Product Details
Richer Tradition: Country Blues and String Band Music 1923-1942

Richer Tradition: Country Blues and String Band Music 1923-1942
Various Artists

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Guitar Blues - Sylvester Weaver
  2. Time Ain't Gonna Make Me Stay - Edward Andrews
  3. Sundown Blues - Daddy Stovepipe
  4. Salt Lake City Blues - Papa Charlie Jackson
  5. Whiskey and Gin Blues - South Street Trio
  6. James Alley Blues - Richard Rabbit Brown
  7. Goin' to Leave You Blues - Big Boy Cleveland
  8. Hey Lawdy Mama/The France Blues - Papa Harvey Hull, Long "Cleve" Reed
  9. Chicken Can Waltz the Gravy Around - David Crockett, Stovepipe No. 1
  10. Bamalong Blues - Andrew & Jim Baxter
  11. Man Trouble Blues - Jaybird Coleman
  12. Blue Coat Blues - Tom "Blue Coat" Nelson
  13. Frisco Whistle Blues - Ed Bell
  14. Two Ways to Texas - Emery Glen
  15. Gravel Camp Blues - Lewis Black
  16. T and T Blues - Mooch Richardson
  17. Death Bell Blues - Tom Dickson
  18. C.C. & O. Blues - Pink Anderson, Simmie Dooley
  19. Middlin' Blues - George "Bullet" Williams
  20. Rolling Log Blues - Lottie Kimbrough
  21. Kyle's Worried Blues - Charlie Kyle
  22. Bull Frog Blues - William Harris
  23. Sobbin' Woman Blues - Elizabeth Johnson & Her Turpentine Tree-O
  24. Miss Meal Cramp Blues - Alec Johnson
  25. Unknown Blues - Tarter & Gay

Disc 2:

  1. Jail House Blues - Whistler & His Jug Band
  2. Blues, Just Blues, That's All - Old Southern Jug Band
  3. String Band Blues - Kansas City Blues Strummers
  4. Black Cat Blues - Old Pal Smoke Shop Four
  5. Dirty Guitar Blues - Leecan & Cooksey
  6. Boodle-Am-Shake - The Dixieland Jug Blowers
  7. Quill Blues - Big Boy Cleveland
  8. Jug Band Special - Whistler & His Jug Band
  9. Cold Morning Shout - South Street Trio
  10. Violin Blues - Johnson Boys
  11. Winner, Easy - The Blue Boys
  12. G. Burns Is Gonna Rise Again - Johnson, Nelson & Porkchop
  13. I Got a Gal - James Cole String Band
  14. Jazz Fiddler - Lonnie Carter, Walter Jacobs
  15. Knox County Stomp - Tennessee Chocolate Drops
  16. Adam and Eve - Tommie Bradley
  17. Runnin' Wild - James Cole & His Washboard Band
  18. Giving It Away - Birmingham Jug Band
  19. Jackson Stomp - Mississippi Mud Steppers
  20. Rising Sun Blues - King David's Jug Band
  21. Travelin' Railroad Man Blues - Alabama Sheiks
  22. Old Hen Cackle - Coleman & Harper
  23. Ted's Stomp - Louie Bluie, Ted Bogan
  24. Dusting the Frets - Dallas Jamboree Jug Band
  25. Arkansas Traveler - The Nashville Washboard Band

Disc 3:

  1. Original Stack O'Lee Blues - Little Harvey Hull, Long "Cleve" Reed
  2. Tuxedo Blues - Daddy Stovepipe, Whistlin' Pete
  3. Mean Conductor Blues - Ed Bell
  4. Back Door Blues - Emery Glen
  5. Spanish Blues - Lewis Black
  6. Helena Blues - Mooch Richardson
  7. I Heard the Voice of a Pork Chop - Ben Covington
  8. Rising River Blues - George Carter
  9. She Could Toodle-Oo - Hambone Willie Newbern
  10. Weak Minded Woman - Willie Baker
  11. Old Rock Island Blues - Lonnie Coleman
  12. Cairo Blues - Henry Spaulding
  13. I Ain't Givin' Nobody None - Mae Glover
  14. Showers of Rain Blues - Edward Thompson
  15. Framer's Blues - Eli Framer
  16. If I Call You Mama - Luke Jordan
  17. Never Drive a Stranger from Your Door - Willie Lee Harris
  18. Mississippi Swamp Moan - Alfred Lewis
  19. Paddlin' Madeline Blues - Gitfiddle Jim
  20. Shaking Weed Blues - Tommy Settlers
  21. South Carolina Rag - Willie Walker
  22. Beans - El Morrow, Beans Hambone
  23. Poor Jane Blues - Jack Gowdlock
  24. Window Pane Blues - Tommie Bradley
  25. Hot Jelly Roll Blues - George Carter

Disc 4:

  1. Labor Blues - Tom Dickson
  2. Goin' Away Blues - Lottie Kimbrough
  3. No Baby - Charlie Kyle
  4. Early Mornin' Blues - William Harris
  5. Dreaming Blues - Willie Reed
  6. Weeping Willow Blues - George Carter
  7. Way Down in Arkansas - Hambone Willie Newbern
  8. Wild About My Loving - Lonnie Coleman
  9. Indian Squaw Blues - Freezone
  10. Florida Bound - Edward Thompson
  11. God Didn't Make No Monkey Man - Eli Framer
  12. Tallahatchie River Blues - Mattie Delaney
  13. Diamond Ring Blues - Walter Taylor
  14. Bedside Blues - Jim Thompkins
  15. Lonesome Midnight Dream - Willie Lee Harris
  16. Billy Goat Blues - John Byrd
  17. That Won't Do - Arthur Pettis
  18. Ghost Woman Blues - George Carter
  19. "Toby" Woman Blues - Gene Campbell
  20. Rollin' Dough Blues - Jack Gowdlock
  21. Starvation Farm Blues - Bob Campbell
  22. Farewell to You Baby - Carl Martin
  23. Teasin' Brown Blues - Louie Lasky
  24. Married Woman Blues - George Torey
  25. Dago Blues - Virgil Childers

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #138872 in Music
  • Released on: 2007-11-06
  • Number of discs: 4
  • Formats: Box set, Original recording remastered

Customer Reviews

Richer Tradition Indeed! Essential Collection!5
As a budding Paramount Records Man, I have to somewhat agree with the previous review....But that being said, you have to take 'Pre War' Recordings with a grain of salt to begin with. And if your already in that frame of mind, then John Stedman and JSP has once again given us on helluva box set at a great price to listen to! What we have here, and again, if your into the "Paramount Records" thing then you know what I'm talking about, is a bunch of "one off" or "Two Off" country and rural Blues that, unless you were in a 20 mile radius of the artist, you never heard these 78's before. No!, their NOT Charlie Patton or Blind Blake or Blind Lemmon Jefferson, these were the guys and gals that were way below that scale of success, but that's the beauty of these sides....these get even more 'real' than the more popular pre-war artists! I could imagine sitting in someones livingroom listening to these songs while they were playing them! It's THAT intimate! And once again JSP comes up with a collection that is definitely NOT boring. Again, is it Charlie Or Blind Blake...NO...But these folks are real, pretty damned good at their playing and again, this is like being invited to a down home fish fry on a Sunday afternoon in Chicago, or Indiana or any Southern small town back in the pre war days...... I suggest you compare this collection with anything on the Document label, which does a very good job at 'Documenting' Old 78 artists, but for the most part makes for a very boring 'Listen', unless your a scholar. On the other hand, these are real people like you and me who, at least were worthy enough for someone to make a record of them, and JSP deserves Kudo's for putting together a 4 cd set that is both listenable (considering the rarity of the 78's involved) and enjoyable! So, when your ready to go beyond the 'Stars' of Pre-War Blues and Country/Rural music, take the plunge on this set, both the remastering and 'coolness' of this music hopefully will bring you much pleasure!
Gerard Masters

Hard to get out of the CD player once you put it in!5
Picture yourself between 1915 and 1935 at a Southern Black juke house or country supper or picnic (both often juke houses at another location with the same amount of dancing, drinking,gambling, drugging, eating, signifying, sexing for free and for money, and generally good vibrations despite the expected shootings, cuttings, or raids by the law if proper payments weren't be made to the plantation owner or the sheriff. Picture yourself ready to eat, drink, and be merry, to PARTY, PARTY HARDY, and exhaust yourself with pleasure or at least the pursuit of please. Be ready to keep partying until what they used to call "broad daylight."

This is the soundtrack.

The string bands here and the solo blues artists would have been what you listened to, although their tunes would not have be confined to the three minutes 78 records limited them to. They would grind on 10 or 20 minutes or longer for dancing often slow and deliciously naughty for the dancers or anyone who wanted to watch.

The music here swings for dancers, rattles for shaking it, and grooves to ease the mind. There is nothing attempting to be anything but funky and Black.

Most of this box set documents the many string bands usually containing fiddles, guitars, tenor or six-string banjos, often including basses, jugs, percussion, mandolins, banjo-mandolins, and banjo ukes, and sometimes including a horn or two, that reflected the taste of young Black musicians and dancers. They played music that mixed Blues, Ragtime, Jazz, popular music, and the old string band repertoire and sustained dance rhythms that had come from Africa as well as new jams created by Africans in America.

The great string band tunes here throw light on the old assumption that Black string bands had died out by the 1920s or that the recording industry did not record them because of racism.

Black musical taste developed beyond the old time fiddle banjo repertoire that reached its peak in the 1890s. As the new Century neared, a wave of new music swept from the African American community through the US and beyond. This music included Ragtime, both the formal composed piano ragtime associated with the great piano composers like Joplin, and all sorts of pop music that called itself Ragtime as well as Black folk derived music that had inspired Ragtime and was in turn influenced by pop music Ragtime. This music also included the Blues and many mixtures between Ragtime and the Blues. The new music was also associated with a wave of new dances many of which went from Black rural juke joints to Broadway and Europe.


Scores of these recordings were made by commercial record companies between 1919 and the 1940s and some of the best of these recordings are on this CD.

Regardless fo this historical importance, this Box Set is sure fun and great to listen to, a bit hard to get out of the CD player once you put it in.

A Richer Tradition: Country Blues and String Music 1923-19422
This collection is not for the weak-hearted and includes a hundred sides on 4 CDs and there are few (literally and figuratively very few) real gems among them. Undoubtedly, you will find some sweet songs among the pile, any lover of the genre will find enough to be satisfied. However, more than fifty years into the blues revival one can say that most "good" stuff from this genre had made earlier reissues and this collection, sadly, features leftovers, rejects and material nobody chose to include in the past. What's left is not always cream of the crop material, and indeed, this collection seems like they scraped the deep bottom of the barrel to find these rarities. Unless you are an ethnomusicologist or folklorist interested in historical preservation for its own sake, much of this material will sound rough hewn, if not outright unlistenable, not only from an expectedly primitive recording standpoint but from basic musical skills. It seems like they pulled together anyone and anything, regardless of fundamental quality. Even the biggest aficionados of old-time deep-roots & blues, such as me, will find the bulk of this material a stretch. If you are looking for entertainment value with that old music, stick to the mainstay of the genre.