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Susan Reed-appreciation Related threads: Obit: Folksinger Susan Reed RIP (1926-2010) (33) Susan Reed - Available Recordings (42)
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Subject: Folklore: Susan Reed From: mkebenn Date: 19 Sep 16 - 01:04 PM Once again, a heart felt thank you to the 'cat in general. Somehow, I was unaware of this lady. Thanks to the resources available on the net I fixed that quick enough. I saw her name in the thread on Burl Ives and searched her. Right up my alley. Once again I find a singer I really like after they are gone. sigh, Mike |
Subject: RE: Susan Reed From: GUEST,keberoxu Date: 19 Sep 16 - 01:59 PM Another Elektra artist, wasn't she, or am I mistaken? |
Subject: RE: Susan Reed-appreciation From: Joe Offer Date: 19 Sep 16 - 02:10 PM According to our Elektra thread (click), Susan made 3 albums on that label. I don't know of other recordings she may have made. I wish somebody would market all the Elektra label recordings (with liner notes) on mp3. I'd buy them all. |
Subject: RE: Susan Reed-appreciation From: GUEST,Bob Coltman Date: 20 Sep 16 - 06:24 AM Susan Reed was originally a 78 rpm artist for RCA Victor in the late 1940s. A bewitchingly popular cafe artist around New York, following a South Carolina childhood. Her Elektra career followed with a 10" LP in the later 1950s. A ravishing voice—I cannot get her songs of the Auvergne, originally sung at Town Hall in NYC (LP on Columbia) out of my head. My devotion is to traditional style, yet Susan Reed's work is some of the first I heard, and I still love it. The folksong performers of the 1940s and 1950s are all too easily overlooked by those whose first knowledge of folksong singing starts with the 1960s. The '50s (and to some extent the '40s, when Guthrie, Seeger, Burl Ives, Leadbelly, Josh White and many others first came on the scene, and were recorded by Moe Asch and others) were the breakout era so far as mass culture was concerned. They deserve to be better known. Bob |
Subject: RE: Susan Reed-appreciation From: GUEST,Bob Schwarer Date: 20 Sep 16 - 01:32 PM I found a bit of her work on YouTube. You might have to ignore a few clicks, but I like it. |
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