If you think you’re allergic to folk music, here’s the cure. This three-disc anthology of live recordings contains some of the most powerful, soulful music ever made with or without benefit of amplifiers. It’s not folk music in the “folkie” singer-songwriter genre—the performers are mostly Southerners born in the late 19th or early 20th century who played in the old-time, early country or blues traditions: Maybelle Carter, Dock Boggs, Mississippi John Hurt, Clarence Ashley, Bill Monroe.
The boxed set’s 55 tracks document a series of concerts in Greenwich Village during the folk revival of the early sixties. A group of young scholars that included Peter K. Siegel and the late Mike Seeger brought traditional artists to New York to perform for audiences who truly understood how great they were. These musicians had been forgotten, and were now being rediscovered late in their lives. On one track, the banjo player and bluesman Dock Boggs tells the crowd that he had put aside his banjo for the past 25 years, working as a coal miner until Mike Seeger called him up out of the blue.
Don’t make the mistake of thinking that because these are important archival recordings, they are difficult to listen to. The tracks have been chosen for their drive and universal appeal. The sound quality is excellent. There are fiddle tunes, blues, ballads, gospel songs, solos, duets, trios and quartets. Needless to say, there is no filler–every track is worthy of your full attention. A few personal favorites: Bill Monroe’s wailing vocal and turbo-charged mandolin on “Brakeman’s Blues;” Maybelle Carter’s soulful rendition of “The Storms are On the Ocean;” several numbers by the exuberant one-man band, Jesse Fuller; and the joyous gospel song, “Before This Time Another Year,” by Bessie Jones and the Georgia Sea Island Singers.
Acoustic guitar players, listen closely to Fred McDowell, John Hurt, Jesse Fuller, Doc Watson, Roscoe Holcomb. These are the masters you want to emulate.
Happily, we are now in the throes of a new folk revival. Ex-punk rockers are forming old-time string bands, and young hipsters are flocking to fiddle-and-banjo festivals. This recording should delight and inspire this generation and their grandchildren, too.
Check the WRL catalog for Friends of Old Time Music

