music clip of the day

jazz/blues/rock/classical/gospel/more

Category: country

Friday, 4/6/12

Happy (75th) Birthday, Merle!

Merle Haggard, live

“Lonesome Fugitive,” Buck Owens Ranch Show, 1966

***

“Working Man Blues,” Austin City Limits, 1978

***

“Today I Started Loving You Again,” with Tammy Wynette, England (Wemberly), 1988

Thursday, 4/5/12

passings

Earl Scruggs, banjo player, January 6, 1924-March 28, 2012

With Doc Watson (vocals, guitar) and their sons (Merle Watson, Randy & Steve Scruggs), live, 1971, Deep Gap, North Carolina (Doc’s home)

Sunday, 9/18/11

 passings

Wade Mainer, singer, banjo player, April 21, 1907-September 12, 2011

“I’ll Be a Friend to Jesus” (1936)

Vodpod videos no longer available.

*****

Singing, playing, talking (c. 2004)

Part 1

Vodpod videos no longer available.

***

Part 2

Vodpod videos no longer available.

***

Part 3

Vodpod videos no longer available.

*****

lagniappe

What we was playin’ in the ’30s was true country music—no electric instruments, no copyrights. Something’d happen and someone’d write a song about it—nobody owned it, nobody’d know who wrote it. The music just told a story.

Wade Mainer

Sunday, 5/15/11

White folks got soul, too.

Brother Claude Ely, singer, songwriter, preacher
July 22, 1922-May 7, 1978

Ain’t No Grave: The Life and Legacy of Brother Claude Ely
(Dust-to-Digital 2011)

Vodpod videos no longer available.

***

“There Ain’t No Grave Gonna Hold My Body Down”
(King 1954 [recorded 1953])

Vodpod videos no longer available.

***

“Cryin’ Holy Unto the Lord”
(recorded 1953)

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Friday, 4/29/11

When you’re young you can’t imagine that the things that make your life sing won’t always be there. Then you get older. And they aren’t.

Hound Dog Taylor & The Houserockers (Brewer Phillips, guitar; Ted Harvey, drums), “Sadie,” live, Ann Arbor Blues Festival, 1973

More? Here.

**********

langiappe

mail

This arrived yesterday, in response to an email letting her know that she was featured here (with Hazel Dickens):

Thanks for letting me know about this.  We said goodbye to Hazel yesterday and singing was never more difficult.  She was my musical guide and my beloved friend.  Smart, funny, complicated, always real.   She’ll live in my music, and my life, forever.  “Fly away, Little Pretty Bird.”

Ginny

***

Hazel Dickens, “Pretty Bird,” 1967

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Thursday, 4/28/11

Yesterday we heard music of “nostalgia” and “homesickness,” of “loneliness” and “separation,” from Mali. Today it comes from West Virginia.

Hazel Dickens, singer, songwriter
June 1, 1925-April 22, 2011

Live, with Ginny Hawker, vocals, and Tracy Schwartz, fiddle

“West Virginia My Home” (H. Dickens), Kentucky (Morehead State University), 2008

Vodpod videos no longer available.

***

I Love To Sing The Old Songs” (H. Dickens), 2008

Vodpod videos no longer available.

**********

lagniappe

Hazel Dickens, a clarion-voiced advocate for coal miners and working people and a pioneer among women in bluegrass music, died on Friday in Washington. She was 75.

The cause was complications of pneumonia, said Ken Irwin, her longtime friend and the founder of Rounder Records, her label for more than four decades.

Ms. Dickens’s initial impact came as a member of Hazel and Alice, a vocal and instrumental duo with Alice Gerrard, a classically trained singer with a passion for the American vernacular music on which Ms. Dickens was raised. Featuring Ms. Dickens on upright bass and Ms. Gerrard on acoustic guitar, Hazel and Alice toured widely on the folk and bluegrass circuits during the 1960s and ’70s, captivating audiences with their bold, forceful harmonies and their empathetic approach to songs of struggle and heartbreak.

***

The influence of the staunchly traditional duo extended beyond bluegrass to commercial country music. Hazel and Alice’s arrangement of the Carter Family’s “Hello Stranger” became the blueprint for Emmylou Harris’s version of the song, and their adaption of “The Sweetest Gift (A Mother’s Smile)” inspired Naomi Judd, then a single mother in rural Kentucky, to start singing with her daughter Wynonna.

***

Hazel Jane Dickens was born June 1, 1935, in Mercer County, W.Va. One of 11 children, she grew up in a family whose survival depended on the coal industry. Her father, a Primitive Baptist preacher and a forceful singer, hauled timber to feed the household. Her brothers were miners and one of her sisters cleaned house for a supervisor at the mines. The music they sang in church and heard on the radio, particularly the music of the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, offered one of their few diversions.

She moved to Baltimore in the early 1950s and worked in factories there. City living was hardly more prosperous than the life she’d known in the coal fields of Mercer County, but it did afford her exposure to the larger social and political world. She met and started playing music with the singer and folklorist Mike Seeger, who eventually introduced her to Ms. Gerrard.

***

A reluctant feminist role model, Ms. Dickens said she was originally scared to write about issues like sexism and the oppression of women.

“I can remember the first time I sang ‘Don’t Put Her Down, You Helped Put Here There,’ ” she said in her 1999 No Depression interview. “I was at a party standing in the middle of all these men. It was here in Washington. Bob Siggins was playing banjo, and when I got done, everyone just looked at each other, and Bob said, ‘That’s a nice song, but I won’t be able to sing it.’ And I said, ‘Of course you can.’ ”

“We were writing about our own experience,” she explained. “They were things we needed to say.”

—Bill Frisksics-Warren, New York Times, 4/23/11


Sunday, 4/17/11

“Cold, Cold Heart”

“I Can’t Help It (If I’m Still In Love With You)”

“I Saw The Light”

Who else, when it comes to syllables, does so much with so little?

Hank Williams (with others), “I Saw The Light”
TV broadcast (The Kate Smith Evening Hour), 3/26/52

Vodpod videos no longer available.

**********

lagniappe

reading table

George Crosby remembered many things as he died, but in an order he could not control. To look at his life, to take the stock he always imagined a man would at his end, was to witness a shifting mass, the tiles of a mosaic spinning, swirling, reportraying, always in recognizable swaths of colors, familiar elements, molecular units, intimate currents, but also independent now of his will, showing him a different self every time he tried to make an assessment.

—Paul Harding, Tinkers (2009)

Friday, 3/25/11

Western Swing Festival

Beginning on Friday, March 25th at 8:00 a.m. . . . [we] will honor the legacy of Western Swing with 64 hours of continuous programming, running until midnight on Sunday, March 27th (this will preempt all regularly scheduled programming). We will explore the genre’s entire history, from its roots in the 1920s and 1930s to bands still performing today. The festival will also include live performances and interviews with several Western Swing experts. Grab your ten-gallon hat, lace up those dancin’ boots, and come swing with us!

WKCR-FM (broadcasting from Columbia University)

Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys

“I Hear Ya Talkin'”

Vodpod videos no longer available.

***

“San Antonio Rose”

Vodpod videos no longer available.

***

“Take Me Back To Tulsa”

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Thursday, 1/27/11

two takes

Charlie Louvin, July 7, 1927-January 26, 2011

“If I Could Only Win Your Love” (Ira & Charlie Louvin)

Emmylou Harris & Charlie Louvin, live (TV broadcast), mid-80s

Vodpod videos no longer available.

***

Louvin Brothers, 1958

Vodpod videos no longer available.

**********

lagniappe

He really changed the world of music, Charlie did. I know that, for me, hearing the Louvin Brothers brought me that fierce love of harmony.

—Emmylou Harris

*****

Louvin Brothers, “I Don’t Believe You’ve Met My Baby,” live (TV broadcast),
c. 1955

Vodpod videos no longer available.

*****

I can remember my brother and I singing together when I was 5 and he was 8 years old. He already knew how, and he was teaching me.

***

I’m the biggest harmony lover in the world. If a song’s worth singing you ought to put harmony on it.

***

Show business is all I really know how to do. I would like for that to be the last thing I do.

Charlie Louvin

Thursday, 12/30/10

When people hear I’m a criminal defense lawyer, they often ask: “How come there aren’t more songs about serial killers?”

Eddie Noack, “Psycho,” 1968

Vodpod videos no longer available.

**********

lagniappe

mail

In response to yesterday’s post, a reader writes:

Ever wonder what it would be like if Neil Young circa 1971 Heart of Gold and Bruce Springsteen circa his 1975 Time magazine cover performed “Whip My Hair”?

Here’s your answer.

Vodpod videos no longer available.