20 “White House Blues” by Charlie Poole & The North Carolina Ramblers

Charlie Poole’s World

From all the pionneer “hilbilly” musicians and singers  whose recordings in the twenties and thirties established the roots of American country and folk music, Charlie Poole is the most well remembered and his legacy on further developements of the music is important. With his band, The North carolina Ramblers, they took the best of the country and the city popular music of their time and blend it together in an unique style that influenced many others back then and ever since. in their recordings, you can hear echoes of rural string band music, Tin Pan Alley popular songs, “coon songs” of the ministrel shows, Irish accents, melted in a tight combination of fiddle-guitar-banjo with Poole’s strong vocals over it. That plus his dexterity on the banjo, played in a pre-Earl Scruggs three-finger style, made their music very unique. Certainly, Poole’s reputation as a hard-living, hard-drinking man and his prematury death at age 39 helped also to forge his “legend”. charlie_poole300

-The best way to enter “Charlie Poole’s world” is by buying the excellent box-set “You ain’t talkin to me-Charlie Poole and the roots of country music” issued by Columbia-Legacy a few years ago. In addition to Charlie Poole’s best recordings, are featured many other recordings who influenced his music and other versions of Poole’s records by other string bands. The liner notes by Henry Sapoznik are excellent and the packaging is very cool. (Robert Crumb did the artwork). You can have a glimpse of it here.

-On this page, read Charlie Poole’s biography

-And here, you’ll have the lyrics for many Poole’s songs.

-I compiled 25 tracks that i love selected from the JSP box-set reissue of Poole’s complete recordings that i own. But i plan to buy also  the box-set descibed above because from what i heard, the sound is much better than on the JSP reissue and it offers also many rare records not available anywhere.

-TRACK LIST

1.The Girl I Left In Sunny Tennessee

2.I’m The Man That Rode The Mule Around The World

3.Can I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight Mistercpoolncramblers1927

4.Don’t Let Your Deal Go Down Blues

5.Goodbye Booze

6.Budded Rose

7.There’ll Come A Time

8.White House Blues

9.The Highwayman

10.Hungry Hash House

11.If I Lose, I Don’t Carecpoole_kinneyrorrerl

12.You Ain’t Talkin’ To Me

13.Falling By The Wayside

14.Take A Drink On Me

15.George Collins

16.Ramblin’ Blues

17.Shootin’ Creek

18.Bill Mason

19.Baltimore Fire

20.Sweet Sunny South

21.He Rambled

22.Tennessee Blues

23.If The River Was Whiskey

24.Goodbye Sweet Liza Jane

25.Milwaukee Blues

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The White House Blues Variations

After “Charles Giteau” here’s another folk ballad that deals with the assassination of a president, this time, William McKinley, 25th president of the United States, killed by Leon Czolgosz, an anarchist, in 1901. For the details of this event, go here. It seems that the ballad originated with afro-americans “songsters” and, like “Stackalee”, was a kind of proto-Blues with a melody and a verse structure very alike another murder Blues ballad, “Delia’s gone”. In fact, all this songs, Delia, White House Blues, The Cannon Ball, Railroad Bill, even Stackalee and Frankie had very similar melodies in their primary forms, as they entered the oral tradition at the same time, the turn of the century and were all associated with black singers. Later, white musicians began to take those songs in their repertoire, like White House Blues, who became, thanks to Bill Monroe, a bluegrass standard.

-You can go here, to read more about the sources of this song.503px-mckinleyczol_following_day

-in his book “Long Steel Rail”, Norm Cohen tells about the writer D.H Lawrence, who used to sing a version of “White House Blues”. A friend of Lawrence recalled that in 1915, as he was singing several Negro Spirituals, he also “…set our brains jingling with an american ballad on the murder of president McKinley with words of brutal jocularity sung to an air of of lilting sweetness…”

-A few words on my selected tracks: “Zolgotz” is the title that Bascom Lamar Lunsford gave to his version of “White House Blues”, refering to the name of the murderer. He recorded this track for the Library of Congress in 1949. The New Lost City Ramblers’s version is in fact a parody that was written during the Depression and mock President Hoover. Ernest Stoneman’s version is titled “Road to Whashington” and sounds a lot like the Charlie Poole’s version. He recorded the song twice, the first version being called “Unlucky road to Whashington”. The Greenbriar Boys’s version was learned from a Riley Puckett record. Peter Stampfel of The Holy Modal Rounders does a unique performance in his unique weird string-band style. On the wonderful website “Digital Library of Appalachia” i was happy to find two afro-american versions of the song, bringing it to his roots. One is by banjo player Big Sweet Lewis Hairston with Leonard Bowles on fiddle ( this is really black string-band music at his best), the other one by Howard Twine on the electric guitar. British guitarist John Renbourn made a really nice version of the song, turning it into an introspective ballad with nice minor chords on the guitar. I’ve included also two versions of “Cannon Ball Blues” by The Carter Family, as the melody and the verses are strongly related. The first one was sung by A.P Carter and the other was sung by Maybelle during a “Friends of old-time music” concert in the sixties.

-TRACK LIST:

1.Zolgotz ,Bascom Lamar Lunford, from “Songs and Ballads of American History and of the Assassination of Presidents”

2.White House Blues, Big Sweet Lewis Hairston & Leonard Bowles, from Digital Library of Appalachia800px-william_mckinley_assassinat1

3.The Road To Washington, Ernest V. Stoneman, from “The Unsung Father Of Country Music”

4.The Cannon Ball,The Carter Family , from a Jsp box set

5.White House Blues, Tom, Brad & Alice, from “Carve That Possum”

6.White House Blues, Bill Monroe and His Bluegrass Boys, from “Live Recordings 1956-1969: Off the Record Volume 1″

7.McKinley , The Greenbriar Boys, from “Best of the Vanguard Years”

8.White House Blues, John Renbourn, from “Faro Annie”

9.White House Blues, New Lost City Ramblers, from “Songs From The Depression”

10.White House Blues, Janice Trail, from “Digital Library of Appalachia”

11.New White House Blues,Peter Stampfel, from “The Jig Is Up”

12.White House Blues, Howard Twine, from “Digital Library of Appalachia”

13.He’s Solid Gone, Maybelle Carter, from “Friends Of Old Time Music “

14.White House Blues, Haywood Blevins, from Digital Library of Appalachia

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10 “Willie Moore” by Burnett & Rutherford

Burnett & Rutherford’s World

“Dick Burnett and Leonard Rutherford travelled throughout the South from 1914 to 1950, spreading their good music, collecting good songs, and building a reputation for musical excitement that still holds today throughout the region. People from widely different geographic areas remember the singing of “Blind Burnett,” the “blind minstrel of Monticello,” and fiddling Leonard Rutherford, “one of the smoothest fiddlers ever to take a bow.”

Sure, the old-time music of Burnett & Rutherford makes us travel in time, and it’s tempting to imagine the duo singing and playing in the streets of the mountain towns, while people are buck-dancing in rhythm with the banjo and fiddle. Even after 80 years,even played on a modern computer lap-top, their music sounds so exciting and immediate, joyful and honest all at once. Their version of “Willie Moore” is perhaps one my favorite performance on the Anthology…

-On this page, you’ll read the full article that i started to quote in the beginning by the great country music historian Charles Wolfe.

-and here, you’ll read more about the life and music of the duet

-Dick Burnett claimed that he wrote the famous appallachian song “Man of constant sorrow” in 1913 but never recorded it. Let’s hear Emry Arthur’s version of the song:

“Man of constant sorrow” mP3

-I’ve compiled 18 tracks by Burnett & Rutherford, with Burnett always playing the banjo or guitar (he had a very “snappy” guitar style) and Rutherford the fiddle. They are joined on two tracks (Cumberland Gap and She’s a flower from the field of Alabama) by guitarist Byrd Moore. On two tracks (Going around the world and Going across the sea) Burnett is playing and singing alone.

1.Ladies On The Steamboatburnruth

2.All Night Long Blues

3.Cumberland Gap

4.Curley Headed Woman

5.Pearl Bryan

6.Billy In The Low Ground

7.Rambling Reckless Hobo

8.Willie Moore

9.Lost John

10.Little Stream Of Whiskey

11.I’ll Be With You When The Roses Bloom Again

12.She’s A Flower From The Fields Of Alabama

13.Weeping Willow Tree

14.A Short Life Of Trouble

15.Going Around The World

16.Going Across The Sea

17.Sleeping Lulu

18.Blackberry Blossoms

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If you want to hear more old-time music from Kentucky, i strongly recommand the following discs:

-”Kentucky Mountain Music” a superb box-set with 7 cds and a booklet issued by Yazoo Records, it’s a compilation of 78rpm records and field recordings

-”Music of Kentucky” also from Yazoo Records, 2 cds with other 78s and field recordings from that region

-”Mountain music of Kentucky” is a 2 cd set of field recordings made by John Cohen for Folkways Records; a lot of banjo pickers, Sacred-Harp and religious singing, the great Roscoe Holcomb,etc… a must-have!

The Willie Moore Variations

“Willie Moore” is the first real vernacular american folk ballad of the Anthology. The theme and verses of the song are very alike british broadside balladry but versions of the song could only be found in America.

This tragic love tale has very mysterious verses: Why Willie Moore was called a “king”, did “sweet Annie” killed herself because she could not marry him, or Willie maybe killed her, why did Willie went away to Montreal and who is the mysterious J.R.D who “composed” the song?

-On this page, you’ll read an essay and the lyrics of the song

-Most of the versions that i found share the same melody, a melody that can also be found in other ballads, like “Sweet William and Lady Margret” sung here by Jean Ritchie. My selection is relatively short to avoid repetition as many versions of the song sounds quite similar.

TRACK LIST

1.Sweet William and Lady Margaret, Jean Ritchie, from “Ballads from her Appalachian Family Tradition”mtdulcimer

2.Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, from “Best of the Vanguard Years”

3.Hadden, Rothfield & Carr, from “When These Shoes Were New”

4. Happy Traum , from “Buckets Of Song”

5.Barry Hall, from “Virtuoso Five-String Banjo”

6.Silver Thread Trio, from “Silver Thread Trio”

7. Brian Keane, from “The Way West (Original Film Soundtrack)”

8.Foghorn Stringband, from “Rattlesnake Tidal Wave”

9.Doc Watson, from “Jean Ritchie and Doc Watson at Folk City”foghorn-stringband-photo

10. Fred Starr, from “The Max Hunter Folksong Collection”

11. Hank Schwartz, from “Notes Along The Way”

12. Jody Stecher & Kate Brislin, from “Stay Awhile”

13. The Kossoy Sisters With Erik Darling, from “Bowling Green”

14.Matt Bauer, from “Tribute To The Anthology Of American Folk Music By Harry Smith”

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