brown - Wild Goose Chase

    • She’s a 17 year-old banjoist and singer who carries on the old-time tradition

    • She’s found mentors in many folk masters, including the master banjo player Lee Sexton of Kentucky, the female bluegrass pioneer Alice Gerrard, and founder of the New Lost City Ramblers John Cohen

    • This is off her upcoming album, Long Time to Be Gone, which is out August 26 on Jalopy Records

    • It’s a tune she got from Virgil Anderson of Kentucky, who we’ll hear later in the show

  • Si Kahn and Charlotte Brody - Boxes of Bobbins / Time to Organize

    • Kahn is a community organiser and musician from Pennsylvania who moved to the south as an activist during the Civil Rights Movement

    • Brody was his wife, a registered nurse and, along with Kahn, a full-time organiser for the Carolina Brown Lung Association

    • These song was recorded in 1973 for the “What Now People” series that advocated song as political movement

    • Brody wrote them as organising tools for the campaign to unionise JP Stevens, one of the largest textile corporations in the US at the time, which had done everything in its power to avoid the creation of a union

    • Unions were particularly important in the textile industry because of the health issues that could be caused by unsafe labour practices—particularly “brown lung,” a respiratory condition caused by the clouds of cotton dust that blew around the mills

  • Pete Seeger - Sixty Percent

    • Seeger was a folk singer and an activist from New York who advocated for countless social causes through his music for 75 years

    • Off his 1960 album American History in Ballad and Song, Vol.1

    • It’s protest against the American farm parity program of the late 1940s, which set standards to protect against farm product prices that were either too high or too low

  • Bud Grant - What’s the Matter with the Mill

    • He was a blues musician from Thomaston, Georgia who field researcher and festival curator George Mitchell recorded in 1969

    • That’s a version of the Memphis Minnie song of the same name from 1930

  • Colter Wall - Wild Bill Hickok

    • From Swift Current, SK

    • This song is from his 2018 album Songs of the Plains

  • Snooks Eaglin - Rock Island Line

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

    • An American folk song possibly about the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad

    • Earliest known version written in 1929 by Clarence Wilson who was a member of a singing group formed by employees of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad

  • Benton Flippen - This World Can’t Stand Long

    • He was an old-time fiddler from North Carolina who performed with the Camp Creek Boys and the Smokey Valley Boys

    • During his career he won first place countless times at fiddle and band contests in his region, and he played shows at the Newport Folk Festival, the 1982 World’s Fair, the Library of Congress, and the Smithsonian Institution

    • Written by Jim Anglin and first recorded in 1947 by King’s Sacred Quartette

  • Willie Dunn - Riel

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

    • This is his ballad about Louis Riel, the founder of Manitoba

  • Algia Mae Hinton - Out of Jail

    • 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 seems to be an African American traditional song from the late 19th century

  • Uncle Sinner - Old Reuben

    • From Winnipeg

    • Off his 2015 album Let the Devil In

    • That’s a traditional banjo tune which he specifically got from Banjo Bill Cornet

    • It’s related to the song we heard before that,

  • Harry Dean Stanton - Canción Mixteca

    • He was a musician from Kentucky, though he’s probably better known for his acting career, which included credits in films like Cool Hand Luke, Alien, Pretty in Pink, and Paris, Texas among many others

    • This is from the 2014 album Harry Dean Stanton: Partly Fiction

    • Mexican folk song about homesickness written by Jose Lopez Alavez between 1912 and 1915

    • Stanton likely learned the song when he starred in Paris, Texas, as it appears in the film

  • 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

  • Joan Baez - Lonesome Valley

    • She’s one of the best known musicians to come out of the 1960s folk revival

    • She performed for over 60 years before retiring in 2019, and has released over 30 albums

    • Mary Travers provides harmonies on that one

    • An old American traditional gospel folk song, dating back to its first known recording in 1927 by old-time musician David Miller

    • Recorded at the Newport Folk Festival in the mid 60s

  • Billy Connolly - Glasgow Central

    • Though he may be better known as a comedian and actor, he started out as a folksinger with a comedic persona in the 1960s

    • This one was recorded live in 1974

  • Gene Bluestein - Ah, Si Moi Moine Voulait Danser

    • He was a musician, folklorist, activist, and English professor from Minnesota

    • This is off his 1958 album Songs of the North Star State

    • This is one of many French Canadian songs that were sung in Minnesota during the period when voyageurs were travelling in the state

    • It was a dance tune played at trading posts, and the words describe a young woman’s attempt to get a monk to join the dance

  • Alan Mills and the Four Shipmates - Drunken Sailor

    • Canadian folk singer, writer, and actor from Lachine, Quebec

    • Known for popularizing Canadian folk music, and for writing I Know an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly

    • Made a member of the Order of Canada in 1974 for his contributions to Canadian folklore

    • From a 1957 album of sea shanties

    • This song was apparently sung as a “run-away” shanty, used when bringing the sails around to catch the wind

    • It’s from at least the early 19th century, though likely earlier

  • David Laing - No Other Way

    • He was a geologist, singer-songwriter, and educator from New Hampshire who recorded 2 albums for Folkways records in the 1970s

    • His father was a novelist and his mother was the poet Dilys Laing, and he inherited his love for nature and humanity from both of them

    • Laing wrote songs about places that were special to him, which resulted in the album this song comes from, called Magic Mountain

    • He wrote this song specifically for his environmental science fiction adventure novel called Aquila

  • Pharis & Jason Romero - S.S. Radiant

    • From Horsefly, BC

    • Off their new album Tell 'Em You Were Gold, which was recorded live over six days in a 60-year-old barn beside the Little Horsefly River

    • It’s a banjo-centric album, created to highlight the sound of the banjos that Jason makes

    • They used the gourd banjo they call Gourdo on that one, which he built in 2019

    • They wrote the tune for their son Sy

  • Kenneth Peacock - Who is at My Window Weeping?

    • He was an ethnomusicologist from Toronto who was on the staff for what is now the Canadian Museum of Civilization

    • His projects for the museum covered practically every part of Canada, and he’s remembered for the impact his research had on the folk music revival in Canada in the mid 20th century

    • He collected that song while working on Newfoundland folklore, and it’s a short ballad with English roots

  • Tom Handle - Lullaby

    • From a 1979 album of Indigenous music from North America

    • This is a Cherokee lullaby collected in Oklahoma around 1950

    • The liner notes state that certain Cherokee “baby songs” are said to have been composed by the mother bear to lull her cubs to sleep

    • Hunters would overhear them and bring them home for their children

  • Andrea Verga - Farewell to Whalley Range

    • He’s an Italian banjo player, teacher, and producer

    • This tune is by the English folk musician Michael McGoldrick

    • Verga released his version in 2020

  • Lonesome Ace Stringband - Stone Walls and Steel Bars

    • From Toronto

    • This recording is from their 2021 live album, Lively Times, recorded in Vancouver

    • The song was originally recorded by The Stanley Brothers and written by Ray Pennington and Roy Marcus

    • They changed the chords from the Stanleys’ version to make it even more dark sounding

  • The Starlight Gospel Singers - Come Over Here, the Table is Spread

    • They were a rural Alabama gospel group

    • Field recording made by Frederic Ramsey, Jr in 1954

    • Traditional African American spiritual

  • The Wailin’ Jennys - Long Time Traveller

    • Folk group formed in Winnipeg in 2002

    • From their 2006 album Firecracker

    • This song was apparently one of Abraham Lincoln’s favourites

  • Virgil Anderson - You Been Gone So Long

    • He was a banjo player from Wayne County, Kentucky who was born in 1902 and played banjo from the age of 10, entertaining logging camp men with his skills

    • That one’s from his 1980 album On the Tennessee Line

  • Jean Ritchie, Doc Watson - Where Are You Going?

    • Jean Ritchie known as the Mother of Folk

    • Learned traditional folksongs in the oral tradition from friends and family in her youth

    • Member of one of the two "great ballad-singing families" of Kentucky

    • Watson a Grammy award-winning musician from North Carolina known for his fingerstyle and flatpicking skill

    • Had a 60 year career, and often played with other skilled musicians like Ritchie, Clarence Ashley, and his son, Merle Watson

    • Related to Over the River Charlie and Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss

    • Originally a Scottish song, though also popular in Ireland and the US, especially Appalachian region

    • From at least the early 1700s

  • Frank Proffitt - Dan Doo

    • Appalachian musician who inspired musicians during the 60s folk revival to play the traditional 5-string banjo

    • Was known as a skilled carpenter and luthier who made and played his own banjos and dulcimers

    • From the 1962 album Frank Proffitt Sings Folk Songs

    • This is an old ballad also known as “The Wife Wrapt in Wether Skin”

    • Versions vary widely in everything except the plot, and they’ve been found across the British Isles and the United States

  • The Segura Brothers - A Mosquito Ate Up My Sweetheart

    • In 1928, Columbia Records put out a call for Cajun musicians to come to New Orleans for a recording session

    • The Segura Brothers accepted the invitation, which led to notoriety, at least among the folklorists who heard their recordings

    • This is a children’s tune that borrows from Acadian musical traditions

  • Furry Lewis - Casey Jones

    • American country blues artist from Memphis, Tennessee

    • 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

    • Lewis recorded it in 1968 in Memphis, TN

    • We’ll hear 2 other versions after this

  • Mississippi John Hurt - Casey Jones

    • 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

  • Buster Keaton - Casey Jones

    • Silent film star Buster Keaton with his version of Casey Jones, which he performs in the 1965 documentary Buster Keaton Rides Again

  • Old Man Luedecke - The Mermaid

    • From Chester, NS

    • This is from his 2019 album Easy Money, and it’s a traditional sea ballad from around the 18th century that likely originated in England but is well-known across North America

  • Ian & Sylvia - When First Unto This Country

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

    • Every version of this song seems to come from a family called the Gants, whom the Lomaxes, a family of folklorists who collected folk music from across the United States, recorded in 1934

    • It was likely relatively new when they made the recording, though some have noted that it has a frontierish feel

    • 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

  • Bob Connelly - The Editor’s to Blame

    • From his 1975 Folkways Records album Yankee Go Home: Songs of Protest Against American Imperialism

    • It was commissioned by Pete Seeger, and he recorded it in one day on a borrowed guitar

    • The day he recorded it happened to be the same day that Seeger was subpoenaed by the House Un-American Activities Committee

    • The next day, Moses Asch, head of Folkways Records, called him up and said, “Mr. Connelly, Mo here. Have you heard the news or read the newspaper? I do not think the time is right to release an album about American imperialism.” Connelly replied, “Darn right,” but the album ended up being released after all

  • Kaia Kater - Fine Times at Our House

    • Toronto

    • This is from her 2016 album Nine Pin


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Barking Dog: August 18, 2022

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Barking Dog: August 4, 2022