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50 Years: Where Do You Come From? Where Do You Go?

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Download links and information about 50 Years: Where Do You Come From? Where Do You Go? by The New Lost City Ramblers. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 81 tracks with total duration of 03:42:21 minutes.

Artist: The New Lost City Ramblers
Release date: 2009
Genre: World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 81
Duration: 03:42:21
Buy on iTunes $24.99
Buy on Amazon $22.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Colored Aristocracy 2:07
2. Hopalong Peter 2:07
3. Don't Let Your Deal Go Down 2:29
4. When First Unto This Country 2:48
5. Sales Tax On the Women 3:16
6. Rabbit Chase 2:33
7. Leaving Home 3:08
8. How Can a Poor Man Stand Such Times and Live? 3:36
9. Franklin D. Roosevelt's Back Again 2:21
10. I Truly Understand You Love Another Man 2:32
11. The Old Fish Song 4:55
12. The Battleship of Maine 3:08
13. No Depression In Heaven 2:58
14. Dallas Rag 2:05
15. Bill Morgan and His Gal 2:58
16. Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss 2:32
17. The Lady of Carlisle 3:34
18. Brown's Ferry Blues 2:49
19. My Long Journey Home 2:39
20. Talking Hard Luck 2:42
21. The Teetotals 1:02
22. Sal Got a Meatskin 3:27
23. Railroad Blues 2:43
24. On Some Foggy Mountain Top 2:28
25. My Sweet Farm Girl 2:25
26. Crow Black Chicken 2:36
27. John Brown's Dream 1:34
28. Riding On That Train 2:21
29. The Titanic 3:00
30. Don't Get Trouble In Your Mind 2:18
31. Cowboy Waltz 2:50
32. Shut Up In the Mines of Coal Creek 1:52
33. Private John Q 2:02
34. Old Johnny Bucker Wouldn't Do 3:03
35. I've Always Been a Rambler 3:18
36. Automobile Trip Through Alabama 3:17
37. Who Killed Poor Robin? 3:54
38. My Wife Died On Saturday Night 2:20
39. Little Satchel 2:48
40. Black Bottom Strut 2:10
41. The Cat's Got the Measels, the Dog's Got the Whooping Cough 2:57
42. Dear Okie 2:15
43. Smoketown Strut 2:18
44. The Little Girl and the Dreadful Snake 3:32
45. Fishing Creek Blues 2:03
46. '31 Depression Blues 3:15
47. Black Jack Daisy 2:32
48. Victory Rag 2:05
49. The Little Carpenter 2:51
50. On Our Turpentine Farm 2:52
51. Parlez-Nous À Boire 3:36
52. Valse Du Bambocheur 3:02
53. Old Joe Bone 1:58
54. Colored Aristocracy (featuring The Rich Family) 1:41
55. Cluck Old Hen (featuring Fields Ward, Wade Ward) 1:35
56. Young Emily (featuring Dellie Norton) 2:05
57. Going Down the River 2:41
58. Billy Grimes the Rover 2:28
59. Pretty Little Miss 3:22
60. Dark & Stormy Weather 2:27
61. Sioux Indians 3:04
62. Moonshiner 3:10
63. Long Lonesome Road 2:58
64. Cotton Eyed Joe 3:16
65. New White House Blues 2:44
66. Milwaukee Blues 2:34
67. Poor Old Dirt Farmer (featuring Tracy Schwarz, Peter Schwarz) 3:44
68. Cady Hill (featuring Sam McGee, Arthur Smith, Kirk McGee) 1:25
69. I Belong to the Band (featuring Reverend Gary Davi) 4:00
70. Freight Train (featuring Elizabeth Cotten) 2:41
71. I'm Leaving You (featuring Maybelle Carter, Sara Carter Bayes) 2:38
72. Walking Boss (featuring Clarance Tom Ashley) 2:32
73. Mother's Advice (featuring Dock Boggs) 2:52
74. Hills of Mexico (featuring Roscoe Holcomb) 2:32
75. Galax Rag (featuring Kilby Snow) 2:52
76. Say Old Man, Can You Play a Fiddle? (featuring Eck Robertson, Mike Seeger, Tracy Schwarz) 2:53
77. Awake, Awake (featuring Dillard Chandler) 4:15
78. Bowling Green 3:52
79. Madeleine (featuring Dewey Balfa, Rodney Balfa) 2:57
80. Fishing Creek Blues (featuring Eric Thompson, Jody Stecher, Hank Bradley, Larry Hanks, Sue Draheim, Mack Benford, Will Spires, Kenny Hall) 2:42
81. Sally In the Garden (featuring The New Tranquility String Band) 2:20

Details

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The New Lost City Ramblers were instrumental in bridging the gap between the young urban folk musicians of the early '60s, who embraced the form and feel of old-time American music, and the last of the great rural singers and players who had actually grown up with the music in its original incarnation. The Ramblers (John Cohen, Mike Seeger, and Tom Paley — Tracy Schwarz replaced Paley in 1962) not only covered the songs, they also sought out and made field recordings of traditional Southern musicians like Cousin Emmy, Maybelle Carter, Eck Robertson, Roscoe Holcomb, Dock Boggs, Kilby Snow, and many others, thus preserving as well as gently tweaking and reinventing old-time American string band music for a new century. This wonderful set combines two earlier collections, The Early Years: 1958-1962 (featuring the original trio) and Out Standing in Their Field, Vol. 2: 1963-1973 (featuring the later version of the group with Schwarz), with a third disc called Where Do You Come From? Where Do You Go?, which presents some of the field recordings NLCR did of the musicians that inspired them. The end result is a well-rounded portrait of an important and vital string band who were always careful to stay true to the intent and execution of the precious musical resource they drew from, never doing any song a disservice, and always working to create a seamless bridge between the old and the re-imagined.