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And the Tin Pan Bended and the Story Ended...

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Download links and information about And the Tin Pan Bended and the Story Ended... by Dave Van Ronk. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Blues, Jazz, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 24 tracks with total duration of 01:18:45 minutes.

Artist: Dave Van Ronk
Release date: 2004
Genre: Blues, Jazz, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 24
Duration: 01:18:45
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Down South Blues 4:20
2. Dave Speaks 7:34
3. You've Been a Good Old Wagon 2:04
4. Dave Speaks 2:28
5. Don't You Leave Me Here 3:18
6. Dave Speaks 1:53
7. Did You Hear John Hurt? 2:34
8. Dave Speaks 5:21
9. Green, Green Rocky Road 3:42
10. Dave Speaks 0:28
11. Jelly Jelly 2:49
12. Nobody Know You When You're Down and Out 3:58
13. Dave Speaks 4:41
14. One Meat Ball 1:56
15. Buckets of Rain 4:01
16. Dave Speaks 1:31
17. Sometime (Whatcha Gonna Do) 2:37
18. Sportin' Life Blues 4:07
19. Dave Speaks 3:29
20. Ace In the Hole 4:17
21. Dave Speaks 2:57
22. St. James Infirmary 3:50
23. Thank You 0:21
24. Urge for Going 4:29

Details

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Dave Van Ronk did as much as anyone to midwife and instill quality control in the urban folk boom of the early '60s, and his death in 2002 signaled for many the passing of an era. Now Smithsonian Folkways has issued his last concert, held in October 2001 in Takoma Park, and from the opening song, a delicately sung version of Scrapper Blackwell's "Down South Blues," it is obvious that listeners are in the midst of an autumnal performance. Van Ronk's deliberate jazz phrasing is still there, as are the signature guitar skills, but the gruff power in his voice is all but gone, replaced by a soft, hoarse whisper, and there are many times when you can hear his difficulty drawing breath in the spaces between singing. All of this brings a tremendous intimacy and poignancy to several of the songs here, and the hushed delivery gives songs like Len Chandler and Bob Kaufman's "Green, Green Rocky Road" an uncommon power to connect. The between-song comments by Van Ronk (who had just learned of his cancer diagnosis prior to the show) reveal an intelligent, humorous man with a tremendous passion for music, particularly jazz, and a hornman's sense of timing. Every song here carries a graceful sense of urgency, but Van Ronk's versions of Jimmie Cox's "Nobody Knows You (When You're Down and Out)" and Tom Paxton's "Did You Hear John Hurt?" are particularly powerful, and on the former song, Van Ronk sounds remarkably like Louis Armstrong or a casually relaxed and resigned Tom Waits. Newcomers to Van Ronk's music should probably sample his earlier albums first, since they give a clearer version of this performer in his prime, but longtime friends and fans will find the dignity, grace, and intimacy of this last show to be a very special farewell.