- Format: CD
- Label: Revola
- Genre: Rock / Pop
Niles was nontraditional, but he sang traditional songs. A Mephistophelean character out of Carolina, he hammered away at some
harplike instrument and sang in a bone chilling soprano voice. Niles was eerie and illogical, terrifically intense and gave you
goosebumps."
-- BOB DYLAN from CHRONICLES
Doubtless the secret star of Martin Scorcese's acclaimed TV documentaries on Bob Dylan was the amazing John Jacob Niles, one of
those early 20th Century figures that, well, really just don't happen anymore.... Musicologist, collector, songwriter, balladeer, John
Jacob Niles was born in Louisville, Kentucky in 1892 into a mysterious, spooky world of hills and hollers where the eeriest of folk
songs were still alive, and brought their essential strangeness, unchanged yet subtly garbled since the mountaineers arrived from
Britain, to the modern world and ultimately to the folk revival of the early 1960s, influencing generations of folk singers.
Niles was singing the likes of "Barbary Ellen," at children's singing contests as early as 1901, and began collecting Appalachian folk
songs and composing music in earnest as a teenage salesman for Burroughs Adding Machines. After serving in the new U.S. Air
Force in World War I, the government financed Niles's study of music at the Universite de Lyon and the Schola Cantorum in Paris,
where he met Gertrude Stein. In the 1920s, John Jacob Niles published his first song collections, became master of ceremonies at
the Silver Slipper nightclub New York City, and in 1933, toured the U.S. and Europe with Marion Kerby to critical acclaim. That same
year, he acted as assistant and guide on Doris Ullman's celebrated photo expeditions into the fading mountain communities of his
home region, collecting music as he went. Niles was known for his otherworldly singing and dulcimer playing (he made his own lutes
and Appalachian dulcimers) and specialized in the songs of the Appalachian Mountain region. His ballad collections frequently
included material that he composed, such as "I Wonder As I Wander" and "Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair," or arranged, as
well as ballads transcribed directly from oral sources. and continued performing and recording his uniquely powerful, unsettling
approach to folk songs into the 1970s. Niles died at his home at Boothill Farm, near Lexington, Kentucky on March 1, 1980.
This is a first time CD collection of his amazing, slightly disturbing work....prepare to be astonished!
- First time ever on CD for this amazing, influential performer.
- Niles was featured in the first of Martin Scorsese's Bob Dylan TV documentaries, his odd appearance and scary performance style
drawing attention from critics as well as contemporary performers.
- Stunningly remastered in classic RevOla style....
- Sumptuously packaged with notes by Guardian music critic David Pescheck
- A must for all those who saw the documentary and wondered "what is THAT!?!?".....fans of Wyrd folk....folklorists, modern dancers,
cat burglars, er....cats.....anyone who wants to be amazed by JOHN JACOB NILES!
TRACK LISTING
1/ LOVE HENRY AKA YOUNG BUNTING
2/ OUR GOODMAN AKA OLD CUCKOLD
3/ THE MAID FREED FROM THE GALLOWS
4/ EDWARD
5/ JIMMY RANDAL
6/ THE BALLAS OF BARBARY ELLEN
7/ BONNIE FARDAY AKA BABYLON
8/ THE CHERRY TREE
9/ THE GYPSY LADDIE
10/ MARY HAMILTON