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Various Artists - Mountain Music Of Kentucky [2-CD Set]

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Mountain Music Of Kentucky [2-CD Set]
Music Price: $24.98
As of Jan 4 7:50 EST (details)

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Artist(s)Various Artists
StudioSmithsonian Folkways
Release DateMarch 19, 1996
UPC Code093074007723
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About Various Artists - Mountain Music Of Kentucky [2-CD Set]

Originally issued as a single LP in 1960, Mountain Music of Kentucky was praised as "the greatest Kentucky record ever issed and one of the greatest records in the entire literature of American folk song" (San Francisco Chronicle 1960). This much expanded compilation features some of the outstanding traditional musicians of the twentieth century with two full hours of performances (60 minutes previously unreleased), new notes, and many photographs by John Cohen. One of the greatest records in the entire literature of American folk song. -San Francisco Chronicle Album Description

Tracks

Disc 1
  1. Old Age Pension Blues
  2. Hook and Line
  3. John Henry
  4. Pretty Polly
  5. Old Reuben -
  6. Spring of '65
  7. Sally in the Garden
  8. Barbara Allen
  9. When We Shall Meet
  10. Amazing Grace - Newton, John
  11. Across the Rocky Mountain - Holcomb, Roscoe
  12. Graveyard Blues
  13. Cripple Creek
  14. True Love
  15. Sally in the Garden
  16. Lost Indian
  17. Hollow Poplar
  18. Death of the Blue Eagle - Davis, George
  19. Little Birdie
  20. Lost Indian
  21. Jaw Bone
  22. Bunker's Hill
  23. Cacklin' Hen
  24. Julie Ann
  25. Born in Old Kentucky
  26. Buck Creek Girls
  27. Sweet Willie
  28. Cluck Old Hen
  29. Coney Island - Hutchison, Frank
  30. Baby Let Your Hair Roll Down
  31. Wayfaring Stranger
Disc 2
  1. Stingy Woman - Holcomb, Roscoe
  2. East Virginia Blues
  3. Single Girl
  4. Black Eyed Susie
  5. Foreign Lander
  6. Kitty Alone
  7. Young and Tender Ladies
  8. Charlie's Neat
  9. Cotton-Eyed Joe
  10. Little Sunshine
  11. Wild Bill Jones
  12. Great Speckled Bird - Carter, Roy
  13. Clap and Shout
  14. Cry from the Cross - Masters, Johnnie
  15. Clap and Shout and Shriek
  16. The Wagoner's Lad
  17. The Absentee
  18. Marthis Campbell
  19. Sally Goodin'
  20. Fiddler a Dram
  21. Fox Chase
  22. Old Joe Clark
  23. Fire on the Mountain
  24. Ways of the World
  25. Inch Along
  26. Skip to My Lou
  27. St. Louis Blues - Handy, W.C.
  28. Pretty Polly
  29. Hills of Mexico -
  30. Fox Chase
  31. Ruby
  32. No Letter in the Mail - Gregory, Byron
  33. Fair Miss in the Garden
  34. John Henry
  35. Rocky Island
  36. The Coo Coo -

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User Reviews

Average user review: 5.0 (6 reviews)

rating: 5 Quotechristmas giftQuote
bought this cd for my dad for christmas and he said it reminded him of when he was a kid in kentucky. i would recomend this for anyone looking for this kind of old time mountain music January 18, 2007

rating: 5 QuoteAbsolutely essentialQuote
This is a marvelous collection. Along with "High Atmosphere", I consider it essential to orient you to the way the music really sounded. Most people come to Old Time music from some place else...bluegrass, country, or one of the great modern oddities like Old Crow Medicine Show or The Bad Livers. Perhaps you got the bug from "Oh Brother Where Art Thou". Well, you're on the right path with this very big 2 CD collection that not only has achingly beautiful a'capella balads, red hot fiddling, and some really phenomenal banjo work, but also haunting church shape note singing. Get "High Atmosphere" as well, and once you've absorbed them, branch out from there. October 6, 2004

rating: 5 QuoteOLD TIME MUSICQuote
GREAT CD. THE CD CASE IS KIND OF DUMB, BECAUSE IT LIST THE ARTISTS AND TRACK NO. ON WHICH THEY PERFORM, INSTEAD OF THE ARTIST AND THEN THE SONG. THE SONGS ARE WRITTEN ON THE CD LABEL THOUGH. STILL A GREAT CD. VINTAGE SONGS, VINTAGE STYLE April 20, 2003

rating: 4 QuoteThe hills were alive!Quote
Having just reviewed another of John Cohen's excellent collections (High Atmosphere) yesterday, this seemed like a natural choice for today. This was recorded in 1959.

Obviously the biggest "star" here is Roscoe Holcomb. He is the one person on this 2-disc set who is the most well-known to the largest number of people, but this is by no means a one-man collection. In fact, I don't even consider Roscoe to be the best musician present here. For the life of me I still cannot figure out why Bill Cornett's name isn't thrown around as "one of the greats". His voice and banjo playing, particularly on Pretty Polly, Old Reuben, Born In Kentucky, Sweet Willie, etc... just knock me out. Born In Kentucky being a variant of the more well-known tune, Dark Holler.

J.D. Cornett has a fine solo-vocal version of Spring of '65, and you do indeed get some fine stuff from Roscoe here in case he is your main focus. From bits of Jack-A-Roe to one of his "I made it myself" tunes where he then lifts an entire lyric from a Blind Lemon Jefferson tune, though neither he nor the liner-notes make mention of this. Plus, I will take Roscoe's Wayfaring Stranger over Bill Monroe's any day of the week. All in all, it's good stuff!

Moving on, I personally am not too much for the sets of church tunes, aside from Clap & Shout on disc two. However, there are alot of jewels in the sand of disc two. The highlights of disc two, for me, come in the form of Granville Bowlin's segment, Mrs. Sams solo-vocal Wagoners Lad, James Crase's various fiddle tunes, and Lee Sexton's solo banjo St. Louis Blues and his Pretty Polly that is rather closely related to Bill Cornett's but not as powerful. I just love Mrs. Sams' voice. Everyone has their own aesthetic of what is good and what isn't, and for me, Mrs. Sams is just exactly what a wise old female mountain singer should sound like.

There is such a richness and rugged individuality to all these performances that it just breaks your heart to know that for the most part, these traditions are gone. At least we were lucky enough to have someone like John Cohen roaming the hills and making these priceless recordings for all of us. March 16, 2003

rating: 5 QuoteThis is excellentQuote
This CD set takes you into a world of simple but hard labor, soul crushing poverty and soul liberating music. Its historically and musically important. A must for banjo players who have an interest in the evolution of how the instrument is played. May 10, 2002

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