Rolling Country 2006 Thread

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Christgau frowns on Carter's Everythings Gonna Be All Right. I remember liking that album, more than Shave My Legs I think--it's ambitious and wiley and all over the pop map.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 19:53 (eighteen years ago) link

>I didn't get the vinyl. Can I have yours?<

Hell no, it is beeyootiful!

xhuxk, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 19:54 (eighteen years ago) link

I got no Womack vinyl and it sure sounded trad to me. Stringy and regret-y and more slow than fast. If it's not trad, then what is?

wernert, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:13 (eighteen years ago) link

It's trad-pop, I thought.

Huk-L (Huk-L), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:15 (eighteen years ago) link

Tom Breihan on "Boondocks."

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:23 (eighteen years ago) link

When wasn't she slow and regrety? I guess that's what I don't get. It's not like Lee Ann was ever a total pop queen before, was she? I kind of figured she had a slightly neotrad bent since the beginning. Or maybe people thought when she crossed over to AC, that was lost? (I'm not arguing; just trying to figure out where the idea came from.)

It's r&b, a lot of it. (But yeah, sure, an old r&b, maybe.) (See also the 100 times I've compared the big hit to "Little Green Apples.") (Which anyway wasn't the kind of country that most neo-trad types embraced, was it? Since when is '70s pop-country considered trad?)

xhuxk, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:33 (eighteen years ago) link

(Though "I'll Think of a Reason Later" was neither slow nor regretty, I guess. But I don't think that was very typical of her, even then.)

xhuxk, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:35 (eighteen years ago) link

Maybe it is retro-neuvo (or, what do they call people like Anthony Hamilton, neo-soul or something? Is there a genre name I'm forgetting?) (And yeah, that's a nostalgia move, in a way, except usually when country hits draw on '70s soul music -- which has happened a lot in the past few years: Brooks and Dunn do it, Faith Hill do it, Toby Keith does it -- people don't call it "trad.")

I am probably overstating her soul influence, but what the hell. (More likely, she's inspired by '70s c&w that was aware of r&b then.)

xhuxk, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:40 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm not arguing either, I guess I am just realizing that I am curious at the definition of traditional country. Is it is pre-countrypolitan strings and things? Acoustic? Pedal steel?

wernert, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:43 (eighteen years ago) link

I think the packaging had a big part in the traditude of the album.

Huk-L (Huk-L), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:44 (eighteen years ago) link

Speaking of '70s country, a reissue of James Talley's *Got No Bread, No Milk, No Money, But We Sure Got a Lot of Love* just came in the mail! I have never heard this before. I almost bought a cheap vinyl copy 20 years ago in Europe somewhere (true story), but passed it up, and have thought many times that may have been a mistake. So far, however, the album is duller than I would have guessed. (I thought I heard he was sort of Western Swing?) But maybe it will grow on me.

xhuxk, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:51 (eighteen years ago) link

hey xhuxk please explain
how toby keith draws on
70s soul music?

Haikunym (Haikunym), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:52 (eighteen years ago) link

Listen to "That's Not How It Is," even "Who's Your Daddy."

xhuxk, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:55 (eighteen years ago) link

hmm. there's an argument to be made there on both sides, but I don't actually own those songs and I'm listening to earth wind and fire, so i'll come back to it.

Haikunym (Haikunym), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:57 (eighteen years ago) link

I mean, I fairly often hear soul music in the ease and warmth of his phrasing; I'm not sure how else to describe it. And *Shock'n'Y'all* has plenty of funk in its rhythms, too (though again, its real root might be '70s rock that was *aware* of soul). I mean, EWF are great, but they were never the be-all and end-all of the genre (or decade).

xhuxk, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:10 (eighteen years ago) link

Womack's new record doesn't have anything remotely as swirly, huge, anthemic pop-structured as her signature song "I Hope You Dance."

Mike Ireland is a pretty trad-oriented singer/songwriter who really embraces, even obsesses over, elements of '60s-'70s country-pop, and basically approaches them as synecdoches of country tradition, especially the Sherrillian strings.

I think when you nail countrypolitan the way Lee Ann does on the new record, it's a trad move, just not a typical one.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:10 (eighteen years ago) link

hmm, there's a reissue of Talley? he's a guy whose records you can find cheap in Nashville, and Christgau wrote approvingly about him in the '70s, right? populist dust-bowl western swing, perhaps? like Asleep at the Wheel with lefty sentiments? I have only heard scattered bits of his stuff, seems like.

and gosh, soul influences all over the place in '70s and '80s country. even more recent songs like George Jones' "I'll Give You Something to Drink About" show it (I just saw this great clip from some kind of George Jones show that aired in the '90s with him doing this song) like they internalized the bass and drums from Hi Records and added some south-of-border flavor to it all. for that matter, Charlie Rich's Hi/Willie Mitchell sessions are pretty amazing, Hank Williams tunes.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:11 (eighteen years ago) link

T. Graham Brown was (and is) totally a soul singer; I wonder, if he wasn't white, whether he would have been thought of as country at all.

I'm wondering about Lee Roy Parnell, too, now that I've heard his new one (never heard him before; did he have country hits at one point?)

xhuxk, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:21 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm definitely hearing the "western" in Talley; not sure though where the "swing" is supposed to be, though (definitely not like Asleep at the Wheel had it.) Though yeah, Xgau called it a "homespun Western swing masterpiece," and gave it an A when it came out back in 1975.

xhuxk, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:26 (eighteen years ago) link

That "trad country" definition has always been subject to evoilution--and always evolved. There were sounds on 1970s mainstream Nashville records that the Womack CD alludes to--which were bringing in soul sounds in everything from mel Street to Tammy Wynette records THEN.

People seem to use "trad country" to mean pre-80s now, a "break" not far from the time, actually, you get the supposedly defining rock/Modern rock break too. Of course, the country sounds of the sixties and seventies were considered by moldy fig types either urbanized sell-outs or bland mistakes then themselves. Even as honky tonk was rejected by lovers of "tradititonal" Acuff and earlier country as too urban, too willing to talk about nasty subjects, and a sell-out when IT came along.

The Womack record largely revives pre-80s sounds. Like Garth never happened. Her music, from the first, referenced and sometimes incorporated honky tonk sounds out of Texas, and much pre-80s twang production and approach, on the ballads especially, I'd say off hand. . The album before this one was simply considered a pop step too far by a lot of people--and that they attenpted to remake LeeAnn's image at the same timemade things worse.

And of course, country music is now and always has been pop music.

This year's record (which for my money, has a very high percentage of strong songs on it), string writing) was a return to the commitment to work in her OWN tradition, essentially. I saw her with a small, tasteful band preview the whole LP live at the Ryman, and the renewed seriousness of COUNTRY intent was unmistakable--at a musical base a lot more sreious than say, Faith Hill scurrying back to get her a "Look; I didn't go Hollywood; I'm just a Mississippi Girl at Heart" shuck. (Womack later did a similar live show on cable--CMT I think.)

At her best monents, I think she's a good a country ballad singer as this generation has; but then, I think Gretchen Wilson is working her way to a strong second in that regard.


No argumento, meanhwile, that the Bobby Bare rceord is generally wonderfu--and lives in a perfect spot between his music and his son's.

(I found this board because Roy Katsen says nice things about it, BTW.And apologize for any of my notorious fast-typing web typos left uncorrected--in advance.)

Barry Mazor (B Mazor), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:29 (eighteen years ago) link

Ha, I have asked on this board why Gretchen bothers doing ballads.

Faith Hill's most soul music moment is "One" (one of my favorite country singles of the decade.) I kind of hated "Mississippi Girl" until George Smith explained it's basically boogie-rock at heart.

And by the way, welcome, Barry! You should check out that '05 thread, too (and the '04 one, and the No Depression one, and many many more.)

xhuxk, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:38 (eighteen years ago) link

Well, Gretchen surely isn't doing the balalds for the big bucks!

Barry Mazor (B Mazor), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:41 (eighteen years ago) link

Katsen

Barry gives the best typos on the planet!

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:43 (eighteen years ago) link

I have never said
that there's no soul in country,
no no no no no

Plus I did not mean
that Earth Wind and Fire was the
soul ne plus ultra

It was just the truth!
And I hear rock but no soul
in Toby Keith's voice

Gary Allan, sure,
many others. (Plus Jessi
Alexander, wow!)

Haikunym (Haikunym), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:47 (eighteen years ago) link

(I gotta stop doing this haiku shit, it makes me incomprehensible.)

Haikunym (Haikunym), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:48 (eighteen years ago) link

gretchen does ballads b/c shes damn good at it.
i dont care about the aestetic politics of the womack, but fuck does she have a gorgeous, haunting meloncholy to her voice, its just swoony

anthony, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:50 (eighteen years ago) link

I don't hear the soul or the country in Faith Hill's "One"; all I hear is a phrasing nick from Lisa-Lisa's "All Cried Out." I may have to revisit that one.

Joe McCombs, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 22:14 (eighteen years ago) link

Well, if she has proto- (or post? When was "All Cried Out?")-Latin-freestyle in her voice, that's even better!

xhuxk, Wednesday, 4 January 2006 22:20 (eighteen years ago) link

Listen to "That's Not How It Is," even "Who's Your Daddy."

When I reviewed Toby I said that that in a better world "That's Not How It Is" would get play on the Urban AC stations. The song seems to split the difference between Isaac Hayes and Robert Cray. It's more an '80s sound than a '70s (though of course Hayes goes back farther than that).

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 22:25 (eighteen years ago) link

I don't hear the soul or the country in Faith Hill's "One"

Black-gospel-based r&b-pop not unlike Whitney, Mariah, Toni (which certainly is soul-related and certainly draws on Ray Charles), but actually I hear something countrypolitan in the tone, though I can't put my finger on it, just as there's something countrypolitan in Celine Dion's tone, though whatever it is it was probably derided as one of the things that made countrypolitan "not country."

To confuse matters, I'll point out that "One" has reggaeish touches in the rhythm.

And to confuse matters more, I think that the Whitney-Mariah-Celine-Faith (though not necessarily Toni) thing draws on Streisand and Garland as well as on Charles, not in the sense that some people find Streisand and Garland camp but rather in S-G's showbiz reaching-for-the-sky moments. Welding Charles and Streisand is intriguing to me since you have Charles' deliberately rough and "sincere" melisma and Streisand's shriek-with-the-birds operatics.

This post is written in what one reviewer called "the Chuck Eddy hyphenated style."

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 22:45 (eighteen years ago) link

personally i'll take the ronettes over joan baez but to each his own

Yeah, but the Kingston Trio clobber the Tokens.

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Thursday, 5 January 2006 06:05 (eighteen years ago) link

Bobby Womack's "It's All Over Now" seems very country, while "I Can Understand It" *could* be country (I can imagine Toby, or maybe Delbert, or Shelly, or T. Graham, or Bobby) doing it that way, but so far, it still seems most at home on Nicky Siano's proto-disco comp. It's got the obsessiveness, but not quite the feel. (Ditto Separation Sunday, whose urban hicks probably avoid country, cos it's Grandeaddy's music. They probably hear it down the hall, on the radios of guards and/or orderlies, and they'll hear it some more when they get drafted to incinerate birdflu victims.)So whatever metacountry's on this Ballot,I guarantee it's got the obsessos and the feelies.And I dumped Lee Ann, and Deana too: see Comments as well, at http://thefreelancementalists.blogspot.com

don, Thursday, 5 January 2006 06:29 (eighteen years ago) link

don's ballot rulez & makez my head zpin.
and i am a freakin idiot for many reasons but tonight it's for forgetting about Dixie Chicks and Robert Randolph.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Thursday, 5 January 2006 06:41 (eighteen years ago) link

Thanks, Roy; I added some stuff after I sent it to Geoff, and I just now added a little more. The Chicks and Robert (who better be on their Rick Rubin album) debuted this song on the "Shelter From The Storm" TV benefit concert for hurricane victims, which was also where I heard live versions of Aaron Neville's covering "Louisiana 1927" (song of the year; "they're trying to wash us away" covers a whole lotta ground), and Mary J. Blige doing U2's "One." Which is also on her new album, but I haven't heard it (have y'all?), so I just listed that and Aaron's live shot in P&J, rather than Scene. Cos I figure he just wants *actual* singles of my choices, which the Chicks and Robert actually provided, so they made both ballots (and the ILM Poll as well, I think; done so many of these lately.) If I'd bent his rules, I also would have listed Terri Clark's late '94-issued Gtst. Hits, and a promo-only sampler from the Fonotone box set, which has some dynamic jug band tracks, courtesy Jolly Joe (Bussard, that is),and a great, droning, druggy, commanding "Some Summer Day Day No.2," by the Mississippi Swampers, AKA John Fahey and Mike Stewart. One of Fahey's earliest recordings. These are 78s, all made between 1956 and 1969! At least some of them are folkies at fantasy camp, fantasy clinic, even (as in clinical, not krayzee), and it's on the Direct To Dust label, who delivered unto us the Goodbye Babylon box, which I've yet to work my way through, but some of that is very good, even to me, and so is some of this (sampler, anyway).

don, Thursday, 5 January 2006 07:32 (eighteen years ago) link

Don's ballot made me think of a few things:
That George and Dolly duet was from this(last) year? I saw George Jones back in, um, October, I think, and his voice was just awful...though it sounded more like he had a cold than was actually NOT ABLE TO SING, but when he did "Blues Man" the corny A/V presentation showed the video (off-time), but GJ's lady back up singer (the same one he's had for at least 15 yrs) sang Dolly's part. It probably woulda been fine (it was towards the end of the concert, and G's voice had warmed up a lot by then) if not for the fact that we weren't constantly reminded that we could be at home, watching CMT, and hearing fit-George and Dolly singing this song.

Also, has anyone seen Tanya Tucker lately? I saw her last summer (pre-reality show) and she totally blew my mind (mind you, this was at an outdoor country festival, 2nd day--so I was drunkx2 and had only a hour earlier been charmed by Mel Tellis). She's coming back on a soft-seat/arena tour (soft-seat in my town, arena in the next, go fig) in the spring, and I'm pretty jazzed.

Huk-L (Huk-L), Thursday, 5 January 2006 14:59 (eighteen years ago) link

The James Talley reissue does after all have a swing, but it's a light swing, for the most part -- still closer to the Sons of Pioneers than the Texas Playboys, near as I can tell. But yeah, the musicians do jazz it up a little. Talley's voice is really plain-- a progenitor of alt-country, maybe? -- but with warmth, somehow, and not strained or restrained. His voice *sounds* more like Hank Williams than any alt-country guy I've ever heard; I wish I knew the words to explain why, exactly. But there's plenty of '70s folkie singer songwriter in him, too. I like him, just not sure how much yet. (My favorite song so far is a rememberance of a grocey store in Mehan, Oklahoma, when he was 5, but now the town's all boarded up.)

I was reading from this book last night, *Southwest Shuffle: Pioneers of Honky-Tonk, Western Swing, and Country Jazz* by Rich Kienzle. Horrifying chapter about Spade Cooley; I don't know if I'd ever heard the details before about *how* he killed his wife (in front of their 14 year old daughter, who he also threatened if she told anybody) -- totally gruesome, but it makes me curious to pull back out my Spade Cooley album. Which I never liked as much as, say, the Milton Brown and his Brownies or Roy Newman and his Boys or Smokey Wood albums I've got, maybe because (as Kienzle writes) Cooley's innovation was also working California "sweet" music and even classical parts into western swing's varying hillbilly/swing/bebop/blues/polka/Mex/pop
hybrid -- my guess is, that probably made Cooley less funky and frantic than these guys I like more, but I want to make sure. Jeez, though, what a creepy man. I doubt anybody in my record collection has ever done anything more evil...Anyway, what's really interested me so far in Kienzle's book was how, in the intro, he talks about how, inititally, country music in the 20s was a conscious attempt (idea from record company/radio barn dance execs) to fabricate rural nostalgia, so they at first insisted on keeping instruments that would make the music sound less "pure" (drums, horns, electric guitars) out of it, and that purity pretty much became the standard in the southeast, especially out of urban areas like Nashville and Atlanta -- that is, especially in fundamentalist puritan protestant backwaters throughout the region. But the Catholic Irish/German/ Polish populations in Cincinnati, Chicago, and St. Louis insisted on mixing up country with polkas, hence making it more danceable, and the mix (see above) was even more open-ended in Texas, Oklahoma, and on to Hollywood. So keeping country undanceable, keeping it free of unsavory ethnic influences (including black ones and "urban" ones in general) was in some ways, seemingly, a puritan, even (probably) racist impulse (though I don't think Kienzle uses that word), but also a commercial impulse since the purity was country's inentionally fabricated selling point to begin with. (I.e., purity didn't arise naturally. How this connects to Emmett Miller and Jimmie Rodgers and all the subsequent white guys singing blues in the '20s and '30s I'm not sure - was that stuff *not* considered country then? Or just not saleable? Or was it just really marginal? Or what? Rodgers was obviously a huge star, right?) Anyway, I'm wondering whether one could trace the "pure country" vs. "eclectic country" dichotomy across decades, from then til now. I've always suspected insisting on keeping dance music or pop music out of c&w was a puritan impulse, and this says it was from the start. There's a big story in between.

xhuxk, Thursday, 5 January 2006 15:32 (eighteen years ago) link

(Idea was also apparently to keep country *lyrically* pure; i.e., free of drinking and cheating and bad-man songs; Hank and subsequent Texas honky-tonkers then outlaws put an end to that. Interesting, too, how the original nostalgia theme repeats the nostalgia theme inherent in late 19th century minstrel music, too -- i.e, carry me back to dee old Virginny plantation, when times was good.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 5 January 2006 15:42 (eighteen years ago) link

A caption between a photo in the book also reminded me that I really liked George Strait's version of Bob Wills's "Big Balls in Cowtown" a few years ago. (See also, AC/DC: "Some balls are held for charity,
And some for fancy dress, But when they're held for pleasure,
They're the balls that I like best.")

xhuxk, Thursday, 5 January 2006 16:03 (eighteen years ago) link

>The James Talley reissue does after all have a swing, but it's a light swing, for the most part -- still closer to the Sons of Pioneers than the Texas Playboys, near as I can tell.<

Or maybe not. I'm hearing more of the swing every time I play this thing; it's just really subtle, is all. First song is called "W. Lee O'Daniel and the Light Crust Dough Boys," which band name is clearly a Western Swing reference in and of itself.

xhuxk, Thursday, 5 January 2006 16:06 (eighteen years ago) link

And he only sounds like Hank in a couple songs. And his voice isn't as plain as I thought. And "Calico Gypsy" swings just lovely. Etc.

xhuxk, Thursday, 5 January 2006 16:18 (eighteen years ago) link

(I.E., "Blue Eyed Ruth and My Sunday Suit" is a blatant Hank tribute, all the way up to the lonely-big-dog-howling-at-moon-moving-in high notes. I'd almost believe it was a cover version, but I guess not.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 5 January 2006 16:38 (eighteen years ago) link

Yeah, Talley can sneak up on you; see my comments on your Where Is The Love For These Albums from My "T" shelf thread (and o course see robertchristgau.com for how he could seem when first emerging, in the mid-70s, you know those was diffrent times. Hank didn't sing much about drankin' ("much less enjoying it, as I put it in my Hank Jr./Hank III Voice piece, now more quickly available at http://MyVil.blogspot.com/ ). He did sing about YOUR cheatin' heart, and the wages of that, but didn't go into gorey details, well-worked angles that became commonplace later. He was, apparently, according to Escott's bio, against having his stuff swung, explicity, although he didn't abstain from tunes that were implicitly swingy or catchy. Western Swing has long had a following here in the Southeast, but I dunno know if that was true back in its heyday, although my father, who was a clarinet player back then (in the 40s, I mean; Bob and the big band thing were never the same after WWII), liked Western Swing, but remember Swing was *the* thing for quite a while, and Bob was making that Yankee urban (and yes, Jewish Benny Goodman, Black Many Others) more palatable to some, and more available to all, since not too much live, first rate entertainment out in those wide open spaces, which was a good reason for working the west so much. More palatble, and also "taking it back," as some prob saw it, re those who thought of as local music (from Swiss Alp, TX, etc). So, reactionary enough for some as it was progressive for others (sound familiar?) And Eric Lott's Love And Theft describes how minstrelsy could involve some uppity, manic humor and overall fascination with the (warped, funhouse view of) the source material: not progressive, but a fascination that may have some how made less (or more complicatedly) racist musical tendencies more acceptable, for being more commonplace etc.

don, Thursday, 5 January 2006 16:55 (eighteen years ago) link

Of course, Wills could also be seen as sucessor to the travelling Southeastern songster, which, as Bob Palmer pointed out,is also the trad that Hank came from: a mixed bag of music ("Lovesick Blues," adapted[see Bob Dylan's Chronicles for a good description of the modification] from Emmett Miller's version, which was a Tin Pan Alley song originally, and member EM recorded with the Dorseys, Jimmie R. with Louis Armstrong). From the Other side, Mississippi Sheiks sought crossover to Rodgers' more affluent and "less fractious" audience (according to booklet of their Stop + Listen). Robert Johnson is said to have played popular hits, and started to write some, "Red Hot" being the only recorded example, I guess. All unified by "blues is a feeling, " pretty much (good time, bad time, old/nostalgia time blues).Inc. the blues and jazz elements that bluegrass drew on as it travelled (another magnet for reactionaries and progressives at the time, though some mountainists weren't and aren't having any)

don, Thursday, 5 January 2006 17:11 (eighteen years ago) link

Also, has anyone seen Tanya Tucker lately?

Not me, but Mazor gives her new concert DVD Tanya Tucker Live at Billy Bob's Texas (Smith Music Group) a thumbs up in the new ND.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Thursday, 5 January 2006 17:17 (eighteen years ago) link

Jimmie Rodgers was a pretty big star; Emmett Miller was not, since he was a throwback to minstrelsy to begin with. Miller's heyday was really brief. altho he recorded with Eddie Lang, the great white guitarist, right? who also recorded with Bing Crosby. the question I have is this: who was really considered a "white blues singer" before the 1960s? was that even an idea that people entertained?

I'll have to read the "Southwest Shuffle" book, because the diff between "country" in "protestant backwaters" and country in Cinci, St. Louis, Chicago, Texas/Oklahoma and out to California seems to explain, or open up, a lot of stuff that I think is really essential. and today, I think the tension between California-ized ideas of "country" and what Nashville thinks it is--it also seems really basic to me.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Thursday, 5 January 2006 19:06 (eighteen years ago) link

Big N Rich seen playing outside the Rose Bowl yesterday. Lee Ann Rimes, inside. Yecch on the latter. Too many renditions of the star-spangled banner and god bless america and the same fireworks multiple times. But the B1 bomber lighting the afterburners over Pasadena was neat. Boy am I tired of god having to bless everything.

George the Animal Steele, Thursday, 5 January 2006 19:18 (eighteen years ago) link

> who was really considered a "white blues singer" before the 1960s?<

http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:ncex97qjkrjt

http://www.oldblues.net/music/yazoo/yazoorecord/10241-1.jpg

The latter is a great Yazoo comp called "Mr. Charlie's Blues."

On the other hand, were they considered "blues singers" when they actually existed, or only in retrospect? I honestly have no idea.

xhuxk, Thursday, 5 January 2006 19:34 (eighteen years ago) link

I also don't see why you can't toss in Dock Boggs, the Allen Brothers, the Anglin Brothers, Uncle Dave Macon, early (pre cowboy music) Gene Autry, or even...hell, Hoagy Carmichael, maybe. Or into the '50s, Harmonica Frank Floyd? Better ask Greil about that one.

xhuxk, Thursday, 5 January 2006 19:37 (eighteen years ago) link

white blues singer before the 60s? Mose Allison, a white Jewish guy from the Delta,was and is a blues singer, with a 50s progressive jazz piano style, and an attitude at times. A forerunner of Newman, and I think Dylan mentioned him, but he's from the cool school,class of polite insolence: it's a Southern thing, and what the largely Southern US Army correctly pegs as "insubordination of manner.")But that's the delivery; the songs themselves can be pretty pissed off, like The Who demonstrated with their version of "Young Man Blues," and ditto young Bonnie Raitt covering "Everybody Cryin'Mercy." Pace xgau,Van Ronk did record at least one Delta blues song (more like a regular Delta song, except there aren't any) Mose's "One of these days, gonna get myself straight, stop runnin' round with jailbait. Next week, we gonna get organized." Word!He can be bland, though. Amy's Dad. (no connection between those last 2 sentences meant)

don, Friday, 6 January 2006 19:46 (eighteen years ago) link

Jack Teagarden was a popular, white, Southwestern-souding blues-singer/jazz player too; good trombonist. oh yeah, retrieved from prised-open original Nash Scene Ballot file: newly posted (now the second graf) comments on McMurty's Simple Things--for those just now joining us, it's at http://thefreelancementalists.blogspot.com

don, Friday, 6 January 2006 19:53 (eighteen years ago) link


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