Sand Mountain Blues

Sand Mountain Blues

Sand Mountain Blues

ASIN: B0000012DR

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
When the Delmore Brothers moved to Memphis and to King records in the mid '40s, their sound took on bluesy, protorockabilly shadings, though their harmonies remained as complex and varied as any in country music. Alton and Rabon still retained a characteristic lilting and mirroring vocal style, with some yodeling and surging falsettos, but the playing of Merle Travis and blues harpist Wayne Raney drove them to the edges of hillbilly-boogie terrain. On these 18 songs from 1944 to 1949, the brothers sound aggressive and determined after the tumultuous 1930s: "Someday You'll Pay," "'Dis Train," and their two classic blues--"Brown's Ferry" and "Sand Mountain"--have the edginess that distinguishes this period, at once the high point and end point of their work together. --Roy Kasten

Sand Mountain Blues,Delmore Brothers,County Records,Blues,Country,Country & Western,Pop,V/a Compilations
Sand Mountain Blues
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    Sand Mountain Blues
    The Delmore Brothers
    Manufacturer: County Records
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Blues | Styles | Music
    Traditional BluesTraditional Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Country | Styles | Music
    Honky-TonkHonky-Tonk | Country | Styles | Music
    Old-Time CountryOld-Time Country | Traditional Country | Country | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Traditional Country | Country | Styles | Music
    Traditional FolkTraditional Folk | Folk | Styles | Music
    ASIN: B0000012DR
    Release Date: 1995-01-31

    Tracks:

    1. Kentucky Mountain
    2. Midnight Train
    3. Someday You'll Pay
    4. Remember I Feel Lonesome, Too
    5. Weary Day
    6. Prisoner's Farewell
    7. Brown's Ferry Blues
    8. You Can't Do Wrong And Get By
    9. She Left Me Standing On The Mountain
    10. Mississippi Shore
    11. Sand Mountain Blues
    12. I Won't Be Worried Long
    13. Frozen Girl
    14. Going Back To The Blue Ridge Mountains
    15. I'm Lonesome Without You
    16. Don't Foeget Me
    17. 'Dis Train
    18. Last Old Shovel

    Amazon.com

    When the Delmore Brothers moved to Memphis and to King records in the mid '40s, their sound took on bluesy, protorockabilly shadings, though their harmonies remained as complex and varied as any in country music. Alton and Rabon still retained a characteristic lilting and mirroring vocal style, with some yodeling and surging falsettos, but the playing of Merle Travis and blues harpist Wayne Raney drove them to the edges of hillbilly-boogie terrain. On these 18 songs from 1944 to 1949, the brothers sound aggressive and determined after the tumultuous 1930s: "Someday You'll Pay," "'Dis Train," and their two classic blues--"Brown's Ferry" and "Sand Mountain"--have the edginess that distinguishes this period, at once the high point and end point of their work together. --Roy Kasten

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