zaterdag 15 januari 2011
Alan Lomax - Deep River Of Song: Mississippi: The Blues Lineage
vrijdag 14 januari 2011
Alan Lomax - Deep River Of Song: Black Appalachia: String Bands, Songsters and Hoedowns
Neville Marcano - The Growling Tiger of Calypso
donderdag 13 januari 2011
Alan Lomax - Italian Treasury: Sicily
Alan Lomax - Alabama Sacred Harp Singers: Southern Journey, Vol. 10: And Glory Shone Around
woensdag 12 januari 2011
Alan Lomax - Cajun & Creole Music 1934/1937
2. Les Clefs de la Prison
3. J'ai Vu Lucille
4. Un Matin, J'Etais Sur Ma Galerie
5. Je M'ai Fait Une Maitresse
6. La Belle et le Capitaine
7. Une Fille de Quatorze Ans
8. Mademoiselle Emelie
9. Tout un Beau Soir en me Promenant
10. Au Pont de L'anse
11. Dans Mon Chemin Rencontre
12. Cajun Waltz
13. Creole Blues
14. Cajun Waltz
15. Cajun Waltz
16. Cajun Two-Step
17. Viens Donc T'assir Sur la Croix de ma Tombe
18. Joe Feraille
19. Un te pas Gain de L'air
20. Catin, Prie Donc pour ton Negre
21. Bye-bye, Bonsoir, mes Parents
22. Tous les Samedis
Alan Lomax - Negro Prison Blues & Songs
Various Artists - Goodbye, Babylon
"This fantastic box of holy ruckus is the greatest anthology of antique Southern sacred song and oratory ever assembled. Packaged like a pioneer-family heirloom -- in a cedar case with a nineteenth-century etching of the Tower of Babel on the lid -- Goodbye, Babylon is six CDs of blues hymns, hillbilly hosannas, choral thunder and hellfire sermons from the 78-rpm era. Some of the most important figures in American music testify here...
But much of this suffering and faith is the poetic invention of lesser-known men and women, white and black, who intimately knew heavy labor and poverty. On Disc One, bluesman Blind Lemon Jefferson and J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers, a white string band from North Carolina, both sing of life after death with the heated urgency of men for whom life on earth held few rewards. In 1930's "Memphis Flu," Elder Curry and his Mississippi congregation turn local news -- a deadly outbreak of influenza -- into a galloping lesson on the democracy of God's wrath...
Goodbye, Babylon also disproves the old rock & roll maxim that the devil has the best tunes: God owned many of them first. In "Down on Me," Eddie Head and His Family provide a sanctified 1930 blueprint for Janis Joplin's '67 version; the female street singers Two Gospel Keys fire up the godliness in "You've Got to Move," later covered with more devilish flair by the Rolling Stones. And the Rev. J.M. Gates puts a grim spin on Christmas in his 1926 sermon "Death May Be Your Santa Claus," which became the title of a Mott the Hoople song. God truly works in mysterious ways." — David Fricke, Rolling Stone
(from Dust To Digital)
Alan Lomax - Sounds of The South vol. 4: American Folk Songs For Children
1. JOHNSON'S OLD GRAY MULE
Alan Lomax - Sounds of The South vol. 3: Negro Church Music & White Spirituals
1. DEATH HAVE MERCY
Alan Lomax - Sounds of The South vol. 2: Roots Of The Blues & The Blues Roll On
Alan Lomax - Sounds of The South vol. 1: Blue Ridge Mountain Music
1. THE BANKS OF THE ARKANSAS/WAVE THE OCEAN