Barking Dog: July 13, 2023

  • Jessie Clarence Gorman - Goin’ Up to the Country #1

    • Gorman was born in Georgia in 1928 and began playing guitar at the age of nine with the help of his older brother

    • Recorded in Georgia in 1967 by music historian George Mitchell

  • Bessie Jones - Sometime

    • Known for spreading folk songs, stories, and games to a wider audience in the 20th century, and especially for helping to preserve Black American song and dance traditions

    • She travelled to New York City to record her music and her biography with the ethnomusicologist and folklorist Alan Lomax

    • She also sang at Carnegie Hall, Newport Folk Festival, the Smithsonian Institution’s folklife festivals, and Central Park

    • Recorded by Alan Lomax on St. Simons Island, Georgia, in 1959

    • It’s a children’s play song from the Georgia Sea Islands

  • Sam Hinton - The Green Grass Growing All Around

    • Was an American folksinger, marine biologist, and visual artist

    • This is off his 1964 album of children’s songs called Whoever Shall Have Some Peanuts

    • It’s a cumulative song, where each verse grows longer than the last, and it started out as a popular music song from 1912

The next six songs are different members of the “Unfortunate Rake” song family, which includes “St. James Hospital,” “Streets of Laredo,” and “One Morning in May,” among others. The earliest version of the song likely dates to the 18th century, and the original story is about a young man in a job like soldier or sailor who has contracted some form of illness—often a sexually transmitted infection—and is giving directions for his funeral. In the first version, we’ll hear references to being “disordered” and obtaining “salts or pills of white mercury”; both of these are explicit references to syphilis, which mercury was used to treat at the time the song was first transmitted. We’ll hear later versions of the song that change the cause of death, but in each version, the function of the song is to provide practical advice to the target audience.

  • Brendan Gleeson - The Unfortunate Rake

    • Perhaps better known as an actor in films like Braveheart and Gangs of New York

    • This is from the Coen Brothers’ 2018 film The Ballad of Buster Scruggs

    • Though it’s the most recently recorded version of the song that we’ll hear today, it’s the closest in text to the earlier versions of the song

  • Wade Hemsworth - The Bad Girl’s Lament

    • A Canadian folksinger from Brantford, Ontario

    • Hemsworth learned this version of the song in the Canadian North Woods, and it is closely related to early versions found in the Maritime provinces and in Maine

    • This is the only version that changes the story to that of a young girl “gone wrong”, rather than a ballad about a misguided boy, or “rake”, though the general story is still very similar to earlier versions

  • Johnny Cash - Streets of Laredo

    • This is from the 2002 album American IV: The Man Comes Around

    • Western settlers brought the ballad with them, and it was quickly adapted to their immediate surroundings

    • Here, the young man dies of lead poisoning from a bullet, rather than syphilis

  • John Greenway - The Ballad of Bloody Thursday

    • American folklorist who specialised in social protest songs

    • This one comes from a 1960 Folkways album which specifically focuses on the “Unfortunate Rake”

    • It’s a modern industrial adaptation of the ballad that commemorates a longshoreman’s strike in San Francisco in 1934, during which many workers were injured or killed

    • The ballad largely strays from the parent ballad, though some lines remain the same

  • Rosalie Sorrels - The Lineman’s Hymn

    • She started out as a folksinger and collector of folk songs, and left her husband in the 1960s to travel across America with her five children, establishing herself as a performer and making connections with other folk musicians, writers, and artists

    • The text closely resembles the earlier “Streets of Laredo,” but is loaded with telephone lineman slang, and placed in a local setting

    • This version contains the ironic twist that the young man meets his doom by falling from a low pole, though his job frequently requires ascents of much greater heights

  • A. Paul Ortega - Chicago

    • Ortega was an influential Apache musician who began as a tribal singer at the age of five

    • He moved to Chicago in the early 1960s and began to adapt blues guitar to Apache social songs

    • This is from his 1974 album Three Worlds

    • Of all the versions of the ballad that we’ve heard today, this one differs most from earlier versions, and to great effect

  • David Francey - Highway

    • Scottish-born Canadian folksinger who worked as a railyard worker and carpenter for 20 years before pursuing folk music at the age of 45

    • Off his 2001 album Far End of Summer

  • Lisa Null - Will You Love Me in the Morning

    • Null was a folk musician who performed around the Washington, DC area for more than 40 years

    • This is from her 2015 album Legacies, released by Folk Legacy Records

    • Her partner, Charlie Baum, wrote the song, and he sings the melody on it

    • He woke up with the song in his head one morning, saying that it came to him in a dream

  • Uncle Sinner - Rocky Island

  • Othar Turner - Father, I Stretch My Hands to Thee

    • One of the last well-known fife players in the American fife and drums blues tradition

    • Born in Mississippi in 1907 and lived his life in the Mississippi hill country as a farmer

    • Scholars from nearby colleges recorded him and his friends in the 60s and 70s, and his band played at many local farm parties

    • Performed as the “Mississippi Fife and Drum Corps” with his bandmates Jessie Mae Hemphill and Abe Young on Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood in 1982, and the group began to receive wider attention in the 1990s

    • A hymn written by Charles Wesley and first published in the mid-1700s

    • From the 7th album in a series called Living Country Blues USA, which comprise field recordings made of American blues artists in 1980 by two German blues enthusiasts named Axel Küstner and Siegfried Christmann

  • Laura Baird - Pretty Polly

    • She’s a multi-instrumentalist from New Jersey known for her work with her sister Meg as the Baird Sisters, and with guitarist Glenn Jones

    • This is from her 2017 debut solo album I Wish I Were a Sparrow

    • It’s a mid-eighteenth century American murder ballad that comes from the older “Gosport Tragedy” ballad

  • Robert “Nighthawk” Johnson - Can’t No Grave Hold My Body Down

    • From an album of field recordings George Mitchell made of Johnson in Skene, Mississippi, in 1969

    • Attributed to songwriter and preacher Claude Ely of Virginia

    • He claimed to have written it when he was twelve while he was sick with tuberculosis

  • David Nzomo - Itumbi ya Nyaa (Divorce Song)

    • He’s a musician from Kenya who recorded six albums of traditional Kenyan songs for Folkways records while he was studying at Columbia University in the 1960s and 70s

    • This is from his 1975 album Work and Dance Songs from Kenya

    • It’s a song about a wife leaving her husband over an argument between her and another of his wives

    • The refrain of the song translates to:

That woman called me an egg

An egg of ostrich and antelope

An egg that can’t do two things

I am going to perform miracles

Till I get to the shores

Where our kin dwell

  • The Weather Station - Yarrow and Mint

  • Ferron - Light of My Light

    • She’s a musician and poet from BC

    • This one’s off her 1992 live album Not a Still Life, recorded at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco

    • It was originally included on her 1978 album Backed Up

  • Judy Collins - Carry It On

    • American artist who has recorded music in a number of different genres

    • Is also known for bringing attention to lesser-known artists, including Leonard Cohen, Ian Tyson, and Joni Mitchell, who weren’t very well-known when she recorded songs by them

    • This one’s from her 1965 album simply called Fifth Album

    • Written by the folksinger Gil Turner

  • Bob Dylan - Only a Hobo

  • Old Man Luedecke - Song for Ian Tyson

  • Kacy & Clayton - Brunswick Stew

  • Gillian Welch - One Morning

    • She’s one of the best-known contemporary American roots musicians, and has collaborated with artists like Allison Krauss, Emmylou Harris, and The Decemberists, though she’s known particularly for her musical partnership with Dave Rawlings

    • From her 1998 album Hell Among the Yearlings

    • It’s her own song

  • Pharis & Jason Romero - Cannot Change It All

    • From Horsefly, BC

    • Off their 2022 album Tell 'Em You Were Gold, which was recorded over six days in a 60-year-old barn beside the Little Horsefly River

  • Sarah Wood - Red Rocking Chair

    • She’s an old-time banjo player and traditional ballad singer from Kentucky

    • This song is off her 2017 album 25 Tunes for Old Time Banjo and Singing, Vol. 1

    • It’s known by a bunch of other names, including “Honey Babe Blues”, “Sugar Babe”, and “Red Apple Juice”

    • The different versions vary greatly both in lyrics and melody, but the song is recognized as one song or one song family

  • The Tarriers - Red Apple Juice

    • They were a folk group from New York City who formed in the 1950s

    • Members included Erik Darling, Bob Karey, Karl Karlton, and Alan Arkin, who later became a well-known actor

    • This song is from their 1960 album Tell the World About This

  • Art Thieme - Hobo’s Last Ride

    • He was a folk musician, photographer, and radio host from Chicago who specialised in music and stories from the upper midwest United States, but he also had an interest in cowboy songs

    • This is from his 1983 album That’s the Ticket, released by Folk-Legacy Records

    • He learned this song from a recording by Canadian musician Hank Snow that he heard on a country radio show as a child during the 1950s

    • It uses the same tune as “Tying Knots in the Devil’s Tail

  • Harrison Kennedy - Hard Time Blues

    • A Hamilton, Ontario artist with a career in blues and roots music spanning over 50 years

    • From his 2011 album Shame the Devil

  • Willie Dunn - Bear and Fish

  • David Rovics - Behind the Barricades

    • He’s a musician and writer based in Oregon who’s been touring internationally since the 1990s

    • This song is from his 2001 album Living In These Times

    • He wrote it after police riots in Genoa, Italy during the G8 meetings in the summer of 2001

  • OJ Abbott - The Silver Herrings

    • Abbott was 84 when this song was recorded by the folklorist Edith Fowke for her 1957 album Irish and British Songs from the Ottawa Valley

    • He learned this fish peddlars’ song at his school in England as a child, the only song he recited for Fowke that he actually learned in England

  • Harry Belafonte - Shenandoah

    • He was an influential American singer, activist, and actor

    • Off the 1957 album An Evening with Belafonte

    • Traditional American folk song and sea shanty, traced back to the early 19th century

    • Likely came from American and Canadian voyageurs who travelled down the Missouri River

  • Mississippi John Hurt - Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight

    • American country blues singer and guitarist from Avalon, Mississippi

    • He made a couple of recordings for OkEh Records in the late 1920s but they were commercial failures, and when OkEh Records closed shop during the Great Depression, Hurt returned to his work as a sharecropper, continuing to play music at local events

    • His OkEh recordings were included on the incredibly influential 1952 Anthology of American Folk Music, and in 1963 a copy of “Avalon Blues” was discovered, which led the musicologist Dick Spottswood to find Hurt in Avalon

    • Hurt performed at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival, which brought further attention to his music, and he toured extensively throughout the US and recorded 3 albums

    • This is his own song

  • Paul Clayton - Little Pig

    • An American folksinger and folklorist who specialised in traditional music and collaborated with artists like Jean Ritchie and Dave Van Ronk

    • The song comes from an old English nursery rhyme called “Betty Pringle’s Pig,” and it was collected throughout the midwest United States and New England

    • Clayton’s version was collected in Culpeper County, Virginia

  • Jake Xerxes Fussell - Jubilee

  • Grit Laskin - The Long Note / Old Hag You Have Killed Me

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Barking Dog: July 20, 2023

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Barking Dog: July 6, 2023