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Favorite Art Thieme Songs

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olddude 28 Feb 09 - 08:30 PM
Jerry Rasmussen 28 Feb 09 - 08:34 PM
olddude 28 Feb 09 - 08:38 PM
Joybell 28 Feb 09 - 09:07 PM
Art Thieme 28 Feb 09 - 09:35 PM
olddude 28 Feb 09 - 09:44 PM
Big Mick 28 Feb 09 - 09:46 PM
GUEST,Gerry 28 Feb 09 - 10:27 PM
katlaughing 28 Feb 09 - 10:53 PM
Art Thieme 28 Feb 09 - 11:39 PM
Skivee 01 Mar 09 - 12:36 AM
Phil Cooper 01 Mar 09 - 09:22 AM
olddude 01 Mar 09 - 09:41 AM
olddude 01 Mar 09 - 10:36 AM
GUEST,DonMeixner 01 Mar 09 - 10:50 AM
katlaughing 01 Mar 09 - 11:28 AM
Waddon Pete 01 Mar 09 - 11:40 AM
Uncle Phil 01 Mar 09 - 11:48 AM
Cool Beans 01 Mar 09 - 12:32 PM
Art Thieme 01 Mar 09 - 12:50 PM
olddude 01 Mar 09 - 06:48 PM
GUEST,Gerry 01 Mar 09 - 08:46 PM
Art Thieme 01 Mar 09 - 11:46 PM
Art Thieme 01 Mar 09 - 11:57 PM
BK Lick 02 Mar 09 - 02:14 AM
GUEST,Gerry 02 Mar 09 - 06:45 AM
olddude 02 Mar 09 - 01:57 PM
kendall 02 Mar 09 - 02:58 PM
Art Thieme 02 Mar 09 - 04:22 PM
Big Mick 02 Mar 09 - 04:36 PM
GUEST,Charles Kratz 02 Mar 09 - 05:17 PM
Art Thieme 02 Mar 09 - 06:47 PM
kendall 02 Mar 09 - 07:22 PM
Art Thieme 02 Mar 09 - 07:35 PM
BK Lick 04 Mar 09 - 01:34 AM
GUEST,Gerry 04 Mar 09 - 05:21 PM
Bob Hitchcock 04 Mar 09 - 05:36 PM
bseed(charleskratz) 30 Jun 09 - 02:37 PM
Art Thieme 30 Jun 09 - 10:13 PM
olddude 30 Jun 09 - 10:21 PM
Ron Davies 30 Jun 09 - 10:35 PM
Art Thieme 30 Jun 09 - 11:58 PM
GUEST,George Stephens 01 Jul 09 - 12:58 AM
catspaw49 01 Jul 09 - 02:19 AM
Sandra in Sydney 01 Jul 09 - 04:21 AM
GUEST 01 Jul 09 - 02:23 PM
Art Thieme 01 Jul 09 - 07:04 PM
olddude 01 Jul 09 - 08:04 PM
TRUBRIT 01 Jul 09 - 09:53 PM
GUEST,George Stephens 01 Jul 09 - 11:22 PM
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Subject: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: olddude
Date: 28 Feb 09 - 08:30 PM

Keeping with my theme (no pun intended) on the great mudcat masters who gave us a lifetime of music. Art is a mudcat treasure and national one. Way to many to say what is my all time Art Thieme song but right now I am listening to Blue Mountain ...

so what is yours?


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Jerry Rasmussen
Date: 28 Feb 09 - 08:34 PM

There are countless songs of Art's that I love but having to pick one, the first that comes to mind is not a song but a tall tale, The Great Turtle Drive. I never tire of that one.

Jerry


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: olddude
Date: 28 Feb 09 - 08:38 PM

OH my Gosh
I never heard it Jerry only people talking about it . gotta hear that tall tale sometime

how about it Art share with us


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Joybell
Date: 28 Feb 09 - 09:07 PM

I've always loved, "That's the Ticket" from way before I knew Art.
Cheers, Joy


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Art Thieme
Date: 28 Feb 09 - 09:35 PM

Good people, here is the tall tale I told on stage for over 30 years. I originally got the tale from Jack Thorp's book Pardner Of The Wind. Mr. Thorp put out the first book of cowboy songs ever published in the USA in 1908. That was two years before John Lomax's book of cowboy songs came out in 1910.

THE GREAT TURTLE DRIVE (as adapted and told by Art Thieme -- after Jack Thorp)

Well, it had to be way over 100 years back. There was this fellow having dinner in a place in Kansas City. On the menu was turtle soup -- a very rare commodity out on the American frontier. He ordered himself a bowl of that turtle soup, spooned it down and enjoyed it quite a bit. THEN he got the bill.

After calming down and paying the huge $50.00 price tag on the one bowl of soup, he got to thinking about all the land terrapins out there on the prairie crawling around south of there. If he could gather a bunch of those turtles together he could make a tidy sum.

So this guy went out and hired a crew of fellows that he called Turtle Boys, and he sent them down to southern Texas -- where all the land terrapins roamed wild down there. He gave the boys gunny sacks, and they gathered together a big herd of about thirty thousand head o' turtle. It was an impressive sight; turtles just about as far as you could see. One fine summer day they got out there on the trail and headed 'em north -- the idea being to get 'em all the way to the railroad up near Abilene in Kansas. Truth be told, this was a pretty strange scheme. At the rate the land terrapins moved, about four or five feet per day, it would take them more than thirty years to get to market. But our entrepreneur was one of those Enron-Arthur Andersen, bank and stock market thief guys and, of course, he was blinded to the realities of his venture by all the dollar signs in his eyes.

Ya gotta kind of picture the details of it. They were riding along, hooting and a-hollering, just trying anything to get 'em to move out. Even shooting off their revolvers wasn't very effective. They fed them beans hoping it might sort of jet propel 'em along. (Bad idea.)

At night the turtle boys would be ridin' around the herd and singin' to 'em. Roping strays ya know. (It's not easy to rope a turtle. They just pull in their heads and legs and tail -- the rope just slips off.)

One amazing discovery was that the entire herd, all thirty thousand head o' land terrapins, had to be flipped over every night. The turtle boys had to dismount from their horses, walk over to the herd, and carefully, one by one, they had to flip over all the turtles onto their backs --- to keep 'em from stampeding. After a week or two of this, the turtle boys realized that the turtles' little legs waving around in the air all night tired them out so bad that the next day the animals could only make one or two feet at best. So they had to cut that out. It was all trial and error since a trail drive like this had never been done before.

One good thing that came out of all this was that while they were all bedded down for the night the females would lay eggs. Three weeks later they would hatch out into a secondary herd following the first herd. Our head man just got more and more dollar signs in his eyes. He had a picture in his mind of a whole long string of hurtle turds-------whew, I mean turtle herds -- all stretched out (as it were) all the way to the railhead up north in Abilene.

Well, eventually they got to the banks of the Red River -- that fabled stream that was infamous in the tales and songs of Texas. Sunning himself on the banks of the river was an impressive scholarly-looking mud turtle named Studs -- Studs Turtle. Now, he saw this thundering mass o' turtle flesh barreling down the bluff at him with their nostrils all flared and the steam pouring out -- and he got a little spooked! He jumped right into the river -- and swam away. But the land terrapins, being a few straws short of a bale, followed him into the river. Being land terrapins, of course they all sank like a rock -- and drowned.

Folks, as you might imagine (and I hope you are doing just that) this would've put a quick end to what has, through the years, come to be known as The Great Turtle Drive in the annals of western history. But the turtle boys, being quite resourceful wouldn't let it end there. They started digging these huge pits which they filled with red-hot coals. They pushed boulders into the pits and heated those up until they too were just glowing red hot with heat. Then, using small trees as levers, they pushed the hot rocks into the waters of the Red River. Slowly, the water started to heat up -- and then it started to seethe, boil, steam, and froth. For the next year at least, the Red River ran with turtle soup. Pure stuff. It kept the Indians fed through a very bad winter -- and everyone turned out pretty happy when it was all over.

A year later in that same restaurant in Kansas City, that same guy, this time having a nice bowl of beef stew, had another idea. He told his friend, "I just thought of something. If we could do it with turtles, maybe we should try it with COWS."

And that was the start of the cattle industry in the American West.

Yeah, all the singers of cowboy songs, and the reciters of cowboy poetry, and the lovers of cowboy movies, and the riders of all those bulls (both the mechanical kind and the real ones) -- also the Texans who toss the bull in all those bars -- they ALL owe this fellow a huge and heartfelt THANK YOU for providing them ALL with a subculture they could thrive and get rich and famous within. As my old uncle was so fond of saying, "Fame is proof of how gullible people can be!"

And if you are left wondering how I can sit here and tell this to you now, it's because I was there to see it as it all unfolded-----------and I have turtle recall!


Art Thieme
Peru, Illinois (Where our governors make our license plates!)


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: olddude
Date: 28 Feb 09 - 09:44 PM

Art
   that is priceless
God Bless you, and thank you for your gift of music to all of us.

Dan


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Big Mick
Date: 28 Feb 09 - 09:46 PM

..... Art is a rare gem of a man. I could no more select one song or one story than I could select my favorite kid. Just can't be done.

I love ya, Art. It is that simple. You once told me how Utah changed your performing life. I would say the same thing about you, my friend. I cannot imagine what performance would be like without you around to swipe this stuff from.

All the best,

Mick


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: GUEST,Gerry
Date: 28 Feb 09 - 10:27 PM

I heard him sing a couple of songs on the radio that I don't think he ever put on an album, and those songs were good enough to start me buying his LPs; Golden Vanity, and the Phil Ochs song, While I'm Here.


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: katlaughing
Date: 28 Feb 09 - 10:53 PM

Art has been one of the BIGGEST influences on me since I came to Mudcat and *met* him. His Cowboy's Barbara Allen has a really special place in my heart for a lot of reasons, not the least of which is his delivery of it, but also because I grew up in WY until I was eight and, lived there later, and the song references places I knew there. I love all of his music, though!

But, it's not just his music which has influenced me. It is his freely sharing and caring of his career and experiences which he tells about in such entertaining and humble, yet awesome ways. I know he thinks I go overboard sometimes and I might make him blush, but he IS one of my all-time heroes.

Just one example of the power of his artistry - no pun intended: inevitably, if my Rog or I are in a down mood or we've been snippy with one another, if I put on one of Art's CDs it never fails to lighten our moods and bring us back in sync with one another and our world. There were many miles travelled in Wyoming to Art's music and it brings those good times back to us any time we listen, again.

luvyakat


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Art Thieme
Date: 28 Feb 09 - 11:39 PM

Jeez, folks, thanks. I'm very glad you liked some of what I did last century. 'Twas an honor to be among you -- swimming in our little folkie pond.


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Skivee
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 12:36 AM

I'm also quite fond of "That's The Ticket". Please place one more chaulk mark in the proper column.


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Phil Cooper
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 09:22 AM

Pinery Boy, Death of Robin Hood, Master of the Sheepfold. Can't just pick one.


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: olddude
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 09:41 AM

Today it is "Betty and Dupree's blues"
I am speechless from the quality and volume of work Art has given us


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: olddude
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 10:36 AM

This is on the web that we all should read
                     
                            Art Thieme Biography
Art is America's best-loved troubador. Many years ago, a great singer by the name of T. Texas Tyler was known as "the man with a million friends". Unfortunately, Tex is no longer with us, but that title has passed on to Art Thieme. Art is a one man skiffle band. His main instruments are his guitar and banjo, but he plays everything from the saw, to the jew's harp, to the nose flute, as well as another dozen or so weird gadgets. None of them, however, is as wierd as his sense of humor. He tells the most outrageous puns and stories so well that you laugh even if you've heard them a dozen times or more. He has donated his time and talents to getting dozens of folk clubs started. He has taught children to make and play home-made instruments. He has taught other musicians, as well. He shares his songs with anyone who will listen. He has written many articles for folk publications. He has folk music radio shows. He he has performed in schools, in concert halls, at concerts, by campfires, and on riverboats. He has collected songs (and bad jokes), while travelling across the country, from hoboes, children and other musicians. Like a real balladeer, he may never sing or play a song the same way twice, but adds new interpretations with each performance. He is a real treasure! ~ Don Stevens, All Music Guide


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: GUEST,DonMeixner
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 10:50 AM

"While I'm Here" is certainly more proactive sounding than "When I'm Gone".
Hank Snow's The Last Ride is the Art Thieme song that comes to mind immediately. But Along side the Santa Fe Trail is probably my favorite.

Don


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: katlaughing
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 11:28 AM

And then there's the Tennessee Stud!


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Waddon Pete
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 11:40 AM

I'm not going to even try and choose!

All of them!


Best wishes,

Peter


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Uncle Phil
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 11:48 AM

And Art singing Jerry's A Handful of Songs.
- Phil
(and the stories never go out out style. I used the one about the dog who died after losing his tail a couple weeks ago, properly attributed to Art)


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Cool Beans
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 12:32 PM

I like "Vincent." Now, there's a song whose theme is art. What's that? Oh, Art Thieme. OK, it'd have to be "The Night Rider's Lament."


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Art Thieme
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 12:50 PM

I never learned or sang "When I'm Gone" or "While I'm Here" -- whatever it's called. For me, Terry Leonino and Greg Artzner (Magpie) did the definitive version of it. I'm left wondering who you heard do that song that you thought was me??!

Art


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: olddude
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 06:48 PM

Kat
for me there have only been two people that did Tennessee Stud!
that make me sit down in awe
one is Doc Watson
the other is Art Thieme


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: GUEST,Gerry
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 08:46 PM

Sorry, Art, in my imagination I can hear you singing "When I'm Gone," I'll just have to chalk it up as some kind of auditory hallucination on my part. So I'll vote for Billy Venero.


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Art Thieme
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 11:46 PM

Gerry,
I will happily accept "Billy Venero" --- It is a real favorite of mine too. And I've always felt that was a fine picking arrangement I figured out for it. What a gutsy/lame thing for me to do --- have the temerity to have my very first LP be a LIVE concert recording?! That old Kicking Mule album turned out o.k. I guess. That was the big bicwntennial year -- 1976 -- when we recorded that.

I have an idea that I'll P,M. you about.

Art


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Art Thieme
Date: 01 Mar 09 - 11:57 PM

Olddude,

I did get a ton of mileage out of Mr. Driftwood's old song. There are many good memories connected to it for me. like singing it in Arkansas for Jimmy in Glenn Ohrlin's barn one time. Carol and I were picking Stone County ticks off each other for a week every time we came home from there.

Ah nostalgia!!

Art


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: BK Lick
Date: 02 Mar 09 - 02:14 AM

I hope all y'all know about Stefan Wirz's lovingly crafted Art Thieme discography.


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: GUEST,Gerry
Date: 02 Mar 09 - 06:45 AM

Art, you'll need my email address, since I'm not a member.
It's gerry@ics.mq.edv.av except that you have to change each v to u.


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: olddude
Date: 02 Mar 09 - 01:57 PM

Art
if I were sitting in that barn listening and had to pick the ticks and fleas off of me afterwords,

I would have considered myself blessed cause I heard you do "Tennesse stud" it would have been worth it and a small price for me to pay

God Bless you


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: kendall
Date: 02 Mar 09 - 02:58 PM

No way could I pick a favorite.I've always loved his puns that he sprinkles here and there. Lock moss nesters indeed!


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Art Thieme
Date: 02 Mar 09 - 04:22 PM

Kendall, the fun of it was making folks think these were off the top o' my head. The hours I spent making it seem spontaneous---no matter how many times you might've heard it before. Thanks. Coming from you, it's a real compliment.
Art


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Big Mick
Date: 02 Mar 09 - 04:36 PM

You have that in common with Utah. That man spent hours and days familiarizing himself with the local goings on, and the jokes and humour, just so's he could sound unrehearsed and off the cuff...... It is the mark of the great storyteller,....... just like the Captain. There is much to learn from you good folks.

Mick


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: GUEST,Charles Kratz
Date: 02 Mar 09 - 05:17 PM

I love this romantic medly, particularly the second tune.

"Molly Darling/Mary Charlotte Anne McGhee"

And "Shake Sugaree" And "Cotton-eyed Joe"--just jaw harping and a capella vocal.

And dozens of others--Art's picking is wonderful, both on guitar and banjo; his storytelling is nonpariel, and he has the warmest, most expressive singing voice I've ever heard.

Oh, and I'm one of the lucky ones--I have a tape he gave me with "The Great Turtle Drive" on it, so as wonderful it is to read the tale (particularly with his recent twists), it's better to hear him tell it.

One song mentioned above I don't think I've heard him sing despite my owning four CDs and a tape is "The Night Rider's Lament," a song I truly love and wish I could do justice to, but lacking any falsetto, I can't do the yodel.

Charles (seed)


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Art Thieme
Date: 02 Mar 09 - 06:47 PM

Seed,

You got it! PM me with your mailing address and if my computer is burning CDs well enough, I'll send you a CD I put together of my favorites off those first two Kicking Mule Records LPs---------------long out o' print and never out on a CD. 'Billy Venero' is there too along with 'Night R. L.

Art


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: kendall
Date: 02 Mar 09 - 07:22 PM

"The secret of success is sincerity. Once you learn to fake that, you have it made." (George Burns)


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Art Thieme
Date: 02 Mar 09 - 07:35 PM

"Always be sincere, whether you mean it or not!" ---- Art

"Some people have tact. Others tell the truth!" ---Art

"Having 2 faces beats dining alone!" -- Art

Kendall I just put my choice over on your thread, of my favorite of all the songs I heard you sing over the many years. It's been a pleasure to know you and to hear you!


Art (again)


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: BK Lick
Date: 04 Mar 09 - 01:34 AM

Guess my favorite's gotta be "Down By The Embarras."
You can listen to it here -- hi la-lie lee la-lee!


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: GUEST,Gerry
Date: 04 Mar 09 - 05:21 PM

Admirer's of Art Thieme might want to have a look at my update http://www.mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=119111&messages=1 of the song, Chevrolet, in which I manage to get references to four of Art's albums into the last two verses.


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Bob Hitchcock
Date: 04 Mar 09 - 05:36 PM

I think it's very hard for me to come up with one favorite as everything Art seems to do is just wonderful. "The State of Illinois" has always been one of those songs that pops into my head every now and then, maybe it's because my mother-in-law is from there.

I really enjoyed the stories and the jokes too, even though he stole one of mine years ago (but that was ok), the Cottage Cheese story always made me laugh.

Bob


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: bseed(charleskratz)
Date: 30 Jun 09 - 02:37 PM

I just got a new favorite Art Thieme tune, and a revelation about one of the things that makes Art so great. The tune--or rather medley--is "What Does the Deep Sea Know--Cairo--The Lakes of Ponchartrain" and the revelation is that at his best--which is most of the time--Art is two fine artists at the same time, a wonderful singer/storyteller (one of the best) and a great instrumentalist. In this medley he is not so much accompanying himself with the banjo but doing duets, his banjo far more than a background for his singing. Since I first bought "The Older I Get the Better I Was" ten years ago I've been blown away by both his singing and his playing, but it was just this morning as I was listening to him that I realized that there is as much personality and expression in his playing as his singing. Art, thanks so much for the treasure that is your entire ouvre.

Charles


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Art Thieme
Date: 30 Jun 09 - 10:13 PM

Well, now you've let the secret out. Yep, I'm two people at the same time. Schizoid as all hell! I'm here to tell you that being two-faced isn't as bad as you might think. And schizophrenia sure does beat dining alone all the time!

Thanks, too, for the nice things said about my music, folks. But personally, I have no favorite Art Thieme song. All of my favorites are by many of you!!!!!!!

Love to all,

Art


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: olddude
Date: 30 Jun 09 - 10:21 PM

Naw Charles, I think the old guy may have had one or two that was OK
LOL ... Seriously though I can't think of one he ever did that was not great


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Ron Davies
Date: 30 Jun 09 - 10:35 PM

Love Art's version of "Bye and Bye". You can almost hear and smell the cauldrons boiling in the crisp autumn. And "Master of the Sheepfold".   And I can't count the people I've told about the Nesters. And never forgotten to give Art credit. (Well, hardly ever.)


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Art Thieme
Date: 30 Jun 09 - 11:58 PM

Mudcatter, Sian In Wales, P.M.'d me a year or two ago and said that he'd told the "Nesters" line to a friend near the real Loch Ness. Later, he was in a pub there, and heard it retold--more than once.

So, I guess one o' my lines has gone back where the original tale began --- and into the oral tradition to boot. I've felt honored by that ever since I heard about it.---Besides it's just really very cool I thought.

Art


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: GUEST,George Stephens
Date: 01 Jul 09 - 12:58 AM

Art,

I'm sure you don't remember me; we met some 25 years ago before a Folklore Society of Greater Washington concert -- on the occasion when Kathy Fink presented you with the "pango" (or vice versa; scholars bicker...).

I say almost every time I perform that "Art Thieme taught me to sing" (in the sense of learning to let a song speak for itself)... not to mention providing about half my repertoire...

I've gotten lots of mileage out of "The Pinery Boy" and "The Shanty Boy From the Big Eau Claire".

Is it conceivable that in the above mentioned concert, while playing the musical saw, you said "There's a vas deferens between playing the saw and not playing it" (or words to that effect)? Or was it my fevered imagination?

George


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: catspaw49
Date: 01 Jul 09 - 02:19 AM

I dunno' how I missed this thread the first time around but I almost missed it this time as well.

Its hard to pick just one song for Art, but I think I'd say it would be one which Art has expressed great passsion about on many occasions here at Mudcat. Art stated the song was a signal event on the timeline of the serious folk revival and that song was, of course, Waltzing with Bears.

Spaw


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Sandra in Sydney
Date: 01 Jul 09 - 04:21 AM

I think the poodle song, "North Country Tragedy' has to be my all-time favourite.

Or maybe the "Cowboy's Barbara Allen'


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: GUEST
Date: 01 Jul 09 - 02:23 PM

I like Santa Fe Trail, Shake Sugaree, East Texas Red, Belle Starr, Cowboys Barbara Allen, That's the Ticket, Billy Venero, Sioux Indians,Wilderness Road, Bibble-a-la-doo, Master of the Sheepfold, The Soo Line, Walkie in the Parlour. Shanty boy on the Big Eau Claire, Getting in the Cows, etc, etc, etc, etc,etc. Art is the master folk singer. We should all try to let the song sing to us, just like Art. Burl


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: Art Thieme
Date: 01 Jul 09 - 07:04 PM

George Stephens,
Thanks for the memories of those Washington D.C. times. I think that might've been the trip to the East Coast on which I met Craig Johnson and heard some of his unbelievably nearly perfect song creations. But, as you sort of said, the "panjo" (bedpan banjo) I made, and played in schools for a few years is the very same one I eventually gave to Cathy Fink. --- The line I often used was, "Make sure when you play the saw that the teeth are away from your crotch a few inches or else you could perform a cut-rate vasectomy on yourself. And, yes, there is a "vas deferens" between playing the saw right and doing it wrong."

And Sandra, that 'poodle song'/"North Country Tragedy" was written by Craig Johnson.

Burl, "The Soo Line" is one of Craig's too---as is "The Keweenaw Light" and "Way Down The Road" -- I do wish Mr. Johnson had made a recording of his thaumaturgic songs himself; but no! So I'm just glad I put those 4 songs on my records.--------------- Love to you and Elaine!

Again, thanks good people. I miss hanging with you at festivals and gigs.

Onward,

Art


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: olddude
Date: 01 Jul 09 - 08:04 PM

Art
where did Billy Vernero (sp) come from? that is one of my all time favorite cowboy songs thanks to you ... who wrote that one or is it trad?

Dan


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: TRUBRIT
Date: 01 Jul 09 - 09:53 PM

sorry - i am a groupie -- i love all his stuf.......


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Subject: RE: Favorite Art Thieme Song
From: GUEST,George Stephens
Date: 01 Jul 09 - 11:22 PM

Its my understanding Craig Johnson has a solo album nearly ready to go from Five String Productions. Hope I'm not spreading outright, boldfaced lies!

George


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