Georgia Banjo Blues
Download links and information about Georgia Banjo Blues by Art Rosenbaum. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 23 tracks with total duration of 57:22 minutes.
Artist: | Art Rosenbaum |
---|---|
Release date: | 2003 |
Genre: | World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist |
Tracks: | 23 |
Duration: | 57:22 |
Buy it NOW at: | |
Buy on iTunes $11.99 |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Saline County | 1:58 |
2. | Sundown | 2:10 |
3. | How Come That Blood On Your Shirt Sleeve? | 3:03 |
4. | Chilly Winds/Old Joe Clark/Salt River/Johnny Bring the Jug Around the Hill | 3:24 |
5. | Roll ‘Em On the Ground | 1:49 |
6. | I Don’t Love Nobody | 1:56 |
7. | Jubilee | 1:49 |
8. | John Hardy | 3:29 |
9. | Cincinnati Train | 1:45 |
10. | Georgia Blues | 3:02 |
11. | Cacklin’ Hen | 2:06 |
12. | Swannanoa Tunnel | 3:43 |
13. | Rickett’s Hornpipe/The Flowers of Michigan | 2:26 |
14. | Shoot the Turkey Buzzard/Last Chance | 2:38 |
15. | If I Lose My Money Let Me Lose | 2:53 |
16. | Cold Frosty Morning/Cottage In the Grove | 2:16 |
17. | Coal Creek March/Last Payday At Coal Creek | 4:14 |
18. | Muskrat | 2:25 |
19. | Want to Go to Cuba But I Can’t Go Now | 2:00 |
20. | Seventy-Four | 2:24 |
21. | Billy Button | 1:05 |
22. | Echoes of the Ozarks | 2:55 |
23. | Last Cheater’s Waltz | 1:52 |
Details
[Edit]Art Rosenbaum, like Mike Seeger and John Cohen and other urban folk revival survivors, fell under the spell of traditional Appalachian music in the 1960s, and has spent his lifetime promoting it, seeking it out, writing about it (four books, including a banjo instruction manual), and most importantly, playing it. Rosenbaum has developed a variety of finger-picked and clawhammer styles on banjo, and though his voice is a bit pitch-challenged and wavering, that's the way you're supposed to sing this stuff, at least if it's a facsimile you're after, and that is the goal here. Georgia Banjo Blues is a stripped-down affair, with most tracks just Rosenbaum solo on banjo, and for the record, few of these tunes are in the blues category. The playing is studied and back-porch, the singing is, well, appropriate, and in the end, the whole project emerges as a charming and subtle primer of the genre. Highlights include the eerie and haunting "How Come That Blood on Your Sleeve?," a breakneck version of "John Hardy," a joined medley of "Coal Creek March" and "Last Payday at Coal Creek" (pieces usually associated with old time banjo player Pete Steele), and a credible Dock Boggs impersonation on "Want to Go to Cuba but I Can't Go Now," although Boggs never attempted anything at the velocity Rosenbaum uses here. The goal of Rosenbaum, Seeger, Cohen, and the so-called "Young Fogies" isn't to innovate, but to replicate and preserve this fascinating music, and Georgia Banjo Blues does its part with a very special charm and joy.