Product Details
The Skillet-Lickers, Vol. 3: 1928-1929

The Skillet-Lickers, Vol. 3: 1928-1929
The Skillet Lickers

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Track Listing

  1. Liberty
  2. Nancy Rollin
  3. Old Dan Tucker
  4. Devilish Mary
  5. Pretty Little Widow
  6. Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss
  7. Day at the County Fair, Pt. 1
  8. Day at the County Fair, Pt. 2
  9. Mississippi Sawyer
  10. It Ain't Gonna Rain No Mo'
  11. Going on Down Town
  12. Flatwoods
  13. Never Seen the Like Since Gettin' Upstairs
  14. Show Me the Way to Go Home
  15. Cotton Baggin'
  16. Rovin' Gambler
  17. Back up and Push
  18. Smoke Behind the Clouds
  19. Four Thousand Years Ago
  20. Georgia Man
  21. Skip to My Lou My Darling
  22. Charming Betsy

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #170889 in Music
  • Released on: 2001-04-03
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Import

Customer Reviews

Bald Mountain Caruso5
"Gid Tanner was one of the most widely recognized names among country music enthusiasts of the 1920s and 1930s. The group that he headed, Gid Tanner and His Skillet Lickers, was one of the most influential string bands that recorded during the formative years of the country music industry. The innovative approach, craftsmanship, and professionalism of this widely imitated ensemble was due in large part to the talents of such competent band members as Clayton McMichen on fiddle and Riley Puckett on guitar.

James Gideon "Gid" Tanner was born at Thomas Bridge, near Monroe, in 1885 and spent most of his adult life in Gwinnett County, where he made a living as a farmer. He learned to play the fiddle as a teenager and became known in local circles for his prowess with the instrument. As a young man he was a regular participant at the Georgia Old-Time Fiddlers' Conventions, held annually in Atlanta between 1913 and 1935. He won the state fiddling championship in 1928. Tanner was known among musicians and convention audiences as a crowd pleaser. He was not only a fiddler but also a comedian noted for his stereotypical imitations and a singer with legendary range. Tanner allegedly knew the words and music to more than 2,000 songs. The favorite among his audiences was "I'm Satisfied," which he sang in alternating falsetto and bass registers. When Tanner sang the song at the fiddlers' conventions, newspapers reported that he "brought down the house" and was forced to repeat the song several times "before the audience would let him go."

On April 17, 1926, the Skillet Lickers recorded eight songs for the Columbia record label in an Atlanta studio. During the next eight years various combinations of Atlanta-area musicians joined Tanner to record more than 100 songs under the Skillet Lickers name. Besides McMichen and Puckett, the Skillet Lickers at one time or another included Ted Hawkins (mandolin, fiddle), Bert Layne (fiddle), Fate Norris (banjo, harmonica), Hoke Rice (guitar), Lowe Stokes (fiddle), Arthur Tanner (banjo, guitar), and Mike Whitten (guitar). With such songs as "Bully of the Town," "Pass Around the Bottle and We'll All Take a Drink," and "Soldier's Joy," these records were well received by fans of old-time string band music, and they sold well. The band's biggest-selling record was "Down Yonder," recorded at its last session in 1934, with Tanner's son, Gordon, playing the lead fiddle.

In addition to traditional folk music, fiddle tunes, and novelty songs, the Skillet Lickers recorded a series of skits in which humorous dialogue, interspersed with snatches of familiar songs and tunes, was the main feature. Called "rural drama records," these skits, as their titles indicate, recounted stories about such topics as "A Corn Licker Still in Georgia," "The Medicine Show," and "Kickapoo Joy Juice."

Although Tanner's recording career ended in 1934, he remained active as an entertainer until shortly before his death. During his last years he performed on stage and radio and entered fiddlers' contests. He won his last first-place trophy at the age of seventy-one.

At his death in 1960, just three weeks shy of his seventy-fifth birthday, Tanner left behind a living legacy of his work as a musician. His grandson Phil Tanner and Phil's son, Russell, both fiddlers, are still actively performing in an old-time string band that retains the name Skillet Lickers. Four generations of Tanners have kept Georgia's old-time music alive for more than a hundred years. Tanner was inducted into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame in 1988."

Don't Get the Wrong Impression -- Not Very Godly Types5
Gid Tanner and the Skillet Lickers are the very top of stringband/mountain music/hillbilly combos in American history. They are not, however, more than marginally holy types. Not when they do numbers like "Pass Around the Bottle and We'll All Take a Drink," "Bully of the Town," "You Gotta Quit Kickin' My Dog Around," "Dance All Night with a Bottle in Your Hand," "Sal Let Me Chaw Your Rosin" and several "humorous" racist numbers like "Darktown Strutters' Ball" and others whose very titles are now offensive and favorites of white-supremacist trolls to this day. Messy, ugly, wild, confounding, exhilarating stuff all in one bundle. A cornerstone of Weird Old America.

Dishing Up Food for the Soul4
Skillet-Lickers offers a healthy helping of Christian Cuisine for those of us who enjoy spice and full-flavor over the bland taste of everyday fare. As a newcomer to Christian music, I am drawn to their sound - a truly electric version of spirit-led music that assists those of us who are weaning ourselves from a heavy metal secular diet. Satisfies that need for rock while it satisfies the soul's need for The Word.