American Roots: A History of American Folk Music

American Roots: A History of American Folk Music Artist: Various Artists
Label: Best Music Int'l
Category: Music



Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Format: Box set
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 4


UPC: 793515285726
EAN: 0793515285726
ASIN: B00004TFBW


Release Date: 2000-05-23

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Tracks:

  1. Peach Pickin' Time In Georgia - Jimmie Rodgers
  2. Sail Away Ladies - Uncle Dave Macon
  3. Wildwood Flower - The Carter Family
  4. Trail To Mexico - The Blue Sky Boys
  5. The Runaway Train - Vernon Dalhart
  6. When The Saints Go Marching In - Fiddlin' John Carson And Moonshine Kate
  7. All Night Long - Earl Johnson's Clodhoppers
  8. Red Wing - Riley Puckett
  9. I'm Thinking Tonight Of My Blue Eyes - The Carter Family
  10. Goin' To The Barn Dance Tonight - Carl Robison And His Pioneers
  11. Go Long Mule - Uncle Dave Macon
  12. Frankie And Johnny - Jimmie Rodgers
  13. Three Men Went A Huntin' - Byrd Moore And His Hot Shots
  14. My Man's A Jolly Railroad Man - Moonshine Kate
  15. Waiting For A Train - Jimmie Rodgers
  16. Georgia's Three-Dollar Tag - Fiddlin' John Carson And Moonshine Kate
  17. Jamestown Exhibition - Bayless Rose
  18. Lay Down Baby, Take Your Rest - Carolina Taar Heels
  19. Backwater Blues - Uncle Dave Macon
  20. The Wreck Of The Old '97 - Vernon Dalhart
  21. The Little Old Sod Shanty On My Claim - Marc Williams
  22. Bury Me Under The Weeping Willow - The Carter Family
  23. In The Hills Of Tennessee - Jimmie Rodgers
  24. Ida Red - The Blues Sky Boys
  25. Alto Waltz - Darby & Tarlton

Tracks:

  1. John Hardy Was A Desperate Little Man - The Carter Family
  2. Gambling Bar Room Blues - Jimmie Rodgers
  3. Little Bessie - The Alabama Barnstormers
  4. I'll Roll In My Sweet Baby's Arms - Buster Carter And Preston Young
  5. I'm Goin' Away In The Morn - Uncle Dave Macon
  6. Pappa's Billy Goat - Fiddlin' John Carson
  7. Hackberry Trot - The Hackberry Ramblers
  8. Abbeville Breakdown - The Alley Boys Of Abbeville
  9. Tiger Rag Blues - Breaux Freres
  10. Louisiana Mazurka - Breaux Freres
  11. Step It Fast - Amedee Breaux
  12. High-Steppin' Mama - Gene Autry
  13. Blue Yodel (T For Texas) - Jimmie Rodgers
  14. Anchored In Love - The Carter Family
  15. Jimmie Rodgers Visits - The Carter Family
  16. Hard For To Love - Hayes Shepherd
  17. The Yellow Rose Of Texas - Gene Autry & Jimmy Long
  18. The Brave Engineer - The Carver Boys
  19. Taxes On The Farmer Feeds Them All - Fiddlin' John Carson And Moonshine Kate
  20. Hold The Woodpile Down - Uncle Dave Macon
  21. I'm A Man Of Constant Sorrow - Emry Arthur
  22. Rambling Boy - The Carter Family
  23. My Little Lady - Jimmie Rodgers
  24. Two Italians..Red Bird - Monroe Gevedon And Family

Tracks:

  1. Orange Blossom Special - Bill Monroe And His Bluegrass Boys
  2. Brown's Ferry Blues - The Delmore Brothers
  3. Row Us Over The Tide - The Blue Sky Boys
  4. The Big Rock Candy Mountain - Burl Ives
  5. Oklahoma Hills - Jack Guthrie
  6. Nine Pound Hammer - Merle Travis
  7. Cannonball Rag - Merle Travis
  8. Red River Valley - Gene Autry
  9. Mule Skinner Blues - Bill Monroe And His Bluegrass Boys
  10. Great Speckled Bird - Roy Acuff And His Crazy Tennesseeans
  11. Take It To The Captain - The Delmore Brothers
  12. Garden In The Sky - The Blue Sky Boys
  13. Ain't That A Cryin' Shame - Merle Travis
  14. Milk Cow Blues - Johnnie Lee Wills And His Boys
  15. When My Blue Moon Turns To Gold Again - Wiley Walker ANd Gene Sullivan
  16. Footprints In The Snow - Bill Monroe And His Bluegrass Boys
  17. You Can't Do Wrong And Get By - The Delmore Brothers
  18. Why Should It End This Way? - The Blue Sky Boys
  19. Cotton-Eyed Joe - Bob Willis And His Texas Playboys/Tommy Duncan
  20. Night Train To Memphis - Roy Acuff And His Smokey Mountain Boys
  21. You Are My Sunshine - The Rice Brothers Gang
  22. Rounder's Blues - The Delmore Brothers
  23. Rocky Road Blues - Bill Monrow And His Bluegrass Boys
  24. Wabash Cannonball - Roy Acuff And His Crazy Tennesseeans
  25. It Makes No Difference Now - Gene Autry
  26. Pigmeat Strut - Merle Travis
  27. No Letter In The Mail - Bill Monroe And His Bluegrass Boys

Tracks:

  1. This Land Is Your Land - Woody Guthrie
  2. House Of The Rising Sun - Woody Guthrie
  3. Grand Coulee Dam - Woody Guthrie
  4. John Henry - Cisco Houston And Woody Guthrie
  5. All I Want - Pete Seeger
  6. Talking Union - Pete Seeger
  7. Teeroo Teeroo - Pete Seeger
  8. I Know An Old Lady - Burl Ives
  9. Columbus Stockade - Cisco Houston And Woody Guthrie
  10. The Sinking Of The Reuben James - Pete Seeger
  11. Boll Weevil Blues - Cisco Houston And Woody Guthrie
  12. Away Rio - Pete Seeger
  13. The Coast Of High Barbary - Pete Seeger
  14. Jack-Hammer Blues - Cisco Houston And Woody Guthrie
  15. Liza Jane - Pete Seeger And Woody Guthrie
  16. Pastures Of Plenty - Woody Guthrie
  17. Cumberland - Cisco Houston And Woody Guthrie/Sonny Terry
  18. Casey Jones - Pete Seeger
  19. Cumberland Bear Chase - Pete Seeger
  20. So Long It's Been Good To Know You - Woody Guthrie
  21. Union Maid - Pete Seeger
  22. Hard Travellin' Guthrie - Cisco Houston And Woody Guthrie
  23. Erie Canal - Pete Seeger
  24. Pretty Boy Floyd - Woody Guthrie
  25. State Of Arkansas - Lee Hays
  26. Worried Man Blues - Cisco Houston And Woody Guthrie
  27. Deliver The Goods - Pete Seeger
  28. Do-Ri-Mi - Woody Guthrie

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  1. Roots Music: An American Journey

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Oh, I wish for more from Disky--hurrah, hurrah!.......2002-02-18

This wonderful, very low-priced collection from Holland's Disky label features 104 tracks of country and pop-folk music from the late 1920s to the mid-1940s. The unusually good sound quality on the earliest tracks, to say nothing of the radio-style intros on several numbers, lead me to suspect that much of this was recorded for, or from, radio broadcasts. For example, one of the Carter Family tracks is entitled "Jimmie Rodgers Visits" and features classically hokey Opry-style banter. Unfortunately, there are no liner notes, though at least recording years are listed on the inserts. Contrast the casual nature of this European "roots" collection with the pretentious hoopla that normally accompanies domestic issues of the same type. Strange and, in a way, refreshing.

The best material is the earliest, and this includes tracks by Uncle Dave Macon, the meter-challenged Fiddlin' John Carson, the elegantly-named Earl Johnson's Clodhoppers, The Carter Family, and Gene Autry, among others. Early Bluegrass abounds, and long before it is alleged to have existed--check out Byrd Moore and his Hot Shots from 1930, Hayes Shepherd's 1927 bluegrass banjo playing, and Uncle Dave Macon's "Sail Away Ladies," also from 1927, a call-and-response number in pure Bill Monroe/Carl Story style. Early country crooning is represented by Jimmie Rodgers, Vernon Dalhart, and Gene Autry--the latter sounding atypically downhome on 1931's "High-Steppin' Mama." Elsewhere, Moonshine Kate makes like Bessie Smith on "My Man's a Jolly Railroad Man" ("His engine's number eleven"), and Riley Puckett offers a smooth, cowboy-crooner rendition of "Red Wing," which was an oldie even then (1927, again). These tracks are superbly representative of the earliest recorded country.

The third and fourth CDs feature more commercially familiar string-band styles, 1940s bluegrass, highly nimble Django-Reinhardt-influenced guitar picking by Merle Travis, and the "Crazy Tennesseeans" of Roy Acuff. Of particular interest are Travis' "Pigmeat Strut," which was ineptly lifted, in part, by Scotty Moore on Elvis Presley's "Just Because," and a song called "Oklahoma Hills," the melody better-known as "Cottonfields." Woody Guthrie, Cisco Huston, Peter Seeger and the Almanac Singers, and other pop-folk greats close the collection. The highlights: A lovely, mixolydian-mode melody on Guthrie's 1941 "House of the Rising Sun;" Pete Seeger's energetic banjo workout "Cumberland Bear Chase" (1944), a version of a tune-with-narrative recorded in the 1920s by the Hill Billies; and Seeger's "Talking Union" (1941). "Talking Union" found new life many years later as Dick Feller's apolitical rant against bad customer service, "The Credit Card Song."

Sound quality ranges from acceptable to fabulous. An incredible deal. I wish for more from Disky.

3 out of 5 stars a lot of music for the price, but not much else.......2001-07-24

Like the first reviewer, I too was struck by the lack of African American representation in a collection titled "American Roots." I can't really imagine how this might have happened, except perhaps because the collection comes from a Dutch record company, though even that explanation seems rather untenable. The lack of any documentation in the box set only exacerbates this oddity.

You sure get a lot of songs here, and the range of material is useful for a collector of old timey music - I particularly appreciated the inclusion of "I'm A Man of Constant Sorrow" and the Pete Seeger repertoire. Again, though, there's zero documentation on the history of these selections, and specific information like recording dates and record labels is really missed.

For the completists in the audience, you'll want this collection. For interested amateurs, you'll probably be better off with either the Harry Smith's AAFM or the many series put together (and well documented) by Yazoo. In fact, there are probably links above this review to at least one Yazoo series.

Bottom line: lots of songs but little explanatory information.

4 out of 5 stars some of the history of American folk music, anyway.......2000-08-13

Odd that something with a title and subtitle so grandiose as this collection's has no songs by African-American artists on it. After all, black Americans have played a huge role, from spirituals to blues and all points between, in the creation of our country's folk and vernacular music. Here, as far as I can tell, only two African-Americans appear, and in secondary roles on disc four: Sonny Terry and Josh White. For the sort of racial integration that more truly defines our grassroots music, you'll have to go to Yazoo's splendid ongoing series on Early Rural American Music.

That -- no small consideration -- aside, American Roots is a good deal, financially of course, but also artistically. The no-frills packaging assures the absence of a fat (or even thin) booklet of liner notes, explaining what compiler Tony Watts's selection criteria were. They're certainly unusual, though they shouldn't be; unlike many of his colleagues, Watts apparently has no trouble seeing that Gene Autry, Roy Acuff, and Merle Travis have as legitimate a claim to a place on the folk-music spectrum as do the Carter Family, Uncle Dave Macon, and Fiddlin' John Carson, whose archaic styles are more obviously tied to earlier Southern traditions. Watts documents the debt early country innovators had to the sounds that came before them as well as the creative, personal approach they contributed as they invented a more modern music. And listening to Travis's flat-picking instrumental "Cannonball Rag," you can hear the music coming full circle; Travis pupil Doc Watson would make Travis's jazz-inflected city sound into something most people assume to be organic Appalachiana.

Disc four moves from the South to New York City, where the Communist Party's Popular Front and singing Stalinists Pete Seeger, Lee Hays, Cisco Houston, and Woody Guthrie created the urban folk revival. This disc contains one of American Roots' two genuinely repellant songs (the other is on disc one -- Vernon Dalhart's "The Runaway Train," bearer of what passed for humor in 1931 but seven decades later comes across as crude and stupid racism). In a 1940 reworking of the traditional "Liza Jane" into an anti-war agitprop exercise, we are reminded that during the Hitler-Stalin pact, Seeger, et al., cravenly followed the Soviet line, which was that World War II was all about the machinations of British capitalists and none of America's business. Later, in the same disc, Seeger and the Almanac Singers are performing a vigorous, full-throated, chirrupy anti-Hitler tune, "Deliver the Goods," done in 1942 after Hitler had attacked Russia and it was okay to oppose Hitler again. The hypocrisy is not pretty to hear. Side four also serves to remind us that where sheer talent is concerned, Guthrie was head and shoulders above the rest.

The sound quality on all four discs is decent on the whole. Inexplicably, however, there is annoying surface noise on Burl Ives's "The Big Rock Candy Mountain," hardly a rare recording. But for the price, I guess it's churlish to demand perfection. Anyone who loves American folk music, or at least that part of it sung by European Americans with (mostly) Southern accents, should have this worthwhile and entertaining anthology in his or her CD collection.

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  3. See Reverse Side for Title ~ Jim Kweskin & The Jug Band
  4. Songbird ~ Eva Cassidy
  5. Spencer the Rover is Alive and Well ~ John Roberts and Tony Barrand
  6. Battlefield Ballads of the Civil War
  7. A Tale of Two Americas ~ Rod MacDonald
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  9. 'Bout Changes & Things, Take 2 ~ Eric Andersen
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Rebirth ~ Angra

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Revenge ~ Takaaki Konno

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