01 Mar 02 - 07:39 PM (#660986) Subject: RE: Tell Old Bill From: Art Thieme Masato, Thanks for finding this. I'd forgotten all about it. Best Regards, Art Thieme |
01 Mar 02 - 08:30 PM (#661035) Subject: RE: Tell Old Bill From: GUEST,MCP Of DIS MORNIN', DIS EVENIN', SO SOON (his title - not TELL OLD BILL as in his words in DT) Sandburg says (of the source) only that This arrangement is from the ballad as sung by Nancy Barnhart, painter and etcher, of St. Louis The site: Old Town School of Folk Music - A Companion to the Old Town School of Folk Music Songbook, Stories & Information Compiled and edited by Mark Dvorak - has the following to say of it:
While Gibson's records may sound like run-of-the-mill white-boy folk to modern listeners, he played an important role in popularizing folk music to American audiences in the 1950s at the very beginning of the folk boom. His 12-string guitar style influenced performers like Gordon Lightfoot and Harry Chapin; he was a mainstay at one of the first established folk clubs in the U.S., the Gate of Horn in Chicago; and he wrote songs with Shel Silverstein and Phil Ochs, as well as performing in a duo with Hamilton Camp. Most of all, he was one of the first folkies on the scene - when he began performing and recording in the mid-'50s, there was hardly anyone else playing guitar-based folk music for an educated, relatively affluent audience. Gibson helped Joan Baez and Phil Ochs in their early days, and was managed by Albert Grossman, who later handled the affairs of such giants as Bob Dylan and Peter, Paul & Mary. He did continue to perform in Chicago in the latter part of his life until he passed away from Parkinson's disease in September 1996 at the age of 64. Sources: • "Sing Out!" Magazine, Volume 9, Number 2. • "All Music Guide" on the World Wide Web. Recordings on file by: Bob Gibson, Jim Post. |
08 Aug 08 - 02:26 PM (#2408610) Subject: RE: Tell Old Bill From: Art Thieme It's good to see that some of us are still kickin' around.--I suspect some are more worse for wear than others... Art |
09 Aug 08 - 02:14 PM (#2409403) Subject: RE: Tell Old Bill From: Scorpio Thanks so much, Suffet, for supplying the chords to go with the tune I have stuck in my head. |
15 Sep 08 - 08:50 PM (#2441610) Subject: RE: Origin: Tell Old Bill From: Janie In the FWIW dept., here are a couple of nice clips from YouTube with very different feels to them. Eric Bibb & Brian Kramer Not sure who this is |
06 Nov 14 - 03:52 PM (#3675176) Subject: RE: Origin: Tell Old Bill From: GUEST,Joseph Scott Ben Harney published a variant of "This Morning This Evening So Soon" as "You've Been A Good Old Wagon But You've Done Broke Down" in 1895. A recording of Harney singing it himself can be heard on youtube if you search on ben harney wagon. The folk song Harney heard by 1895 was similar to the "Dummy Line" that Bascom Lunsford said he learned in 1898. |
31 Mar 25 - 09:42 PM (#4220109) Subject: RE: Origin: Tell Old Bill From: GUEST,Mark Sweet I ran across this song by the Coon Creek Girls, who played at the Renfro Valley KY barn dance show in the 1930s. The chorus is similar to the Tell Ol Bill chorus except for the changing of the “so soon” line. Etta Mae Ledford was the mother of JP Pennington, later of Exile. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_PJqqSmKAdQ |