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Old Songs Newly Found

GUEST,gillymor 18 Jul 25 - 10:10 AM
GUEST,gillymor 20 Jul 25 - 10:39 AM
GUEST,gillymor 24 Jul 25 - 11:30 AM
GUEST,pattyClink 26 Jul 25 - 10:25 AM
Fred 26 Jul 25 - 11:07 AM
GUEST,gillymor 26 Jul 25 - 12:47 PM
GUEST 27 Jul 25 - 07:09 AM
GUEST,gillymor 27 Jul 25 - 07:34 AM
GUEST,PHJim 27 Jul 25 - 07:43 AM
GUEST,PHJim 27 Jul 25 - 07:49 AM
GUEST 27 Jul 25 - 08:25 AM
Stilly River Sage 27 Jul 25 - 12:34 PM
GUEST,gillymor 29 Jul 25 - 06:49 AM
GUEST 31 Jul 25 - 06:38 AM
GUEST,gillymor 31 Jul 25 - 06:40 AM
GUEST,keberoxu 31 Jul 25 - 08:46 AM
pattyClink 31 Jul 25 - 10:28 PM
GUEST,gillymor 01 Aug 25 - 05:56 AM
GUEST,gillymor 04 Aug 25 - 09:20 AM
pattyClink 04 Aug 25 - 10:47 PM
GUEST,gillymor 05 Aug 25 - 08:38 AM
GUEST,gillymor 06 Aug 25 - 11:23 AM
Beer 06 Aug 25 - 12:06 PM
GerryM 06 Aug 25 - 06:58 PM
Rex 08 Aug 25 - 11:50 AM
GUEST,gillymor 09 Aug 25 - 08:56 AM
pattyClink 09 Aug 25 - 03:52 PM
Beer 09 Aug 25 - 06:21 PM
GUEST,gillymor 12 Aug 25 - 08:07 AM
GUEST,gillymor 15 Aug 25 - 07:28 AM
GUEST,gillymor 18 Aug 25 - 09:27 AM
GUEST,gillymor 18 Aug 25 - 10:12 AM
Beer 20 Aug 25 - 09:07 AM
GUEST,gillymor 22 Aug 25 - 10:17 AM
GUEST,gillymor 22 Aug 25 - 01:31 PM
GUEST,gillymor 28 Aug 25 - 10:44 AM
Beer 28 Aug 25 - 04:55 PM
GUEST,gillymor 29 Aug 25 - 06:45 AM
Beer 30 Aug 25 - 08:57 AM
GUEST,gillymor 30 Aug 25 - 09:15 AM
GUEST,gillymor 30 Aug 25 - 10:28 AM
sciencegeek 01 Sep 25 - 01:25 PM
GUEST,gillymor 10 Sep 25 - 09:58 AM
GUEST,gillymor 10 Sep 25 - 10:11 AM
Fred 10 Sep 25 - 05:43 PM
GUEST,gillymor 11 Sep 25 - 04:54 AM
Fred 11 Sep 25 - 08:51 AM
Beer 11 Sep 25 - 09:20 AM
GUEST,gillymor 14 Sep 25 - 12:44 PM
Beer 19 Sep 25 - 07:47 AM
GUEST,gillymor 19 Sep 25 - 11:16 AM
GUEST,gillymor 19 Sep 25 - 11:23 AM
GUEST,gillymor 19 Sep 25 - 11:29 AM
Beer 21 Sep 25 - 08:20 AM
GUEST,gillymor 22 Sep 25 - 08:37 AM
Beer 22 Sep 25 - 04:48 PM
GUEST,gillymor 27 Sep 25 - 07:46 AM
GUEST,gillymor 27 Sep 25 - 08:37 AM
GUEST,gillymor 02 Oct 25 - 11:14 AM
Beer 05 Oct 25 - 08:34 AM
GUEST,gillymor 06 Oct 25 - 06:50 AM
GUEST,gillymor 10 Oct 25 - 09:23 AM
Beer 11 Oct 25 - 12:09 PM
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Subject: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 18 Jul 25 - 10:10 AM

I've been singing this one lately, Hearts Overflowing by Rice Rice Hillman and Pedersen. This was written by Mike Brewer of Brewer and Shipley and released in 1975 though it's new to me. Lovely singing and instrumental work with a brief guitar solo by the late, great Tony Rice.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 20 Jul 25 - 10:39 AM

This one's not so old but I just recently heard it for the first time and had to learn it. Poor Boys Delight by The Infamous Stringdusters from their first album Fork in the Road, released in 2007.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 24 Jul 25 - 11:30 AM

Here's one I recently discovered through the singing of the fabulous Sierra Farrell- A Man Like Me. Written by Roger Miller circa 1957-1960, as best as I can determine.
Due to overwhelmingly popular demand I'm going to make this a regular thing. If you've discovered any older songs that you wish to share, please do.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,pattyClink
Date: 26 Jul 25 - 10:25 AM

Well, if you're going to keep on displaying great taste like this, keep 'em coming!


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Fred
Date: 26 Jul 25 - 11:07 AM

Great selection so far, Gilly, can't wait to see what's next :)

-F


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 26 Jul 25 - 12:47 PM

There's more on the way.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST
Date: 27 Jul 25 - 07:09 AM

Here's an Old Timey/Bluegrassy version of the old sailor's song that I came across a few years back, Shenandoah. Trampled by Turtles gets my vote as one of the best band names of all time.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 27 Jul 25 - 07:34 AM

That was me.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,PHJim
Date: 27 Jul 25 - 07:43 AM

Tennessee Blues, written by Bobby Charles in 1972, is a song I've always enjoyed performing.

Tennessee Blue - Bobby Charles - 1972

Geoff Muldaur also does a fine job on this song.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,PHJim
Date: 27 Jul 25 - 07:49 AM

I'll admit that I don't consider a 1972 song to be an "Old Song" I learned it in 1975 from a Geoff Muldaur LP and much of my repertoire was from the thirties and earlier.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST
Date: 27 Jul 25 - 08:25 AM

I love that guitar intro on Tennessee Blues. Small Town Talk is another good one from that album.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 27 Jul 25 - 12:34 PM

I'm enjoying your selections. Keep it up!

(I liked Richard Thompson's 1000 Years of Popular Music for some of the old songs he brings up and puts in a context.)


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 29 Jul 25 - 06:49 AM

Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think) is a pop song from the '50's that I was unaware of until I heard Jim Kweskin, of jug band fame, perform it as the title cut on a solo CD . It's a fun song to sing with a great singalong chorus and it totally jives with my philosophy.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST
Date: 31 Jul 25 - 06:38 AM

That was a monumental project by RT and he deserves props for having the hutzpah to cover Oops I Did it Again. :^)

Craigie Hills is an Irish emigration song that Caladh Nua does on their Happy Days CD in a more uptempo manner than what I'm familiar with. I'm not sure I've ever heard a song where the tune and bittersweet lyrics were so well suited to one another. A lovely arrangement with some outstanding mandolin and bouzouki work.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 31 Jul 25 - 06:40 AM

Once again, that's me. Oops I did it...


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,keberoxu
Date: 31 Jul 25 - 08:46 AM

I know "Enjoy Yourself" from the recordings of Louis Prima.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: pattyClink
Date: 31 Jul 25 - 10:28 PM

Ran across a copy of Ten Thousand Goddam Cattle, a worthy book on the American West and its cowboys and songs, written by Katie Lee. She was a unique singer who was a great defender of the Colorado River, and she recorded and researched Old Dolores, a favorite song of some mudcatters.

Anyway, when she mentioned Steve Fromholz, who was struggling to make it in the music business in 1968, I went over to youtube and found this pretty great song and recording.

The Man With the Big Hat


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 01 Aug 25 - 05:56 AM

Nice, I haven't heard that one in a long while.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 04 Aug 25 - 09:20 AM

This may not jive with the theme of this thread, such as it is, but the accordion player Flaco Jimenez passed on the other day so I thought I'd link to a couple of songs that might demostrate the range this master musician had.

He'll Have to Go , from Ry Cooder's excellent Chicken Skin Music LP, it was a hit for Jim Reeves 1960.

Streets of Bakersfield , sung by Dwight Yoakam and Buck Owens. Buck made a fine recording of this Homer Joy song back in 1972, with a Don Rich harmony vocal, that didn't do much on the charts


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: pattyClink
Date: 04 Aug 25 - 10:47 PM

Here's a good look at Mr. Jimenez, without the cheezy-sleazy cover art on that Cooder thing.

La Bamba


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 05 Aug 25 - 08:38 AM

In the 80's I saw Peter Rowan play a bar in Blanco, TX and to my surprise FJ was there. One of the tunes they performed was The Free Mexican Air Force. Magical.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 06 Aug 25 - 11:23 AM

Don't This Road Look Rough and Rocky has been around as a Bluegrass standard for a long time. Flatt and Scruggs released it in 1954 and put their names on it but it seems the song goes back a lot farther. When I heard Meghan Dudle sing it recently it dawned on me that it is a truly wonderful song. Lovely vocals and sweet mandolin. It's on her 2010 You Are Always In My Dreams CD. She's also a heck of an old time fiddler.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Beer
Date: 06 Aug 25 - 12:06 PM

Really enjoying this thread and the music you have posted gillymor.
Adrien


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GerryM
Date: 06 Aug 25 - 06:58 PM

Rough and Rocky has been done several times at the Mudcat Worldwide Zoom singarounds.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Rex
Date: 08 Aug 25 - 11:50 AM

Many thanks to Patty for remembering Katie Lee. And Steven Fromholz, his Texas Trilogy alone is worth looking into. But back to Katie, yes her book, Ten Thousand Goddam Cattle is a fine view into the old cowboy songs done in her own way. All through it is her search for the source of Old Dolores which she found, along with its maker, James Grafton Rogers. Her book was ready to go in 1960 along with the LP but with a different title, "Songs the Cowboys Taught Me". I think that title was chosen by an unnamed publisher. Katie wanted the former, it being the name of an actual cowboy song and I think she dug in her heels. The book and LP emerged 16 years later from a less known Arizona publisher but it had the title she wanted. Katie followed her own path.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 09 Aug 25 - 08:56 AM

That's nice to hear, Beer.

Whispering Pines is one that slipped through the net for me, I wasn't familiar with it until I heard someone sing it a few years back. This Iris Dement cover version was apparently used in The Horse Whisperer and contains some lovely guitar and mandolin work. Written by Howard Crockett it was a B side for Johnny Horton, the "Honky Tonk Man" guy, in 1958.

That got me thinking about another beautiful song also named Whispering Pines . The Band cut it on their seminal, eponymously named album released in 1969. With music by Richard Manuel and lyrics by Robbie Robertson it's sung here by Doug Paisley with accompaniment by The Band's keyboard genius, Garth Hudson.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: pattyClink
Date: 09 Aug 25 - 03:52 PM

That's a great nugget about Katie Lee, she certainly did march to her own drummer. Might have backfired though, as far as publicizing her causes, would have been nice if the book came out a lot sooner!


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Beer
Date: 09 Aug 25 - 06:21 PM

As a youngster, Whispering Pines by my singing idol Johnny Horton was a favorite of his. But to hear Iris Dement with her haunting voice sing this is also very very special.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 12 Aug 25 - 08:07 AM

Midnight on the Water, I'd been playing this old Texas fiddle tune on the mandolin quite awhile before discovering that someone had put words to it. That someone was John Croizat, who is listed as one of the fiddlers on this Kate Wolf recording from her Lines on the Paper LP. The tune is credited here to Luke Thomasson, father of another Texas fiddler, Benny Thomasson.

While on the subject of the late, great Kate, might as well link to one of her best-known songs, Across the Great Divide.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 15 Aug 25 - 07:28 AM

While leafing through a notebook recently looking for something to sing I came across Keep Your Distance , off of Richard Thompson's Rumor and Sigh album. I was captivated by this song when I first heard it, the lyrics, the music, all the vocals, just the entire production got to me on a personal level. It's one of my favorite "Country Music" songs though I lost track of it for quite awhile. Buddy Miller did a fine job with it and I can imagine the late George Jones covering it as well.
It's hard to believe but Rumor and Sigh was released 34 years ago so I guess this one does qualify as an old song. Another one from that album, a send up of Margaret Thatcher, called Mother Knows Best, also has elements of Country Music, including some red hot guitar work by RT.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 18 Aug 25 - 09:27 AM

It's Worth Believing written by the late Gordon Lightfoot is a song released in 1972 that I was unfamiliar with until I heard Herb Pedersen sing it on his Lonesome Feeling album. Mr. Pedersen's been around for a long time as a Bluegrass banjo player, Country Music band member (Desert Rose Band), harmony singer and songwriter (Wait a Minute, Old Train) but I found I really liked his understated lead vocal style after hearing this song. With stellar pedal steel by JayDee Maness.

More of my favorites from Lightfoot (the guy could really put together a song):
Home From the Forest from Tony Rice's landmark Manzanita LP and one from GL himself, an early song that he rerecorded in the '70's (and much improved, IMO)
Steel Rail Blues, with tasteful guitar work by Red Shea and Lightfoot.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 18 Aug 25 - 10:12 AM

I have to admit I missed out on a number of Lightfoot songs until I heard Tony Rice sing them, TR was a big Lightfoot fan and there is even a collection of his GL covers on CD. I think Song For a Winter's Night was one of the best. Listen to this through a decent quality audio device if you can, it's a lovely recording.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Beer
Date: 20 Aug 25 - 09:07 AM

Love your find with "It's Worth Believing". Been a Lightfoot fan from his very beginnings. Thanks
Adrien


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 22 Aug 25 - 10:17 AM

Yep, Beer, Lightfoot was a gift.

Sunlight, Jesse Colin Young passed away in March and in remembering him I came across this lovely song from the Hippie Dippie days that he did with the Youngbloods. I used to sing this long ago but now it's a bit of a challenge for my limited vocal range. I also fished out the Soul of a City Boy LP, his first solo album with just him and his acoustic which really showcases his unique, and I'd say beautiful, singing voice. My younger brother and I spent months dropping and lifting the needle trying to learn his guitar part on this one Four in the Morning.
NY Times obit here.

I also happened on Hippie From Olema , Lowell Levinger's (aka Banana, Youngbloods guitarist) response to Merle Haggard's Okie From Muskogee, remade in a Bluegrass setting off his Get Together: Banana Recalls Youngbloods Classics album, released in 2015 and featuring JCY on harmony vocal. I saw them perform this one at a Youngblood's concert in the early '70's and don't think I've heard it since.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 22 Aug 25 - 01:31 PM

Looks like a pay wall on the NY Times obit so here's one from NPR-
https://www.npr.org/2025/03/18/nx-s1-5331329/jesse-colin-young-obituary


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 28 Aug 25 - 10:44 AM

As a child I heard Joan Baez sing Matty Groves on an early LP and later on encountered fine versions by Doc Watson and Fairport Convention, among others. Much later I came across Billy Ross doing this old ballad on his South Street CD and it captivated me all over again. Matty Groves

Billy Ross has become a favorite though he doesn't seem to have a lot of recorded output available. My introduction to his artistry was on the first Ossian LP where he did an excellent rendition of The Echo Mocks the Corncrake, providing the vocal and dulcimer (followed by very intense jig). The Echo Mocks the Corncrake/I Hae a Wife O Ma Ain


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Beer
Date: 28 Aug 25 - 04:55 PM

WOW!! What a great Jig.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 29 Aug 25 - 06:45 AM

The dots for that slip jig are here, The Session. It's not too difficult.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Beer
Date: 30 Aug 25 - 08:57 AM

I can't read music but play by ear. I also don't play the fiddle but love to accompany them on my guitar. However, I went beyond what you posted and checked other links that came up. I ended up spending way to much time listening to some great fiddling sessions.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 30 Aug 25 - 09:15 AM

Time well wasted, Beer. :-)


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 30 Aug 25 - 10:28 AM

I don't read music well enough to play off it so if I can't learn a tune by ear I gather the abc notation at The Session, The Fiddle Companion or abcnotation.com and go to https://michaeleskin.com/abctools/abctools.html and convert it to tablature (his tools work for a variety of stringed instruments and tunings). I then move off from the paper as soon as possible.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: sciencegeek
Date: 01 Sep 25 - 01:25 PM

I fell in love with Craigie Hills when we first heard Dolores Keane and John Faulkner performed for LITMA many years ago, I don't remember which album it's on


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 10 Sep 25 - 09:58 AM

A young lady (young compared to me, anyway, she was probably in her 50's) showed up at our last loosey goosey jam and when her turn to sing came around she introduced "a Suzy Boguss song" and did a wonderful job on Someday Soon, all on a heirloom pre-war Gibson guitar that had a huge sound. Well, when the proceedings were winding down I broke out Judy Collins Who Knows Where the Time Goes LP and played J.C.'s version for the whippersnapper and, of course, she went crazy for it. S. Bogguss did a lovely version but the J.C. one may be my all time favorite recording. You've got a great song being sung by a great singer with a great backup band including James Burton on guitar, Buddy Emmons on pedal steel and Van Dyke Parks on piano, all supporting each other and the singer so beautifully. Someday Soon

Another Ian Tyson-penned gem is performed here by Tony Rice (yep, I'm a T.R. freak) outside of his usual string band setting - Summer Wages


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 10 Sep 25 - 10:11 AM

I agree sciencegeek. Here is the wonderful Delores Keane doing Craigie Hills live on a TV broadcast with some stellar backing.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Fred
Date: 10 Sep 25 - 05:43 PM

This is a good source for gig material - nicked 5 songs to date ;)

-F


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 11 Sep 25 - 04:54 AM

That is really nice to hear, Fred.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Fred
Date: 11 Sep 25 - 08:51 AM

Gilly,

you're doing an excellent job with this thread, mate, excellent :)

-F


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Beer
Date: 11 Sep 25 - 09:20 AM

I agree as well Fred.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 14 Sep 25 - 12:44 PM

Well, remembering these old songs has been a lot of fun for me, guys.

Back in the '90's I saw a Native American/Anglo cowboy, singer, storyteller and craftsman named Brownie Ford perform at a folk festival in Louisiana and was instantly captivated by his singing and was surprised to learn later on that he was about 90 years old, he sure didn't sound it or look it. We had a brief chat and bought his Mountains, Swamps & Honky-Tonks CD (It's not in print but it's available as a Mp3 and on streaming services). Of all the cool songs on the recording, mostly old ballads and old country, I Washed My Hands in Muddy Waters really jumped out at me. I probably first heard Johnny Rivers version of it back in my teen years and still like it but on hearing Brownie's version I realized what a concise and compelling story it is, told in just four verses and a chorus with some timely punctuation by David Doucet and DL Menard on guitar. It was written by Joe Babcock, Stonewall Jackson had a hit with it on the country charts in 1965.I Washed My Hands in Muddy Water

Stonewall had another hit with Smoke Along the Track in !959 which Emmmylou Harris covered with her acoustic band The Nash Ramblers. Written by Alan Rose and Don Helms, Dwight Yoakam did a fine cover of it as well on his Live in Austin,TX CD.
Smoke Along The Track


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Beer
Date: 19 Sep 25 - 07:47 AM

Very informative and enjoyable to listen to. Thanks gillymor.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 19 Sep 25 - 11:16 AM

Your welcome, Beer. It's been my pleasure.

Flipping through the vinyl the other day I came across a long-forgotten LP, a sampler from Greenhays called The Gathering. One of the tracks is Heather on the Moor sung by Paul Brady. According to the liner notes PB played the guitar, whistle and mandolin on the track with Andy Irvine on harmonica (I think he had a broken arm at the time). Heather on the Moor.
Brady and Irvine also collaborated on their monumental Andy Irvine Paul Brady LP (with Kevin Burke and Donal Lunny) and among the many wonderful cuts was Plains of Kildare, which recently showed up in a Mudcat thread regarding Stewball. Plains of Kildare

Another Scottish song, The Rambling Rover came from Andy M. Stewart of Silly Wizard. For some reason I'd always assumed that Stewart resurrected it from the "Ballad Boom" of the '60's but in tracking it down for this post found that he actually wrote it. I recently heard Siobhan Miller cover it and was charmed by her vocal and by the entire arrangement. The Rambling Rover.
She also covers some other older gems like Pound a Week Rise on her Strata CD.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 19 Sep 25 - 11:23 AM

I also wanted to mention that I've got a playlist on Spotify entitled, not surprisingly, Old Songs Newly Found. It doesn't exactly follow the goings on of this thread but it contains most of the songs mentioned here plus some that aren't, yet. I'll try to update it.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 19 Sep 25 - 11:29 AM

It's not your welcome, Beer. You are welcome. Jeeesh!


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Beer
Date: 21 Sep 25 - 08:20 AM

No problem at all gillymor. B.T.W., absolutely love Paul Brady and the song you posted was a gem.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 22 Sep 25 - 08:37 AM

In case you haven't heard it, Beer, here's Paul Brady performing his arrangement of Arthur McBride https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBGkhPx529g
that was also on the Irvine/Brady LP. I'd also recommend the Missing Liberty Tapes CD which includes live versions of Arthur McBride and other Brady arrangements of traditional songs like The Lakes of Pontchartrain and Mary and the Soldier. He's got a great backing band on it which includes most of the guys who played in Planxty at one time or another. Welcome Here Kind Stranger was also a lovely recording. You might say I'm a bit of a Brady fan.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Beer
Date: 22 Sep 25 - 04:48 PM

This is a classic for sure. I never get tired of it.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 27 Sep 25 - 07:46 AM

The Parting Songs thread sparked a memory of Won't You Come and Sing For Me?, a song we used to close the proceedings with at a Bluegrass jam (after we burned out on Circle Be Unbroken) I was a part of until about 25 years ago. It was sung by 2 young ladies and everyone joined in on the chorus, even the banjo players. Our voices echoing off the roof of the pavilion would give me chills but we always left with a warm feeling. The chorus went like this:

Sing the hymns that we sang together,
In that plain little church with the benches all worn.
How dear to my heart, how precious the moment
We stood shaking hands and singing the songs.

Won't You Come and Sing for Me?

Hazel Dickens wrote the song and she had this to say about it:

“I’m really not religious, to tell the truth. However, when I was growing up, I was impressed by the love and kindness that was openly shared and displayed among the brothers and sisters of the old Primitive Baptist church. It was that and the singing of the old songs that stayed in my memories down through the years (not the preaching). Particularly at the end of the service after they sang the parting song, they go around and shake hands and greet each other, humbling themselves before each other with smiles and hugs and invitations to go home with them and share a meal. This kind of humility and harmonious spirit of a common people inspired me to write this song as a tribute to that place and time tucked away in the corner of my memory.”

I can relate to her words as a non-believer who regularly attended a local UU church back then. Hazel recorded the song with her musical partner Alice Gerrard on a Folkways album of the same name which was released in 1973. It featured other-worldly singing and the playing of budding mandolin genius David Grisman.

Among the reasons I'm drawn to songs like this and other Bluegrass and Old Time songs is that they don't shy away from uncomfortable topics like dying, death, grief and remembrance. I used to sing a song or two at the Jams and one was Larry Spark's Love of the Mountains, written by Allen Mills, which whenever I hear it makes me think of my folks with a bit of sadness and a lot of gratitude. Larry is flat out one of my favorite singers. Love of the Mountains.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 27 Sep 25 - 08:37 AM

I should have mentioned that the Won't You Come and Sing for Me? LP was recorded in 1965 but wasn't released until '73 for reasons I could not discover.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 02 Oct 25 - 11:14 AM

Back in the '70's I was way into Dave Van Ronk and even got a big J-50R Guild like the one he played. Later on I heard a couple of songs that I'd learned off his recordings featured in contemporary films. Fare Thee Well (Dink's Song) was collected by John Lomax in 1904 (Wikipedia says 1909, corrections welcomed here), Second Hand Songs called it a 'Folk song that tells the story of a woman deserted by her lover when she needs him the most. In 1904, ethnomusicologist John Lomax recorded it with his huge Edison recording machine as sung by an African American woman called 'Dink' in a tent camp of migratory levee-builders in Texas. It was published in 1934 in John and Alan Lomax's "American Ballads and Folk Songs". The Lomax recording is believed to be lost (or worn out at least).'
It was prominently featured in the Coen brother's film Inside Llewyn Davis, which was based on Van Ronk's posthumous memoir, The Mayor of MacDougal Street. Here is the film's star, Oscar Issac singing it with Marcus Mumford and some of the Punch Brothers providing the instrumental backing, Fare Thee Well (Dink's Song)

The other song was He Was a Friend of Mine. Willie Nelson sang it in the film Brokeback Mountain but I'm partial to the way Jerry Jeff Walker performed it on his Scamp CD. He Was a Friend of Mine


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Beer
Date: 05 Oct 25 - 08:34 AM

Love Jerry Jeff Walker. To many have left us. But we can still listen to them.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 06 Oct 25 - 06:50 AM

Yep, JJW was one of a kind.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Remembered
From: GUEST,gillymor
Date: 10 Oct 25 - 09:23 AM

Buddy Miller has written some wonderful songs, including Watching Amy Dance (with Julie Miller), but I especially like to hear him sing older songs with that soulful voice of his. That's How I Got to Memphis was written by Tom T. Hall and Miller really wails on it. Here it is off his Love and Other Lies album -That's How I Got to Memphis and a live solo version that's too good not to include here Live . A couple of other favorites are his version of the Bob Wills classic Time Changes Everything, written by Wills' lead singer Tommy Duncan, which he performs here with Asleep at the Wheel- Time Changes Everything . Then we have One of These Days, written by Earl Montgomery, it was a hit for George Jones in 1972 and Emmylou Harris recorded an excellent version on her Elite Hotel LP. Miller performs it live on an Emmylou tribute album- One of These Days.

The aforementioned Tom T. Hall was a prolific song writer who wrote a bunch of Country Music hits but he also performed my favorite version of the Bluegrass standard Fox on the Run (flirting with a theme here), with banjo titan J.D. Crowe on the 5 string. The song was actually written by British songwriter Tony Hazzard and Manfred Mann had a hit with it in the UK in 1968/69 (not to be confused with a song of the same name that Sweet had a hit with), American Banjo player Bill Emerson heard it, rearranged it, recorded it with Cliff Waldron and then The Country Gentlemen (where I first heard it) and the rest is Bluegrass history, Fox on the Run.


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Subject: RE: Old Songs Newly Found
From: Beer
Date: 11 Oct 25 - 12:09 PM

All good. Time Changes Everything is a song I do very often when I make my rounds at Senior Homes. Even tough far away from the Texas Swing State, here in Quebec it still left a mark. Especially Bob Wills


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Mudcat time: 11 October 5:45 PM EDT

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