Barking Dog: April 25, 2024

  • Jake Xerxes Fussell - Going to Georgia

    • He’s a musician from Georgia who grew up in an artistic family and apprenticed with the blues musician Precious Bryant from a young age

    • He often adapts traditional Southern folk music to his own style, and this song is no different

    • It’s the first single off his forthcoming album, When I’m Called, which releases on July 12

    • Fussell learned the song from a number of different sources, including Ralph Stanley, Paul Clayton, and Dock Walsh, though the main source he gives is a recording by the Eller Family of Hiawassee, Georgia from the 1984 album Folk Visions & Voices: Traditional Music and Song in Northern Georgia

    • We’ll hear that recording after this

  • The Eller Family - I’m Going to Georgia

  • Pete Seeger - Guantanamera

    • Even if you don’t know his music, you’ve likely heard his name--he was a very influential folk singer and an activist who advocated for Civil Rights, environmental causes, and peace through his music

    • He recorded this one in June of 1963 at Carnegie Hall in New York City

  • David Rovics - The St. Patrick Battalion

    • He’s a topical singer-songwriter based in Oregon who’s been playing since the 1990s

    • Off his 2007 album The Commons

    • This is the story of the 202 mostly Irish men who deserted the US Army during the annexation of Mexico in the 1840s and joined the Mexican Army instead

  • Heron - Jokerman

    • They’re an English folk-rock band that first performed between the late 60s and early 70s, and have reunited intermittently since the 1990s

    • This is the title track from their 2013 album of Bob Dylan covers

    • The song first appeared on Dylan’s 1983 album Infidels

  • Willie Dunn - Pontiac

  • The Four Southerners - Trouble in Mind

    • They were a vocal quartet that recorded two tracks for Decca Records in March of 1937

    • “Trouble in Mind” was written by jazz pianist Richard M Jones in the vaudeville blues style, and first recorded by Thelma La Vizzo in 1924

    • Has since become a standard in multiple roots genres

  • Lightnin’ Hopkins - Trouble in Mind

    • Hopkins was a country blues musician from Texas who gained a broader audience with the folk revival of the 1960s after recording and performing around Texas in the 40s and 50s

    • He continued to tour and record throughout the 60s and 70s, and was the poet in residence for Houston, Texas for 35 years

    • Recorded live on April 6, 1964 at Swarthmore College Folk Festival in Philadelphia

  • Derroll Adams - Trouble in Mind

    • He was a musician from Portland, Oregon who got his start busking on the West Coast of the US during the 1950s, where he met Ramblin’ Jack Elliott and the two began travelling and recording together

    • This one was recorded live in Haarlem in the Netherlands in 1977

  • Si Kahn - Aragon Mill

    • Kahn is a community organiser and musician from Pennsylvania who moved to the south as an activist during the Civil Rights Movement

    • From his 1975 album New Wood

    • It’s his own song

    • The song is about the end of mill village culture

    • It references the city of Aragon, Georgia, which grew around its mill, and it’s also been frequently performed in Ireland, which shares a similar milling history

  • Frank Proffitt - Baby-O

    • Appalachian banjo player from North Carolina, known for preserving the traditional ballad “Tom Dooley

    • Worked in a spark plug factory, as a carpenter, and as a tobacco farmer

    • His carpentry skills extended to making instruments—he was a talented luthier, and the banjos he played were homemade

    • This is from the 1962 album Frank Proffitt Sings Folk Songs

    • This song is used as both a lullaby and to entertain older children, and the melody is an old banjo tune

  • Wade Hemsworth - Aidal O’Boy

    • Wade Hemsworth was a folksinger from Brantford, Ontario known especially for writing the “Black Fly Song

    • The song seems to be a variant of one of the many Irish songs brought over to Canada in the 1800s

    • This version was sung in Labrador and the melody has been used for other songs in Canada, but little else is known about this particular variant

    • From Hemsworth’s 1955 album Folk Songs of the Canadian North Woods

  • Blind Boy Fuller - Careless Love

    • He was a popular North Carolina Piedmont blues artist who learned to play the guitar as a child

    • A traditional American song that’s been recorded by many blues artists

    • It likely came from the Appalachian region of the US, and the song has floating verses, meaning that the lyrics aren’t set but there are a number of common verses that artists might pick to use in their version

    • Recorded in New York City in 1937 for Melotone Records

  • Big Dave McLean - Atlanta Moan

  • William S Burroughs - This is Kim Carson

    • Burroughs was a writer and artist known as a member of the Beat Generation

    • This is off the 1979 album The Nova Convention

    • It’s an excerpt from his 1983 novel The Place of Dead Roads

  • Alistair Hulett, Dave Swarbrick - The Days of ‘49

    • Hulett was a folksinger from Glasgow, Scotland, known as a member of the folk punk band Roaring Jack

    • Swarbrick was a folk musician from England who’s known as a member of Fairport Convention, and emerged as an important member of the 1960s British folk revival

    • This is off their 1996 album Saturday Johnny & Jimmy the Rat

    • It’s an Australian workers’ rights song

  • Zeinab Shaath - The Urgent Call of Palestine

    • This is the title track from the 1972 album The Urgent Call of Palestine, which was restored and re-released in March

    • Shaath was only a teenager when she recorded it, and it was some of the first English-language music to bring attention to the Palestinian struggle

    • The lyrics to this song are by the Indian poet Lalita Panjabi

  • The Men of No Property - Why Are the British Troops Here?

    • From the 1971 album This is Free Belfast! Irish Rebel Songs of the Six Counties, which Smithsonian Folkways calls “a document of dissent during the period of Northern Ireland’s political and sectarian violence known as The Troubles”

    • This is an excerpt from “Soldiers of the Empire” by John Gray, read by an Irish rebel

  • William Clancy - The Rocks of Bourne

    • This is from the 1963 album Traditional Music of Ireland Vol. 1: The Older Traditions of Connemara and Clare

    • Clancy was a carpenter from the small town of Miltown Malbay on the Clare coast

    • Although he was considered one of the finest Uilleann pipe players in the country and was often requested for concerts throughout Ireland, he considered music “just a hobby”

    • This is a traditional Irish folk song, likely from County Galway

    • It’s unclear where exactly the rocks of Bourne, or “Bawn” as they’re more commonly called, are located

  • Finbar Furey - The Rocks of Bawn

    • He’s an Irish folk musician known as a member of the group The Fureys, which he formed with his brothers in the 1970s, though he’s been performing as a solo act since the late 1990s

    • This is from his 2023 album Moments in Time

  • Low - Blowin’ in the Wind

  • Kemuli String Band - My Mother

    • Off a 1999 album of 25 years of selected field recordings from a rainforest community in Papua New Guinea

    • One member of the band, Rebeka, composed the song about her feelings after her mother’s death

  • Bob Dylan, The Band - Four Strong Winds

    • This recording was made during the Basement Tapes sessions in 1967

    • The song is by Ian Tyson of the Canadian folk duo Ian & Sylvia, who wrote it in about 20 minutes in his manager’s apartment in New York City in 1962, apparently after hearing Dylan perform “Blowin’ in the Wind” the previous day

  • Joseph Spence - Don’t Take Everybody to Be Your Friend

    • Joseph Spence was a Bahamian musician known for vocalizing and humming while playing guitar, and he influenced artists like Taj Mahal, The Grateful Dead, and John Renbourn

    • This is from the 1966 album The Real Bahamas (In Music And Song), recorded in New York in May 1965 during Spence's first American concert tour

  • Jack Kelly & His South Memphis Jug Band - RFC Blues

    • A Tennessee jug band that was very popular during the 1930s and continued to play through the 1950s when jug bands had declined in popularity

    • This one was recorded on August 1, 1933 in New York City

    • The RFC was apparently the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, created in 1932 to give emergency loans to banks, railroads, and farmers

  • Stanley Triggs - The Blue Velvet Band

    • He’s a folksinger, photographer, and anthropologist from BC

    • Learned this version from Archie Greenlaw of Lardeau, BC in 1949

    • Likely from an old Irish song called the “Black Velvet Band

  • Pablo Milanés - Y Hay Que Andar (And We Must Go On)

    • Milanés was a Cuban musician, and one of the founders of Nueva Trova, a movement that occurred in Cuban music after the Cuban Revolution of 1959, alongside the nueva canción movement of other Latin American countries

    • From the 1970 album Canción Protesta: Protest Song of Latin America

  • Uncle Sinner - Prettiest Train

    • Winnipeg

    • Recorded in 2017

    • Comes from a recording that the folklorist Alan Lomax made of Benny Will Richardson in late 1947 while Richardson was incarcerated at Mississippi State Penitentiary

    • It’s also been recorded by artists like Odetta and Fred Neil

  • Will Shade - Won’t You Send Me John

    • He was a blues musician from Tennessee, best known as the bandleader for the Memphis Jug Band

    • This one was recorded by the music historian George Mitchell in Memphis in 1962

  • Mississippi Fred McDowell - Down On Dankin’s Farm

    • He was a hill country blues musician originally from Tennessee, though he moved to Mississippi in 1928 and continued to farm there full-time while playing music on the weekends

    • His music caught the attention of producers and blues fans in the early 1960s due to the recordings Alan Lomax and Shirley Collins made of him while travelling across the southern states to collect field recordings

    • Within a couple of years of this attention, he became a professional musician and recording artist who played at folk festivals and toured clubs around the world

    • Recorded in 1968 in Los Angeles

    • It’s his own song, written after visiting a prison work farm that was operated by the state of Mississippi

  • Sons of the Pioneers - Bury Me Beneath the Willow

    • One of the earliest western bands in the US

    • Formed in 1933 and the band still exists but there have been countless changes in membership since the beginning

    • As with many folk songs, this one has unclear origins, but was first recorded by Henry Whitter in 1923

  • Neriah and Kenneth Benfield - Weeping Willow Tree

  • Morley Loon - Amendo Na Nooch

    • He was a Cree musician and actor from Mistissini, Quebec

    • This one’s from his debut album, Northland, My Land, from 1981

    • Title translates to “Friendship-Kinship”

  • Jean Carignan - Medley, Haste to the Wedding

    • Carignan born in Levis, Quebec

    • Made a member of the Order of Canada in 1974 for being “the greatest fiddler in North America”

    • Danny MacDougal plays second violin on this, and Pete Seeger plays banjo

  • Paul McCartney - Calico Skies

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Barking Dog: April 11, 2024