Nehemiah Curtis James was born near Yazoo
City, Mississippi, in 1902. James was raised just south of the Mississippi
Delta near Bentonia, on the Whitehead plantation, where his mother was the
plantation cook. James’s friends named him “Skippy” due to his peculiar style
of dancing. Skip’s father, a guitar-playing bootlegger, abandoned his family
when Skip was a young boy.
In 1931, after years of work as a laborer,
bootlegger, and sometimes musician, James entered a singing competition at a
store in Jackson, Mississippi. James had just begun to play his song, “Devil
Got My Woman,” when he was awarded the prize-a train ticket to Grafton,
Wisconsin, and a recording session with Paramount Records.
Paramount was famous for the poor quality
of its recordings, and sadly, many fine performances were poorly recorded by
the label, including those by James. James recorded several songs with guitar during
his first session, and eight piano songs during the second session. James
recalls recording 26 sides in all, though only 18 have been found. Among the
classic recordings he made at those sessions were, “Devil Got My Woman,” “I’m
So Glad,” “Hard Time Killing Floor Blues,” “22-20 Blues,” and “Special Rider Blues.”
James was only paid 40 dollars for his efforts, and as the recordings were made
during the height of the depression, only a few sides were ever released.
Disillusioned with the music business, James quit and turned to religion.
Little is known about his life during the 33 years between his Paramount
recordings and his rediscovery in the mid-Sixties.
James played his first show in 33 years at
the 1964 Newport Folk Festival. His performance was a brilliant one and it
seemed that his powers were still completely intact despite his long lay off.
Many believed that James performance at the festival topped all others who
appeared.
Despite his huge popularity at Newport,
James did not have a recording deal. When Cream recorded “I'm So Glad” on their
Fresh Cream album, James, now ailing, used his royalties to get into a good
hospital in Washington, DC, where he could have the surgery that extended his
life by three years.
James recorded the excellent albums, “Today!”
(1966) and “Devil Got My Woman” (1968). James died in 1969, in Philadelphia.
Tommy Johnson
was country blues singer and guitarist from Terry, Mississippi. Johnson was
born in 1896, and by the Twenties he was an established figure in Mississippi
blues. The Sixties blues rock band, Canned Heat, took their name from the
Johnson song, “Canned Heat Blues.”
Johnson was a
dissolute figure who actively cultivated a sinister image through excessive
drinking and stories that he had sold his soul to the devil in exchange for his
musical mastery. A similar mythology would later be attached to Robert Johnson.
Johnson made his
first recordings for the Victor label in 1928 with the sides, “Canned Heat
Blues” and “Big Road Blues.” Johnson also recorded for Paramount Records in two
sessions, one from 1928 and another from the following year. These recordings
proved Johnson to be a vocalist of great depth and a fine guitarist.
Unfortunately, his recordings for Paramount, are of lo-fidelity.
Johnson’s
classic sides can be found on the compilation, “Complete Recorded Works in
Chronological Order (1928-1929)” (1994).
Josh
White, like Leadbelly, was a country blues singer from the early part of the 20th
century who found new life and success as a part of the Sixties folk boom.
White was born in Greenville, South Carolina, in 1915, and made his recording
debut in 1932 with “Baby Won’t You Doodle-Doo-Doo.”
White
recorded for number of labels including Perfect and Melotone in the Thirties
during his initial incarnation as a country blues performer. In the early
Forties White’s music became some of the first African-American music to find
acceptance among a white audience when he scored a million-selling single with
his song, “One Meatball,” in 1944.
By the
Forties White had become a civil rights leader, and in fact, became a close
confidant of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. During the decade, White became
the first African-American performer to perform at previously segregated clubs,
and he later became the first folk/blues performer to appear on a U.S. postage
stamp. White also appeared on Broadway as Blind Lemon Jefferson in the musical,
“John Henry.” White’s appearance on Broadway brought him to the attention of the
New York City folk crowd which at that time included Woody Guthrie, Leadbelly
and Burl Ives.
By the
late Fifties, White was a fixture in the Folk revival and was recording more
folk-oriented material. White continued performing in folk music festivals and
toured the world up until his death, in 1969.
The best
collections of White’s music include, “Chain Gang” (1940), “Ballads and Blues”
(1946), and the great collection of civil rights tunes, “Southern Exposure: An
album of Jim Crow Blues Sung by Josh White” (1941).
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Ali “Farka "Toure is
among only a handful of African folk musicians who have found an audience for their
music beyond the borders of the African continent. Toure’s involvement with
American guitarist and musicologist Ry Cooder in the Nineties brought him to
the attention of North American roots music listeners. Toure would eventually
become known as the “Bluesman of Africa”
Toure was born in Kanau, Mali,
in 1939. As a youth, Toure was introduced to African-American music, including
soul from the likes of Ray Charles and Otis Redding and the Delta blues. Toure
wrote music and performed for a group called Troupe 117 which was organized by
the Malian government following the country’s establishment of independence.
In 1968, Toure
appeared in a performance in Sofia, Bulgaria, his first such appearance outside of Africa. By the Seventies, Toure was performing on Radio Mali, and the Sonafric
label recruited him to recorded several albums during the decade.
In 1995, Toure recorded the brilliant “Talking Timbuktu” with Ry Cooder and
embarked on a world tour. For his next album, “Niafunke” (1999), Toure’s
producer needed to install remote recording equipment near Toure’s farm as the
performer refused to leave his rice fields unattended to make recordings.
Johnson was one of the best of the early acoustic
blues guitarists. He possessed a technical proficiency that separated him from
his peers, and he was always in high demand as a session guitarist for blues
and jazz recordings. Johnson was a fine vocalist as well, and his prodigious
chops made him a hot recording property in the Twenties.
The place and date of his birth are the subject of
some debate, although many believe his birthplace to be New Orleans. It is known for sure that
Johnson was raised in New Orleans and later
moved to St. Louis
in the Twenties where he began recording for Okeh Records. That label would
release his first side, “Mr. Johnson’s Blues,” in 1925. Johnson recorded
numerous sides for the label including, “Very Lonesome Blues,” “Lonesome Jail
Blues,” Five o’clock Blues,” “Backwater Blues,” and many others.
Johnson lent his nimble guitar skills to Louis Armstrong’s Hot Five recordings in
1927. The next year, Johnson and the white jazz guitarist, Eddie Lang, made
some of the first racially-integrated jazz recordings. Johnson’s career
suffered during the Depression Era of the Thirties when Okeh went bankrupt and
he relocated to Canada.
Johnson died in 1970, in Toronto,
from injuries he had suffered in a car accident.
Like most other musicians of his era, Johnson’s work
is best heard on any number of compilation albums. “Blues in My Fingers: The
Essential Recordings of Lonnie Johnson” (1994), and “Complete Recorded Works
1925-1932” (1991) are the best compilations available for this artist.
Woody Guthrie was the most important figure in the history
of American folk music. Guthrie was more than a singer and musician. He was a
real-life incarnation of John Steinbeck’s character of Tom Joad from the Grapes
of Wrath and a committed left-wing political activist.
Guthrie was born in Okemah,
Oklahoma in 1912. When he was 14
he began playing the guitar and harmonica and learned the English and Scottish
folk songs from the parents of his friends. Despite being a bright student,
Guthrie dropped out of high school and started busking on streets. When he was
eighteen his father called for him to come to Texas to attend school, but Guthrie spent
his time busking and reading in the library.By 1930, Guthrie joined thousands of other “Okies” (Oklahomans) who were
migrating to California to search for work and
escape the “dust bowl” drought that plagued Oklahoma.
In California,
Guthrie worked odd jobs, and by the end of the thirties, he had managed to land
a job playing folk and “hillbilly” music on the radio. At this time he would
write the songs about his experiences during the dustbowl era migration to California that would
later become his legendary collection of dustbowl ballads. In 1936, he would
begin to perform at communist party events in California, and although he never joined the
party, he would later be tagged as a communist.
By the 1940s, Guthrie was in New York
City, and his “Oklahoma
cowboy” nickname and reputation endeared him to the leftist folk music
community in the city. He would record his album, “Dust Bowl Ballads” (1940)
for the Victor Records in Camden,
New Jersey, shortly after his
arrival. The album has long been hailed as a superb document of an episode of
American history told by a man who lived it. Guthrie would also record for Alan
Lomax of the Library of Congress, singing and speaking about his adventures of
the dust bowl period of ten years before.
Guthrie would land another radio job in New York, this time as the host of the “Pipe
Smoking Time” show which was sponsored by a tobacco company. He also appeared
on CBS radio on the program, “Back Where I Came From”. He managed to get a sopt
on the show for his friend, the legendary black folk singer, Huddie “Leadbelly”
Ledbetter. By 1941, Guthrie was off to WashingtonState
to write and perform songs about the construction of Grand Coulee Dam in the
employ of the American Department of the Interior. Guthrie wrote 26 songs for a
film which was to be produced about the project, but the film never came to
fruition. The songs, “Pastures of Plenty” and “Grand Coulee Dam” would become
well known nonetheless.
In 1944, Guthrie met Moses Asch of Folkways Records for whom
Guthrie would record hundreds of songs including the first recording of perhaps
his best known tune, “This Land is Your Land”. Folkways would later release
these songs in various collections.
By the mid 1950s, Guthrie’s health was deteriorating with
the onset of Huntington’s disease. He was eventually bedridden in BellevueHospital, and in 1960 was visited by a
very young and awestruck admirer, Bob Dylan.
Leadbelly is a legendary figure in both the fields of
folk music and the blues. Leadbelly’s life is the stuff of American popular
legend. He was a hard man who was convicted of murder and spent much of his
early adult life in prison. While in prison, he worked in chain gangs doing
hard labor.
Leadbelly is remembered for his twelve-string guitar
virtuosity and his catalogue of songs, both blues and folk that he either wrote
or collected on his travels in the early days of the 20th century.
Among Leadbelly’s most famous songs are: “Good Night Irene,” “Black Betty,”
“Midnight Special,” “On a Monday,” “Pick a Bale of Cotton,” “Green Corn,” and
“Stewball.”
Leadbelly was born Huddie Ledbetter in Mooringsport, Louisiana,
in 1885. By the time he was five-years-old, his family had settled in Bowie County, Texas.
Leadbelly learned the guitar in childhood, and by 1903, he was performing in Shreveport, Louisiana,
clubs and steadily honing his craft. The wide range of music which Leadbelly
heard in Shreveport
had an indelible influence on his music. In 1912, following the sinking of the
Titanic, Leadbelly wrote a song about the ship noting that African-American
boxer, Jack Johnson, was denied the right to sail on the ship and was able to
live out his life as a result.
In 1915, Leadbelly landed in trouble when he was
convicted of carrying a pistol. Three years later, his volatile temper
exploded, and he killed one of his relatives, Will Stafford, in a fistfight
over a woman. He was sentenced to imprisonment in the SugarLand prison near Houston, where he served 7 years. A song written
for the Texas
governor and his performances for fellow prisoners helped to earn him an early
release. He was released in 1925, but would wind up back in prison at Angola
Prison Farm, in 1930, for attempted murder, after he had knifed a white man in
a fight. Between his stints in prison, Leadbelly traveled around Texas with blues master, Blind Lemon Jefferson, playing
music and acting as Jefferson’s guide.
In 1933, John Lomax of the Library of Congress
“discovered” Leadbelly in Angola
and recorded him on primitive recording equipment. Lomax would return the
following year with better recording equipment and record hundreds of songs
from Leadbelly’s vast repertoire of blues and folk tunes. Later that year,
Leadbelly was released for good behavior and accompanied Lomax on several song
collecting excursions through the American South.
Later in 1934, Leadbelly landed a recording deal with
ARC Records, and recorded blues material. His recordings were commercially
unsuccessful, and he returned to Louisiana.
In 1936, Leadbelly traveled to New York where
he tried to appeal to black audiences in Harlem’s
Apollo Theatre by playing the blues. He failed to win over the Apollo
audiences, but began to attract attention from the white leftist folk crowd.
In 1939, Leadbelly landed in trouble again, this time
for stabbing a man in a fight in Manhattan-a
crime which landed him in jail again for two years. Upon his release in 1941,
Leadbelly became a fixture on the New
York folk club scene, appearing with other folk
luminaries such as Josh White, Brownie McGhee, Woody Guthrie, and Pete Seeger.
In 1944, Leadbelly went to California
where he made a series of excellent recordings for Capital Records. Leadbelly
contracted Lou Gehrig’s disease in 1949 and died later that year in New York City.
Leadbelly’s music is best heard on the compilations,
“Last Sessions” (1953), “Sings Folk Songs” (1962), “Leadbelly” (1965),
“Midnight Special” (1991), “King of the 12-String Guitar” (1991) and “Where Did
You Sleep Last Night: Leadbelly Legacy Vol 1.” (1996), and “The Definitive
Leadbelly” (2008).
The Delmore Brothers were one of the most
important and influential acts from the early days of country music. The duo
consisted of the brothers, Alton
and Rabon Delmore, a pair of guitarist/vocalists who helped to pioneer the
country music genre with their melding of gospel music, folk, and the blues.
The brothers were born into poverty in Elkmont,
Alabama.
The Delmore Brothers made their first
recordings for Columbia Records, in 1931, and produced “I’ve Got the Kansas
City Blues” and “Alabama Lullaby.” The duo continued to record until 1952, when
Rabon Delmore died of cancer.
During their run, the Delmore Brothers
recorded some of the all-time classics of country music including, “Blow Yo’
Whistle, Freight Train,” “When It’s Time for the Whippoorwill to Sing,” “Freight
Train Boogie,” and “Blues Stay Away from Me.” The latter tune would be covered
by later rockabilly performers Gene Vincent and Johnny Burnette, while “Freight
Train Boogie” has been called the first rock and roll recording by some
pundits.
Blind Willie McTell was a country blues
singer/guitarist and probably the greatest performer of the Piedmont style of
blues playing. He also played ragtime music. McTell was born blind as William
Samuel McTier, in Thomson, Georgia, in 1898.
McTell learned to read and write music from
Braille, and acquired a six-string guitar in his early teens. He was born into
a musical family, and is a relation of gospel music pioneer, Thomas A. Dorsey.
When his mother died during the Twenties, the now parentless McTell began
wandering The South. He wound up in Atlanta,
Georgia, in
1927, and scored a recording contract with Victor Records. He would remain in Atlanta and record for
several record companies.
McTell’s best known song is “Statesboro Blues,”
which was recorded by the Allman Brothers Band. The White Stripes have recorded
two of his tunes, “Southern Can Mama” and “Lord, Send Me an Angel.”
McTell’s albums, “Atlanta Twelve String:
Blues Originals Vol. 1” (1972), “The Definitive Blind Willie McTell” (1994),
and “King of Georgia Blues” (2007) are all essential listening.
Blind Lemon Jefferson was born in Coutchman, Texas,
in 1893. He was an enormously influential country blues singer whose songs have
been covered by rock performers as diverse as the Beatles and Bob Dylan. Dylan
recorded Jefferson’s “See That My Grave is
Kept Clean” on his debut album, while Beatles and others, recorded rocking
versions of his “Matchbox Blues.”
After traveling around Texas
with the legendary folk and blues singer, Leadbelly, Jefferson wound up in Chicago in the mid-Twenties.
He secured a recording contract with Paramount Records and began laying down
classic sides. Jefferson’s recordings proved
for posterity that he was, in fact, one of the best singers and guitarists of
early country blues.
Jefferson was a fast picking guitarist of tremendous facility, and he played
in a wide variety of styles. Jefferseon’s recordings seldom become tiresome as
is the case with many other country blues singers. Jefferson’s
recorded classics include, “Hot Dogs,” “Jack O’ Diamonds Blues,” “Black Snake
Moan,” and “Easy Rider Blues.” He was one of the first male blues singers to
record solo with his own guitar accompaniment.
Jefferson died of exposure when he became
lost in Chicago
in December, 1929 during a bad snowstorm. Several fine compilations of
Jefferson’s recordings are available including, “King of the Country Blues”
(1985), “Complete Recorded Works in Chronological Order” (Volumes 1-4) (1991), “The
Best of Blind Lemon Jefferson” (2000), and “Classic Sides” (2003).
Blind Willie Johnson was born near Brenham, Texas,
in 1897. Johnson is one of the greatest guitarists in the history of blues
music and likely the greatest slide-guitarist in the country blues genre. Johnson
is considered a gospel performer by many, as most of his recordings were of a
religious nature.
Johnson was not blind from birth. It is not
entirely clear how he lost his sight, but it has been suggested that his
step-mother threw lye in his eyes to exact revenge on his father.
Johnson began singing on street corners for
tips as a youth. He continued busking for many years when this was apparently his
only source of income. He busked in several Texas cities, but it seems he spent most of
his time in the Texan town, Beaumont. Johnson only made 30 commercial
recordings in his lifetime. These recordings were made for Columbia Records
between 1927 and 1930.
Fortunately, Johnson recorded after the
advent of microphones and his recordings are of high-fidelity. Among his best
known sides are: ”God Moves on the Water,” about the sinking of the Titanic,
“Nobody’s Fault but Mine,” which was recorded by Led Zeppelin, “Motherless
Children,” which was recorded by Eric Clapton, and “John the Revelator” which
has been recorded by many.
Johnson was poor throughout his life, and
it was his status as an African-American resident of the American South that
contributed to his early demise. After his house was destroyed by fire,
Johnson, with no place to go, was forced to sleep in its scorched remains. He
contracted malarial fever, and when his wife brought him to hospital, he was
refused admittance, likely because he was black. Without treatment he succumbed
to the fever on September 18, 1945.
Of several fine compilations of Johnson’s
music, “Praise God I’m Satisfied” (1977), “Sweeter as the Years Go By” (1990),
and “The Complete Blind Willie Johnson” (1993) are the best.
Charlie
Poole was one of a handful of individuals recording country music in the days
before The Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers made the music popular in the late Twenties.
Poole and his band, “The North Carolina Ramblers,” were one of the most popular
and prolific of the “hillbilly” bands to record in the mid-Twenties. Traditional
country was rich and colorful, and Poole was one of the best from its early
days.
Poole was
born in Eden, North Carolina, in 1892. He was a banjo player, and he and his
band, the North Carolina Ramblers, made their first recording, “Don’t Let Your
Deal Go Down.” in 1925. Poole wrote songs that reflected the harsh realities of
life for the southern poor and his own struggles with alcoholism, a disease
which would eventually kill him.
Songs
such as "You Ain't Talking To Me," “Can I Sleep in your Barn Tonight Mister,” “Take a Drink on Me,” and
“All Go Hungry Hash House” paint vivid pictures of that life. Poole even
dabbled in the political arena with his classic, “White House Blues.”
Several
compilations exist with these songs and many more.
Led Zeppelin was one of the first hard rock
supergroups, and a band which enjoyed unprecedented popularity in the hard rock
arena. The band came together from the ashes of the last incarnation of the
Yardbirds, which featured the young guitar hero, Jimmy Page. Page teamed up
with bassist John Paul Jones and drummer John Bonham, but the new band needed a
lead singer to round out its line-up. Terry Reid was considered at first, but
when he proved to be unavailable, Robert Plant was brought in.
The new band was initially called, “The New
Yardbirds,” but changed their name to “Led Zeppelin” as a response to one
observer who predicted their doom by stating, “They’ll go down like a lead
balloon.” Like most other early hard rock bands, Zeppelin had a solid grounding
in the electric blues of Chicago,
especially where Hubert Sumlin, Otis Rush and Howlin’ Wolf were concerned.
The band’s debut album, “Led Zeppelin”
(1968), clearly revealed that influence as the band recorded revolutionary
takes on a number of Chess standards such as “You Shook Me,” “I Can't Quit You,”
and “How Many More Times” with over-amplified bass, guitar and drums and the banshee-like
vocals of Robert Plant. The album remains today one of the all-time classics of
hard rock.
Their next effort, the superb “Led Zeppelin
2” (1969), contained fewer covers and moved more toward a mainstream hard rock
sound with classic tracks such as “Heartbreaker,” “Whole Lotta Love,” and
“Ramble On.” Their third release, “Led Zeppelin 3” (1970), was a more eclectic
affair featuring several acoustic performances by Page and the hard-driving,
“Immigrant Song.”
The band’s next release, “Led Zeppelin 4” (1971),
would ultimately become their masterpiece due in large part to the presence of
one of the most popular rock tracks ever, “Stairway to Heaven.” In addition to
this hard rock anthem, there were other gems such as the folk-rock of “The Battle
of Evermore,” featuring a vocal duet between Plant and former Fairport
Convention lead singer, Sandy Denny. This album remains one of the best-selling
and most-praised rock albums in history.
The first Led Zeppelin album to actually
bear a proper title, “Houses of the Holy” (1973), followed next. It was yet
another outstanding offering, containing the standout tracks, “The Song Remains
the Same,” and “Over the Hills and Far Away.” The double album, “Physical
Graffiti,” was next and continued Led Zeppelin’s almost unprecedented run of
fine albums. Another diverse release, the album contained the epic track, “Kashmir.”
The very solid, “Presence,” was released in
1976, followed by the somewhat disappointing, “In Through the Out Door,” in
1979. An excellent live album of material from the Seventies, “How the West was
Won,” would appear out of the blue in 2003.
Johnny
Cash, originally from the cotton country of Kingsland, Arkansas, began his
career in music in Memphis, Tennessee as a rockabilly performer with Sam
Phillip’s legendary Sun Records label which had among the musicians on its
roster, Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins.
Cash recorded
his first single, “Cry, Cry, Cry,” in 1955, His first major hit, “I Walk the
Line,” followed in 1956. These early singles would be collected with others on
his debut album, “Johnny Cash with His Hot and Blue Guitar!” (1956). In the
late Fifties, Cash would switch to country music and record a number of classic
songs including, “Big River,” “Ring of Fire,” “Give My Love to Rose,” “A Boy
Named Sue,” “Long Black Veil,” and “I Still Miss Someone.”
In the
late Sixties, Cash recorded two live albums in prisons, “At Folsom Prison”
(1968) and “At San Quentin” (1969). The tremendous popularity of these albums
led to a successful TV variety show which was canceled after only two seasons.
Both albums have been described as two of the best live albums of music recorded
in the 20th century.
In 1971,
Cash recorded the album, “Man in Black.” The title track would later be
attached to Cash as a title of sorts. Cash’s career was in decline, however,
and the rest of the Seventies would be lean in terms of hit recordings. The
mid-Eighties saw Cash return to prominence with the outlaw country group, “The
Highwaymen,” but solo success continued to escape him. In 1986, Cash entered
The Betty Ford Clinic for addiction to painkillers.
In 1994, Cash teamed up with producer Rick Rubin, and recorded an album of
mostly cover songs, “American Recordings.” The album introduced Cash’s music to
a whole new generation of fans. Three more critically acclaimed volumes of American
Recordings would follow.
Cash had been sick with diabetes for several years, but he still managed to
record the fourth American Recordings album which was released in 2002.Cash
succumbed to diabetes the following year.
The
Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers are the two artists most responsible for the early
development of the country music industry. Before them, the folk music of the
Appalachian region of the United States was folk music played by locals for
their own amusement, and it remained a regional art form. The music was casually
referred to as just “Hillbilly Music.” The Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers
were not the first country artists to record, Charlie Poole, Ernest Stoneman,
Eck Robertson and others had made recordings before them, but Rodgers and the
Carters turned hillbilly music into pop music.
The
original Carter F
amily consisted of the sisters, guitarist Maybelle, and lead
singer Sara, and occasional back-up singer A.P., Sara’s husband. The family
hailed from Clinch Mountain, Virginia.
The
Carter Family first recorded in Bristol, Tennessee for record producer, Ralph
Peer, in 1927. They were paid 50 dollars for each song they recorded. Among
those songs were “Wandering Boy” and “Poor Orphan Child” which Victor released
as a single in the fall of 1927.
The next
year, 1928, saw the Carter Family in the Victor studios in Camden, New Jersey,
where they recorded their classics, “Keep on the Sunny Side,” “Can the Circle
be Unbroken,” “Wildwood Flower,” “River of Jordan,” and many others. They were
not paid for these recordings, but were promised royalties based on sales. By
1930, the Carter Family had sold over 300, 000 records in the United States.
Not only
are these recordings historically significant, they are aesthetically pleasing,
too. The Carters were a great string band that displayed technical brilliance
and perfectly sung harmonies. Mother Maybelle was a brilliant guitarist who
invented a guitar picking technique that was adopted by scads of country
guitarists in subsequent years.
The Carter Family is one of the most important artists of the 20th century, and
they must be heard by anyone who wishes to understand the development of
American popular music. The best compilations of the Carter Family’s classic sides
include the following releases: The Original and Great Carter Family” (1962),
“In the Shadow of Clinch Mountain” (2000), “Wildwood Flower” (2000), and
“1927-1934” (2002).
In 1968,
Gram Parsons and Chris Hillman were members of the Byrds and with their band
had recorded the classic album, “Sweetheart of the Rodeo,” the first official
“country-rock” album. Parsons and Hillman left the Byrds shortly after and with
Chris Ethridge, a bassist, and “Sneaky” Pete Kleinow, a steel guitar player,
formed the Flying Burrito Brothers, the band that would spread the gospel of
this new genre.
The band
would produce a brilliant debut album, a decent sophomore album and then
Parsons would be gone to pursue a solo career leaving Hillman to continue the
band without him.
In 1969,
that brilliant debut, “The Gilded Palace of Sin,” was released. The album was a
soulful synthesis of rock and country featuring aching vocal harmonies and
atmospheric pedal steel work by Pete Kleinow. The album contained the
unforgettable tracks “Christine’s Tune,” “Sin City,” “My Uncle,” and an utterly
original take on the soul classic, “Dark End of The Street.”
The next
year, 1970, saw the release of the follow-up, “Burrito Deluxe,” a solid
offering with standout tracks, “Wild Horses,” “God’s Own Singer,” and “Older
Guys.” In 1971, the Burrito Brothers, minus Parsons, released a fine album,
“The Flying Burrito Brothers” featuring a fine version of “White Line Fever”.
The band
continued to release albums throughout the Seventies with Hillman as the sole
original member, but nothing they did even came close to their great debut.
Bill
Monroe is among the most important figures in the history of country music, and
it was Monroe who almost single-handedly invented bluegrass music. He is known
as the “Father of Bluegrass,” and the music bears the nickname of his home
state, Kentucky, the “BluegrassState.”
Monroe was born in Rosine, Kentucky,
in 1913.
Bill Monroe
was one of the finest mandolin players in country music, and it was his mastery
of that instrument that has made the mandolin a mandatory part of every
bluegrass band. Monroe’s
love of the blues and gospel music and his high-pitched singing became signature
elements of the bluegrass genre and would later become a requirement of the
genre.
Bill
Monroe and his long time backing band, the “Bluegrass Boys,” recorded songs
that are now bluegrass and country music standards such as “New Mule Skinner
Blues,” “Heavy Traffic Ahead,” “Uncle Pen,” “In the Pines,” “Working on a
Building,” and “I Saw the Light.”
Monroe wrote and was the first to record the
classic song, “Blue Moon of Kentucky,” which would later become one of Elvis
Presley’s first hits with Sun records during the emergence of rock and roll. In
recognition of his influence on early rockers, Monroe was inducted into the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame in 1997.
Monroe died in Springfield,
Kentucky in 1996.
Monroe’s
best recordings include the albums, “Knee Deep in Bluegrass” (1958), “Bean
Blossom” (1973), “The Essential Bill Monroe and his Bluegrass Boys 1945-1949”
(1992), and “The Music of Bill Monroe from 1936 to 1994” (1994).
The Rolling Stones are, save the Beatles,
the most famous rock band of all time. The Stones emerged from London around
the same time that the Beatles were breaking out from their hometown,
Liverpool. While the Beatles have long ago parted, The Rolling Stones are still a
functioning rock band, although with its members now in their seventies, the
band is now only occasionally productive.
The Stones current lineup consists of Mick
Jagger on lead vocals; Keith Richards on guitar; Charlie Watts on drums; and
Ron Wood on guitar. All the current members except Wood have been with the band
from the beginning, and the band has seen limited personnel changes despite its
long run of 50 years.
The Stones started out in the early Sixties
as one of the finest white blues bands of the day, led at that time, by the
late blues guitarist, Brian Jones. In the band’s earliest incarnation, they
were a blues and R&B band, and Jones was the driving force and resident
blues expert. The band’s name came from the Muddy Waters song, “Rollin’ Stone.”
The band played their first gig at London’s Marquee Club before landing a
regular gig at the Crawdaddy Club. Former Beatles publicist, Andrew Loog Oldham
became the Stones manager around this time.
Oldham’s first act was to secure a
lucrative recording deal for his new band. Decca Records, which was still
reeling from their failure to sign the Beatles, offered Oldham a sweet deal for
the Stones. Oldham, then began to publicize the Stones as the anti-Beatles, a
band of louts who were the polar opposite of the clean and decent Beatles. In
spring 1963, Decca released the first Stones’ single, a cover of Chuck Berry’s,
“Come On.”
The Stones recorded their debut album, “The
Rolling Stones,” in 1964. The album only contained one song written by Jagger
and Richards, with the rest of the songs being blues cover songs. Oldham
encouraged Jagger and Richards to work on their songwriting, as he believed
that the band would have limited appeal if it continued to just perform songs
by “middle-aged blacks.” Two more albums relying heavily on covers of R&B
and blues, “The Rolling Stones Number 2” and “The Rolling Stones Now,” were
released in 1965. The songwriting team of Jagger and Richards were beginning to
produce results with their first self-written hit, “Heart of Stone,” appearing
in 1964.
The Stones first album with a significant
amount of original material, “Out of Our Heads,” was released in 1965. This
album contained the Stones first big international hit single, “Satisfaction,” and
the single turned the band into bona-fide pop stars. The album contained
several other excellent tracks such as, “Play with Fire” and “The Last Time.”
The Stones would continue to improve on
their next release, “Aftermath” (1966), an album of mostly original songs that
includes the early classic songs, “Mother’s Little Helper,” “Lady Jane,” and
“Under My Thumb.” The latter track riled feminists and helped to solidify the
band’s “bad boy” image.
In early 1967, the band’s next album,
“Between the Buttons,” was released. This album saw the band moving away from
the blues and R&B they had long focused on, and further into the realm of
rock and the psychedelia that was so pervasive at the time. Later in 1967, the
band would dive headlong into psychedelia with “Their Satanic Majesties Request,”
a full-blown psychedelic freak out which was panned by many critics, but is
still an interesting offering with the excellent tracks, “She’s A Rainbow” and
“2000 Light Years from Home.”
Between 1968 and 1972, the band would enjoy
a golden period that would see the band record an outstanding string of albums
which are all now considered among the very best albums of 20th
century popular music.
The first, “Beggar’s Banquet,” appeared in
1968, and featured some of the best rock and blues tracks ever recorded by a
rock band. “Sympathy for the Devil” is the most famous track on the album,
followed closely by ”Street Fighting Man.” The blues chops of the band,
especially in the case of Brian Jones, are on full display on tracks such as
“No Expectations” which features fine slide blues guitar by Jones. “Prodigal
Son” is a fine country blues cover. Brian Jones would die tragically from
drowning in his swimming pool shortly after the release of the album.
In 1969, “Let it Bleed” appeared, and like
its predecessor, it contained excellent tracks of rock and blues. Several of
the band’s most famous songs are found here such as, “You Can’t Always Get What
You Want,” “Gimme Shelter,” and the title track. The cover of Robert Johnson’s
“Love in Vain” is one of the highlights of the band’s recording career.
After a two-year hiatus from the studio,
during which time the excellent live album, “Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out” (1970)
appeared, another classic album, “Sticky Fingers” (1971), was released. The
album was the hardest rocking Stones album yet, and featured new guitarist,
Mick Taylor, who was brought in to replace the deceased Brian Jones. Taylor’s
presence on the album gave the band a fuller rock sound that was exploited on
the numbers, “Bitch,” “Can’t You Hear Me knocking,” and “Brown Sugar.” A fine
country-rock moment can be heard with “Wild Horses,” a song that Keith Richards
wrote with Gram Parsons of the Flying Burrito Brothers.
In 1972, the comprehensive and outstanding
double album, “Exile on Main Street,” was released, and it is considered by
many as the band’s definitive work. A slew of blues, R&B, and even gospel
tunes populate the album along side rock songs such as the hits, “Happy” and
“Tumbling Dice.”
The Stones’ work started to slide in the mid-Seventies,
with the band recording several albums which were several notches below the
superb work of the past. Keith Richard’s drug use would become an issue,
especially following his arrest at a Toronto hotel. It was not until 1978 that
the band would finally make an album worthy of their reputation. That album was
“Some Girls” (1978), featuring the stellar tracks, “Shattered” and “Beast of
Burdon.”
The band’s work from the Eighties to
present has been spotty, but there have always been fine moments such as the
album releases, “Tattoo You” (1981), “Stripped” (1995), “The Rolling Stones
Rock and Roll Circus” (1996), and “Shine a Light” (2008).
The band is still a touring unit and they
have ventured into new territory, playing concerts in Shanghai, China, in 2009.