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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: Deckman Date: 11 May 07 - 01:45 PM Dean and Mike, I much appreciate your kind words. Dean, I thought I'd speak to your "flashy guitar" mention: I've never wanted to be a "flashy guitar" player, and in that I have succeeded. I was trained, by the late Bill Higley, that the SONG was what folk music was all about. The story ... the story ... always the story. He raised me to "never let the guitar get in the way of the song." And in that regard, I think I do succeed. Again, thanks muchly. Bob |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: kendall Date: 12 May 07 - 12:55 PM I just finished listening to Bob's CD, and I must comment. You know how I hate to talk...:-) Anyway, this is done in my favorite method, that is, one voice and one instrument. That's a folk singer. I hadn't heard the Nightingale's song in all of 50 years! I learned it from Buryl Ives and for years I thought he and I were the only ones who knew it. Excellent selection too. Last but not least, the diction. That is so important, especially in a folk or trad. song. Come on folks, buy this so he can make another! I personally knew the woman Gordon sang about in Mrs. McDonald's Lament. When I was in the Warden Service her husband was a lobsterman who never quite made it, and it was a sad family. |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: Stilly River Sage Date: 14 May 07 - 11:50 PM Bob, Child support arrived today, so grin and Bear it--the Czech is in the Male. :) Maggie (the correct address is on the envelope) |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: Deckman Date: 15 May 07 - 10:32 AM It's in the mail, Maggie! Bob |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: frogprince Date: 16 May 07 - 11:08 PM refreshify |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: Stilly River Sage Date: 17 May 07 - 10:43 PM It got here this afternoon! Good! Thanks! |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: Joe Offer Date: 22 May 09 - 03:49 PM There's a nice article about Bob at heraldnet.com: Published: Friday, May 22, 2009 Retired Everett carpenter now hammers out folk songs By Julie Muhlstein Herald Columnist Bob Nelson gets up early. By 4 a.m., he's often at work in his home office, which has so much equipment it looks like a recording studio. At 72, he's making good on a promise. "It's a promise I made to myself years ago," said Nelson, a folk singer who lives in Everett with his wife, Judy. I visited Nelson on Wednesday to see in person what keeps him so busy. He had sent e-mail explaining his efforts: "I started learning, collecting and singing folk songs when I was 13," he wrote. Now retired from his work as a carpenter, Nelson has time to devote to preserving the music he loves. "I'm converting over 300 reel-to-reel tape recordings from analog to digital CDs. I also have over 400 cassette recordings," he said. "It's a long process. I've been at it seriously about five months, and have burned up four tape recorders." Past meets future at Nelson's house, where shelves are loaded with boxes of old tapes. He also has a treasure trove of vinyl records, and a turntable to help him save the Northwest's vintage folk music for future generations. He has yet to find a proper repository -- a university, library or music organization -- for the archives he's creating, which also include short biographies Nelson is writing about performers. "My goal is to preserve this material so that 50 or 100 years from now, some future researcher will have these songs available," he said. "Otherwise, they will die with me." Traditional folk music is alive in his heart, and it's a big part of his history. In the 1950s and '60s, Nelson was caught up in the spirited folk scene in Seattle's University District. He performed around the region at hootenannies -- he calls them "hoots" -- jam sessions, coffeehouses and college concerts. Back then, Nelson would haul with him a 60-pound Webcor reel-to-reel tape recorder, capturing performances of folk legends and obscure artists. "It was a working tool, that reel-to-reel. I'd take it to a hoot, then listen and practice," he said. Nelson was an original and active member of the Pacific Northwest Folklore Society, founded in 1953 by the late Walt Robertson, Don Firth and others. In recent years, Nelson, Firth and Stewart Hendrickson have revived the Pacific Northwest Folklore Society (www.pnwfolklore.org). The group has sponsored folk music performances at the Everett Public Library and other venues. "I'm having a lot of fun," said Nelson, who in 2007 recorded "Songs I Sing After Dark," a CD collection of traditional songs that includes "The Old Settler," the Ivar Haglund ballad that was printed on Ivar's restaurant place mats. "I had basically hung it up for about 40 years while I was making a living and being a father," Nelson said of singing and performing. He's been happy to reconnect with artists he knew years ago. Today's folk scene "is very active," he said. Although Nelson was among the founders of the Northwest Folklife Festival, he said he won't be at this weekend's event. Held annually over Memorial Day weekend at the Seattle Center, the festival has grown too big and too far from its roots for Nelson's taste. "I avoid it like the plague," he said. That's not to say Nelson hasn't rubbed shoulders with folk music giants. The night Joan Baez played at the Seattle World's Fair in 1962, Nelson said Baez and a friend didn't want to stay at a downtown hotel. They ended up in the Seattle home of Nelson and his first wife, he said. And Pete Seeger? "I talked to Peter about two weeks ago," Nelson said of the 90-year-old folk legend. At home in Everett, Nelson feels blessed to have played a part in the Northwest's folk legacy. He's proud of himself for learning computer skills needed to save the music -- the songs of David Spence, Bill Higley, Walt Robinson and many more. "I was a carpenter and folk singer, and I had to become a techie," Nelson said. He figures that compiling CDs, cross-indexing songs performed by several singers, and writing biographies will take at least two years. "We don't want the music to die with us," Nelson said. "I can't die till it's done." © 2009 The Daily Herald Co., Everett, WA |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: Deckman Date: 22 May 09 - 04:15 PM One minor correction ... I didn't "Talk" with Pete two weeks ago, I sent him a note. CHEERS, bob |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: Don Firth Date: 22 May 09 - 05:43 PM Thanks for posting that, Joe. Great picture of Bob in the article (taken--um--a couple of years ago). Don Firth |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: Deckman Date: 22 May 09 - 06:22 PM Don ... that's me in the lower picture! When son Chris saw that picture he said: "Jeeze ... what happened?" |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: Stilly River Sage Date: 22 May 09 - 07:57 PM Children can be unkind, Bob. But we're probably harder on ourselves than anyone else is about our aging looks. :) |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release! From: Deckman Date: 22 May 09 - 08:45 PM I just realized that the "on-line" version only had one picture of me taken when I was about 19. The printed version also had me as I look today ... an amazing difference. Must be all that good vodka ... eh? bob |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release-Songs I Sing After Dark From: Stilly River Sage Date: 22 May 09 - 10:57 PM The link you sent had only one photo, but I always read the Herald online and when I went directly to the page it had that handsome youthful shot on top. You had to click on "2" to see SRS |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release-Songs I Sing After Dark From: Peace Date: 22 May 09 - 11:45 PM This is the first I've seen this thread. Great news, Bob, although it's a little late on my part. Congratulations. Bruce |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release-Songs I Sing After Dark From: Stilly River Sage Date: 23 May 09 - 12:24 AM It's a wonderful CD, Bruce. You need to get your hands on this one. |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release-Songs I Sing After Dar From: sharyn Date: 23 May 09 - 01:25 AM This is the first time I've seen this thread, too. Thanks for reviving it, Joe. Sharyn |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release-Songs I Sing After Dark From: Peace Date: 07 Jun 09 - 11:56 PM What a CD. Bob, you have a really good voice and I love the songs you do. I hope the radio shows goes (went) well and that both you guys are happy with it all. You have done some dynamite work on "SISAD". I'm sorry it's taken me two years to hear 'em. Thank you very much. |
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Subject: RE: Bob Nelson's CD release-Songs I Sing After Dark From: Deckman Date: 08 Jun 09 - 08:29 AM Hi Bruce ... I'm glad you liked the songs on my CD. It was a real labor of love. I've been a "hard core" ballad singer since I was 14. After all those years, it's impossible NOT to keep singing. I have an idea for a whole new and different approach to some more CD's. Stay tuned. CHEERS, Bob ... still in Everett ... where the dogs and cops are on the loose at night! |
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