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Subject: performer on the Grand Ole Opry From: GUEST,1827Byrd Date: 11 Aug 02 - 12:55 PM Back in the 1940's there was a performer on the Grand Ole Opry named Robert Lunn (or Lund). He specialized in humerous and novelty songs. Grandfather's Clock and a talking blues were two of his best known. A 33 rpm record came out in the 1960's or there abouts. Does anyone know where a copy of that album can be obtained? |
Subject: RE: Help: performer on the Grand Ole Opry From: masato sakurai Date: 11 Aug 02 - 01:17 PM At least one CD (Robert Lunn: The Original Talking Blues Man) has been released, but Yahoo! says "This Product Is Currently Not Available on Yahoo! Shopping". Info on Robert Lunn is given in Charles K. Wolfe, A Good-Natured Riot: The Birth of the Grand Ole Opry (CMF/Vanderbilt, 1999, pp. 237-240). ~Masato |
Subject: RE: Help: performer on the Grand Ole Opry From: masato sakurai Date: 11 Aug 02 - 01:25 PM The LP was released in 1962 as The Original Talking Blues Man (Stardy SLP-228). |
Subject: RE: Help: performer on the Grand Ole Opry From: masato sakurai Date: 11 Aug 02 - 01:49 PM From AMG All Music Guide:
Robert Lunn |
Subject: RE: Help: performer on the Grand Ole Opry From: Stefan Wirz Date: 11 Aug 02 - 02:00 PM now we have (at least) TWO 'Original Talking Blues Men' - the other being Chris Bouchillon Any hints on which of them has been 'more original' than the other ? |
Subject: RE: Help: performer on the Grand Ole Opry From: Art Thieme Date: 13 Aug 02 - 05:39 PM I do think Chris Bouchillon was the first. His 78rpm record came out in 1927 if my memory is correct. The other side was "ANNAH", Won't You Open That Door"----a great song. Art |
Subject: RE: Help: performer on the Grand Ole Opry From: Stewie Date: 14 Aug 02 - 02:35 AM Your memory is fine, Art. As Stefan has on his site, 'Talking Blues/Hannah' were recorded by Bouchillon on 4 Nov 1926 and released by Columbia on some unrecorded date in April 1927 [Meade, Spottswood, Meade biblio-discography]. Stefan, there seems little doubt that Bouchillon was 'more original'. Linnell Gentry's encyclopedia of country music indicates Lunn toured with Uncle Dave and Acuff, but his earliest appearances on the Grand Ole Opry were in 1938, continuing on until 1958. In his 'Country Roots: The Origins of Country Music' Hawthorn Books 1976, Douglas B. Green writes at page 58:
Another exponent of blues style, or more specifically a blues style, in country music's middle years was the Opry's Robert Lunn, 'The Talking Blues Boy'. Talking blues - hard-luck stories, occasionally quite risque, narrated over a bluesy guitar accompaniment - was not a new form, having been pioneered on record by Chris Bouchillon and others in the 1920s. It was Lunn, however, a frequent part of Roy Acuff's road show, who kept the style alive long after its initial popularity had waned, and it was thus unfortunate that Lunn died just as urban folk groups such as the New Lost City Ramblers were reviving the talking blues and delighting a new generation and a new audience with them. --Stewie. |
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