Out Dec. 10, 2013.
(4-CD LP-Sized Box-Set with 136-page hardcover book; 100 tracks, over 5
hours of music) The famous 1927 Bristol Sessions, produced by VICTOR
RECORDS in Bristol, Tennessee are known as ''The Big Bang Of Country
Music.'' But don't overlook the recordings made in nearby Johnson City
by COLUMBIA RECORDS in October 1928 and October 1929. Collectively, the
Johnson City recordings are regarded by scholars, collectors, and lovers
of old-time music as a distinctive cross-section of Appalachian music,
captured on the cusp of the Great Depression. Indeed, the final
recordings of the 1929 session took place on October 24 - the infamous
'Black Thursday' when Wall Street crashed.
BEAR FAMILY RECORDS has
gathered the entire issued output of the 1928-29 Johnson City sessions.
This is the first time all 100 songs have been issued together... and
the first time many have been heard since the Depression. The
accompanying 136-page, LP-size hardcover book contains newly researched
essays on the background to the sessions and the artists, with many rare
and unpublished photographs. Also included are complete song lyrics and
a detailed discography.
Three of these performances were chosen by the pioneering scholar Harry Smith for his 1952 compilation Anthology Of American Folk Music - a seminal source for the urban folk revival of the 1950s and '60s: The Coo-Coo Bird by Clarence (Tom) Ashley, Old Lady And The Devil by Bill and Belle Reed, and Down On Penny's Farm by The Bentley Boys - the inspiration for Bob Dylan's Hard Times In New York Town and Maggie's Farm. Other gems include a topical best-seller of the Prohibition era, When the Roses Bloom Again For The Bootlegger, the Grant Brothers' Tell It To Me, revived by the Old Crow Medicine Show, and many more.
Can You Sing Or Play Old-Time Music?
is packed with stringband tunes, ancient ballads, sacred songs,
hillbilly blues and blue yodels the entrancing musical world of old
Appalachia.
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