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It features many different artists both who made it big in those days like Emphriam Woodie to the lesser names like Vance' Mountain Ramblers. It is a collection of the good ole country music. It is an excellent find EXCELLENT. It is must have.
twenty-two fine tracks from 1927-1931 presented with very good sound quality. this is a must for all fans of old-time rural music. i like or love everything that i've heard from the folks at old hat. a cornucopia of fiddlers and guitar-pickers and banjo players and hillbilly singers. magic from a bygone era. it is simply a marvelous label that specializes in old-time music releases. "music from the lost provinces" is another outstanding cd from them.
He is a fiddler more seminal than Uncle Pen, his fiddle wrapping you 'round in kudzu vines of primal melody.Real "Tar Heel" rattlin'. This is the Holy Grail of Mountain Fiddle Music.GB Grayson, the archetype of the Mountain Fiddler, lived near Mountain City and was one of the most influential fiddlers of the '20's, who, with his partner Henry Whitter, toured the coal fields of West Virginia, until Grayson was killed in a freak accident, falling from the running board of a car that he was hitching a ride on, on August 16, 1930.But Frank Blevins is the real star on this recording.
A "must have" album for collectors and people that play old-time music. Excellent collection of old-time stringband music. You may not like every song on the album but it is a great assortment of many different styles of playing and singing.
This disc concentrates its attention geographically, collecting old 78s from artists out of Ashe County, NC, one of those backwoods areas unusually rich in hillbilly talent. It's pretty amazing, this late in the folkloric/historic reissues game, to find a whole album's worth of "undiscovered" old-timey music that is of such a high caliber. In addition to great sound quality and great material, both discs are also quite handsomely packaged; the insert booklets include some really cool archival photos, as well as extensive liner notes of the sort that have been woefully absent on similar recent reissue efforts. The best known of these artists was the team of Grayson & Whitter (who were favorites of Ralph Stanley), but there are plenty of other great Ashe County artists on here, with fab names like The Woodies, The Carolina Night Hawks and (my favorite) Ephraim Woodie & The Henpecked Husbands. Old Hat Records, a tiny North Carolina indie label, packs its discs with some of the best music in the style that you're ever likely to hear. (You might also want to check out the "Violin, Sing For Me" and "Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow" CDs.).
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