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Your Past Comes Back to Haunt You, Vol. 4

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Download links and information about Your Past Comes Back to Haunt You, Vol. 4 by John Fahey. This album was released in 2011 and it belongs to Blues, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Acoustic, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 01:01:35 minutes.

Artist: John Fahey
Release date: 2011
Genre: Blues, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Acoustic, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 20
Duration: 01:01:35
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Saint John’s Hornpipe 1:12
2. Sail Away Ladies 1:16
3. Dreaming Under the B & O Trestle 3:19
4. 900 Miles 4:36
5. Prince George’s Dance 2:59
6. Improvisation for Flute and Guitar 3:33
7. Dorothy / Calvert Street Blues [Brenda’s Blues] 1:40
8. Brenda’s Blues 0:46
9. Buck Dancer’s Choice 1:29
10. Night Train to Valhalla 4:22
11. In the Pines 2:49
12. Pretty Polly 3:31
13. Take This Hammer 4:09
14. Yazoo Basin Blues 6:38
15. Stomping Tonight On the (Old) Pennsylvania / Alabama Border 5:44
16. Smoky Ordinary Blues [Dance of the Inhabitants] 2:22
17. Revelation On the Banks of the Pawtuxent 3:17
18. Bean Vine Blues [Pea Vine Blues] 2:18
19. Green Blues 2:46
20. Stone Pony 2:49

Details

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Your Past Comes Back to Haunt You: The Fonotone Years, 1958-1965 is a massive John Fahey document that was a full decade in the making by Dean Blackwood of Revenant, guitarist Glenn Jones, and Lance Ledbetter of Dust-to-Digital. Released a full decade after Fahey's death, it contains 115 tracks compiling the guitarist's complete 78-rpm recordings for Joe Bussard's Fonotone label — solo, as Blind Thomas, the Mississippi Swampers, etc. — remastered from the original reel-to-reel tapes. These are Fahey's earliest recordings, the vast majority of which are previously unreleased on CD. The 12"-by-12" collection also contains an 88-page hardback book with essays and track annotations by Jones and contributions from Eddie Dean, Claudio Guerrieri, Malcolm Kirton, Mike Stewart, and R. Anthony Lee, as well as a previously unpublished 1967 interview by Douglas Blazek., Rovi