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Bluegrass At the Roots, 1961

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Download links and information about Bluegrass At the Roots, 1961 by Don Stover, Lilly Brothers. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Country, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 56:49 minutes.

Artist: Don Stover, Lilly Brothers
Release date: 2005
Genre: Country, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 18
Duration: 56:49
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. In My Dear Old Southern Home 2:15
2. Midnight On the Stormy Sea 3:39
3. Forgotten Soldier Boy 3:16
4. Down On the Banks of the Ohio 4:21
5. Where Is My Sailor Boy? 3:10
6. Sinner, You Better Get Ready 3:01
7. What Would You Give In Exchange? 3:29
8. Oh, Hide You In the Blood 3:05
9. Little Annie 3:02
10. 'Neath That Cold Grey Tomb of Stone 3:06
11. Barbara Allen 7:10
12. The Fox and Hounds 2:29
13. John Hardy 3:31
14. Old Joe Clark 1:56
15. Salt River 1:34
16. Cornbread and 'Lasses and Sassafras Tea 2:13
17. The Waves On the Sea 2:46
18. Saints Go Marching In 2:46

Details

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Bluegrass at the Roots: 1961 is split half-and-half between the Lilly Brothers dueting in the traditional bluegrass "brother" style of the Monroe Brothers and the Blue Sky Boys; and a larger band session that brings in the phenomenal Don Stover on banjo, as well as band regular Herb Hooven on fiddle and bass, with Mike Seeger contributing occasional bass and detailed liner notes. The material focuses totally on the traditional side of things and might be too somber in general tone for some listeners. Although the Lilly Brothers recorded modern pieces and liked to mix the repertoire up, it must be said that they really sink their teeth into this chance to focus on old-timey music exclusively. The vocals from brothers Everett Allen and Bea Lilly are piercing, and as clean as a West Virginia mountain stream might have been before the mines were opened. Instrumentally, things only really jump when Stover steps in and drives ten-penny nails through the front of his banjo head. The recording quality is a trifle mousy sounding; it was supposedly done with an Ampex machine and Electrovoice microphones, so it must have happened in the mastering.