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Tunes or songs that are either chilled or mellow.


Dougie MacLean - Turning Away



Mark O'Connor - Markology



Elliott Smith - Needle In The Hay



Frank Sinatra - In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning


ENJOY
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I have been listening to some Pete Seeger and some blues and old-timey music and I found this documentary via youtube.

Alan Lomax. "Appalachian Journey" (1991)




Between 1978–85, the great American folklorist and musicologist Alan Lomax revisited his old song-hunting grounds, the Deep South and South West, with a PBS film crew to make a television series called American Patchwork. It finally aired in 1991, using only a fraction of the 400 hours of footage. Now, a selection of this material – interviews, songs, and dances by farmers, railwaymen, blues singers, and tall-tale spinners – have been made available, in true Lomax spirit, to all. Not via some luxurious DVD box set, but on an open-access YouTube channel dedicated to his work. The channel has been set up by the Association for Cultural Equity, the charitable organization set up by Lomax in 1983, and which now preserves and promotes the legacy of its founder, who died in 2002.

An unorthodox portrait of Reagan’s America is revealed through these short outtakes. In the era of movies like Tron and Back To The Future, here is a world of music – a Sacred Harp weeping prayer, Clyde Maxwell’s wood-chopping holler, Joe Savage’s Texan blues, the wonderfully wiry coal miner and union activist Nimrod Workman – largely unchanged since Lomax was visiting Parchman Farm with his father in the 1930s; only the backdrops and interiors have modernized. There are surprises, too, such as Chester Zardis’s fluent jazz bass solo.

As well as these clips, which are being daily added, the channel is hosting older rarities, such as the evocative 16-minute documentary To Hear Your Banjo Play from 1947, narrated by Pete Seeger. Brownie McGhee, Woody Guthrie, and Seeger himself appear in the film, which relates the banjo’s history, first as an African survival made with gourds and possum skins, then as the 20th-century accompaniment to hoedowns, spirituals, and field hollers. There are also outtakes from Lomax’s film The Land Where The Blues Began, and a wonderful episode of Boston TV’s Screening Room, a 1975 arts program where he showed his film Dance And Human History and began to elucidate the questions about the similarities and differences in cultures that would mushroom into his weighty theories of Cantometrics in the last years of his life.
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or is that bluegrass lol?

Alison Krauss - I'll Fly Away



The Stanley Brothers - The Jealous Lover



Dock Boggs - Country Blues



ENJOY
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Time for some music methinks -

Stina Nordenstam - Dynamite




Nina Simone - Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair



Alison Krauss & Union Street - I'm Gone



Robin Holcomb - Nine Lives



Van Morrison - Into The Mystic




Enjoy
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Digging deeper into old music -

Stanley Brothers - Little Maggie



Nugrape Twins - There's A City Built Of Mansions



Eddie Head and His Family - Down On Me



Frankie Franko and His Louisianians - Somebody Stole My Girl



Enjoy.
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Some very old blues and bluegrass from the USA -

Dock Boggs - Country Blues



Stanley Brothers - Little Maggie



Robert Johnson- Sweet Home Chicago



Charley Patton - A Spoonful Blues





Robert Crumb and his 78's

This book has a CD full of the old blues,  bluegrass  and jazz stiff.

R. Crumb Heroes of Blues, Jazz & Country

Enjoy.
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Another clutch of tunes -

Iron and Wine - Love Vigilantes



More Grooves here )
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After the usual Morris Men whom were here last year at the Beer Festival, so nothing new there, we had a folky bluegrass and country influenced hillbillies called Wakin' Snakes. They were good, so here are some pics of them.





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So, as i intimated earlier today, the music i relaxed with and played today are as follows -

Various Artists - Good For What Ails You, Music Of The medicines Sows 1926 - 1937 (Old Hat) A collection of old blues , bluegrass and other oddities.

Paolo Nutini - Mean Streets (Atlantic)

Champion Jack Dupree -- New Orleans Barrelhouse Boogie (Columbia)

Various Artists - Brazil Classics Vol. 1, Beleza Tropical (Luaka Bop)

Faithless - Outrospective (Cherry Records)
From techno slam to groovy soul.

Sade - The Best Of Sade (Epic)
Lovely smooth jazzy soul.

Of course, my music is very eclectic!
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So, after  the rant, some soothing music for you good folk in LJ land. Gillian Welch from her sublime Soul  Journey album and a track called Look At Miss Ohio.



Biting words indeed. Enjoy.

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