Showing posts with label tradition records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tradition records. Show all posts
Sunday, August 7, 2011
Ramblin' Jack Elliott With Derroll Adams – Early Sessions (Tradition, TCD 1083)
Ramblin' Jack Elliott is a legend who learned his craft from Woody Guthrie and has profoundly influenced everyone from Bob Dylan and Mick Jagger to Beck. Early Sessions was recorded in England in the mid-1950s. Ramblin' Jack Elliott and Derroll Adams toured Europe from 1955 to 1961 during which time they recorded the songs on this album. Ramblin' Jack's style has had a lasting impact on many artists such as Mick Jagger and, even more profoundly, on Bob Dylan. (Amazon)
Jack Elliot & Derroll Adams' play it loose & carefree in these early folk sessions. I'm certain I recollect from the long-lost liner notes that these tracks were generally put down in single takes, with a shared bottle of whiskey on the table between them. Nothing but solid, good-time renditions of folk standards. "Cigarettes & Whiskey" is perennial favorite amongst friends, as this disc made for perfect poker music back in my night-owl years. A fine sounding 192kbps; as its an oldie from the hardrive archive. Enjoy.
Download Link: Ramblin' Jack Elliott With Derroll Adams – Early Sessions (Tradition, TCD 1083)
Banjo, Vocals – Derroll Adams
Guitar, Vocals – Jack Elliott
1 More Pretty Girls Than One 2:00
2 Roll On Buddy 2:30
3 Death Of John Henry 2:29
4 Salty Dog Blues 2:47
5 Talking Blues 2:32
6 I'm Gonna Walk The Street In Glory 1:46
7 Cigarettes & Whiskey 2:00
8 Danville Girl 2:44 *Anyone know what the "Danville Curl" is all about?
9 Worried Man Blues 3:31
10 San Francisco Bay Blues 1:56
11 Roll In My Sweet Baby's Arms 2:31
12 I'm Going Down The Road 2:03
Friday, July 8, 2011
David Hammond- I Am the Wee Falorie Man: Folk Songs of Ireland (Tradition, TLP 1028 *1959)
"Belfast, where David Hammond was born, is an industrial city flanked by green hills and looking out eastwards on a quiet sea-lough. For the last three centuries it has drawn its life-blood from the surrounding countryside and very few of its half-million inhabitants are more than two generations removed from the soil. In such surroundings David in early boyhood picked up a vast store of traditional songs—from the children playing with dim on the streets, from factory workers chanting and singing on the way home from their daily tasks and from old men and women who remembered in their city pent-houses the songs of the green fields of their youth.
Not all these songs were of Irish origin, for in Ulster's history, English and Scots colonists brought to the province their own particular cultures, and their songs in time have become part of the Irishman's tradition. He has modified them, of course, and dressed them frequently in the garb of Irish melody, so that only a skilled musicologist would dare to say they are not native to the soil. Belfast's traditional songs are a most fascinating admixture of Irish, English and Scots elements.
In his early youth David, who spends a large part of his leisure time walking in the countryside, came to know and love the songs of rural Ulster. On his journeys through six of Ireland's fairest counties, round by the shores of Lough Neagh and over the mountain passes of the Sperrins and the Mournes, he has collected for your entertainment and interest songs from shepherds, weavers, cobblers, fishermen and tinkers—songs of occupation and idleness, songs of love, sorrow and jollification, and even a few of those unblushingly senseless trifles that have amused simple folk all over the world since men first began to sing.
These native airs are not debased by alien graces and they are sung simply, with a minimum of accompaniment, in a traditional style which is not a carbon copy of anybody else's. He has been described by a shrewd critic as a "creative traditionalist," an entirely appropriate phrase. The personality of the singer shines through." (sleeve notes)
I'm forever spellbound by the gentle tone of David Hammond's voice. The sadder the ballad, the more sublimely expressive his delivery. The Wee Falorie Man is an Irish traditional classic, with a healthy handful of ultimate stunners therein. Big thanks to my brother Zack for putting "All Around the Loney-O" into my heavy rotation in the first place. Highly recommended. 320 vinyl rip by yours truly.
Download Link: David Hammond- I Am the Wee Falorie Man: Folk Songs of Ireland (Tradition, TLP 1028 *1959)
Side One
B for Barney
All Around the Loney-O
Green Gravel
Doffin Mistress
Maid of Ballydoo
I Know My Love
Dark Eyed Gypsie
Wild Mountain Thyme
Tis Pretty to Be in Ballinderry
Cruise of the Calabar
Side Two
As I Roved Out
Wee Falorie Man
Old Man Rockin' the Cradle
I'll Tell My Ma
I Wish I Was a Maid Again
Gallant Forty-Twa
Early, Early in the Spring/Morning
I'll Go with Her
Irish Girl
Fan-a-Winnow
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