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various: harry smith's anthology of american folk music vol.2 - social music
  • various

  • harry smith's anthology of american folk music vol.2 - social music (2 LP)

  • sku: DOY626LP
  • Condition: Brand New Back Order
  • 17.18
  • $18.04
  • You can only place this item in your reserve list.

Information

  • Format: LP
  • Label: Vinyl Lovers
  • Genre: Folk

140 gram red vinyl 2LP + insert "

The importance of Harry Smith's work can not be overstated. Not only did he single-handedly save much of American folk music from extinction, but when he handed his record collection over to Smithsonian folkways in 1952, he opened the floodgates for the American folk revival of the following decade. Not since John and Alan Lomax had anyone paid so much attention to saving the American folk song from extinction, but unlike the Lomaxes, Smith was not a government worker armed with a tape recorder, he was just a guy from Portland, Oregon armed with a love of music and an insatiable curiosity. So, when the U.S. Armed Forces began melting down old records to be used as shellac during WWII, Smith kicked into high gear, buying up as many old 78s from the '20s and '30s as he could find. Much of the music found here then comes from a time before television--arm-in-arm with rock & roll--began beaming its über-culture into every household in America, erasing much of what had grown up locally. Prior to WWII, America was in many ways no more than a patchwork of territories, with distinct local cultures and musical traditions reaching both far into the immigrant past of each area's inhabitants, but also into a future firmly rooted in the newness and adventure of life on this new continent. And the “social music” that grew up in this time period was both “social” in the sense of “social gathering” (barn dances, religious gatherings, etc.), but also in the sense of “social issues” (labor rights, migration, money troubles, etc.). Their music was, therefore, a reflection of their lives, serving both as respite from their troubles (these were desperate times: the dust bowl, the depression, tenement housing, sweat shops, etc., were all part of the these people's everyday lives), but also as a vehicle for their discontent."

"

Track listing - Side A: 1. SAIL AWAY LADY · Uncle Bunt Stephens 2. THE WILD WAGONER · Jilson Setters 3. WAKE UP JACOB · Prince Albert Hunt’s Texas Ramblers 4. LA DANSEUSE · Delma Lachney and Blind Uncle Gaspard 5. GEORGIA STOMP · Andrew & Jim Baxter 6. BRILLIANCY MEDLEY · Eck Robertson 7. INDIAN WAR WHOOP · Hoyt Ming and His Pep-Steppers (3:13) Side B: 1. OLD COUNTRY STOMP · Henry Thomas 2. OLD DOG BLUE · Jim Jackson 3. SAUT CRAPAUD · Columbus Fruge 4. ACADIAN ONE-STEP · Joseph Falcon 5. HOME SWEET HOME · The Breaux Freres 6. NEWPORT BLUES · The Cincinnati Jug Band 7. MOONSHINER'S DANCE PT.1 · Frank Cloutier and the Victoria Cafe Orchestra Side C: 1. MUST BE BORN AGAIN · Rev. J.M. Gates 2. OH DEATH WHERE IS THY STING · Rev. J.M. Gates 3. ROCKY ROAD · Alabama Sacred Harp Singers 4. PRESENT JOYS · Alabama Sacred Harp Singers 5. THIS SONG OF LOVE · The Middle Georgia Singing Convention No. 1 6. JUDGEMENT · Sister Mary Nelson 7. HE GOT BETTER THINGS FOR YOU · Memphis Sanctified Singers 8. SINCE I LAID MY BURDEN DOWN · The Elders McIntorsh & Edwards’ Sanctified Singers Side D"": 1. JOHN THE BAPTIST · Rev. Moses Mason 2. DRY BONES · Bascom Lamar Lunsford 3. JOHN THE REVELATOR · Blind Willie Johnson 4. LITTLE MOSES · The Carter Family 5. SHINE ON ME · Ernest Phipps & His Holiness Singers 6. FIFTY MILES OF ELBOW ROOM · Rev. F.W. McGee 7. I’'M IN THE BATTLEFIELD FOR MY LORD · Rev. D.C. Rice & His Sanctified Congregation" ""