Showing posts with label Jug Band. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jug Band. Show all posts

Friday, February 15, 2019

Gus Cannon - Jug Band Blues Essentials

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 77:46
Size: 178.0 MB
Released: 2010
Styles: Jug Band, Pre-War Blues
Art: front

1. Wolf River Blues (2:38)
2. Ripley Blues (3:02)
3. Hollywood Rag (3:04)
4. Minglewood Blues (3:45)
5. Cairo Rag (2:58)
6. Mule Gets Up In The Alley (2:49)
7. Tired Chicken Blues (2:55)
8. Prison Wall Blues (2:37)
9. Heart Breakin' Blues (3:04)
10. Pig Ankle Strut (3:03)
11. Bugle Call Rag (3:01)
12. Noah's Blues (2:52)
13. Pretty Mama Blues (2:40)
14. Big Railroad Blues (3:18)
15. Viola Lee Blues (3:05)
16. Feather Bed (3:12)
17. Going To Germany (2:33)
18. Walk Right In (2:57)
19. Riley's Waggon (2:57)
20. Jonestown Blues (2:50)
21. Money Never Runs Out (2:49)
22. Madison Street Rag (3:14)
23. Springdale Blues (3:06)
24. Bring It With You When Come (2:45)
25. The Rooster's Crowing Blues (3:01)
26. Last Chane Blues (3:16)

A remarkable musician (he could play five-string banjo and jug simultaneously), Gus Cannon bridged the gap between early blues and the minstrel and folk styles that preceded it. His band of the '20s and '30s, Cannon's Jug Stompers, represents the apogee of the jug band style. Songs they recorded, notably the raggy "Walk Right In," were staples of the folk repertoire decades later, and Cannon himself continued to record and perform into the 1970s.
Self-taught on an instrument made from a frying pan and a raccoon skin, he learned early repertoire in the 1890s from older musicians, notably Mississippian Alec Lee. The early 1900s found him playing around Memphis with songster Jim Jackson and forming a partnership with Noah Lewis, whose harmonica wizardry would be basic to the Jug Stompers' sound. In 1914, Cannon began work with a succession of medicine shows that would continue into the 1940s, and where he further developed his style and repertoire.
His recording career began with Paramount sessions in 1927. He continued to record into the '30s as a soloist and with his incredible trio, which included Noah Lewis along with guitarists Hosea Woods or Ashley Thompson. (Side projects included duets with Blind Blake and the first ever recordings of slide banjo.) Often obliged to find employment in other fields than music, Cannon continued to play anyway, mostly around Memphis. He resumed his stalled recording efforts in 1956 with sessions for Folkways. Subsequent sessions paired him with other Memphis survivors like Furry Lewis. Advancing age curtailed his activities in the '70s, but he still played the occasional cameo, sometimes from a wheelchair, until shortly before his death. ~ AMG

Jug Band Blues Essentials

Last Chance Jug Band - Shake That Thing!

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 48:04
Size: 109.9 MB
Released: 1997
Styles: Jug Band, Memphis blues, Folk blues, Modern acoustic blues
Art: Front

1. Shake That Thing! (2:35)
2. Last Chance Blues (3:15)
3. Kansas City Blues (4:42)
4. Write Me A Few Lines (3:58)
5. Who Pumped The Wind In My Doughnut? (2:40)
6. King And Queen Blues (4:26)
7. Let Me Squeeze Your Lemon (4:46)
8. Beale Street Dandy (3:13)
9. Mississippi River Blues (3:03)
10. Poor Boy Long Way From Home (2:45)
11. Mister Crump (5:02)
12. The Judge He Pleaded (Viola Lee Blues) (4:16)
13. Time Is Winding Up (3:19)

Assembled to update the sound of the old Memphis jug bands of the 1920s and 1930s, the Last Chance Jug Band is led by David Evans, a scholar, field researcher, and director of the ethnomusicology department at the University of Memphis. This isn't an academic project in re-creating times past, though, but a real attempt to translate the sound of the old jug bands into a contemporary setting, which means, in a word, drums. So Shake That Thing rocks out with a wonderfully ragged and loose sound complete with jugs, washboards, and kazoos, all centered 'round Evans' slightly shaky (but very effective) high vocals. The end result is a Memphis street-corner party disc that is unbelievably fun. Highlights include "Last Chance Blues," the loopy "Who Pumped the Wind in My Doughnut," "Mississippi River Blues," and a solid cover of "Viola Lee Blues," here entitled "The Judge He Pleaded." ~Steve Leggett

Shake That Thing!

Saturday, December 22, 2018

Jake Leg Stompers - Hot Feet

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 66:47
Size: 156.8 MB
Released: 2007
Styles: Folk, Jug band
Art: Front

1. Big Bad Bill (2:45)
2. Cow Cow Stomp (4:00)
3. Tain't No Sin (2:58)
4. Limehouse Blues (3:17)
5. Alabama Jubilee (3:28)
6. Georgia Crawl (3:40)
7. Cuckoo (2:43)
8. Hard Travelin' (3:17)
9. Dallas Rag (4:00)
10. Miss The Mississippi (3:23)
11. Viola Lee Blues (3:04)
12. Run Mountain (3:33)
13. Cocaine Blues (3:54)
14. Sugar In My Bowl (3:27)
15. Sweet To Mama (3:48)
16. Sippin' On Jake (3:19)
17. Mobile Line (12:02)

Based in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, the Jake Leg Stompers offer tangy tastes of chicken-fried, pre-war, hokum-billy jug music to gourmet audiences throughout the greater Nashville, Middle Tennessee region. Acclaimed for their spirited, eclectic, and wildly unpredictable street performances, the Stompers are equally at home playing for dozens in night clubs or hundreds on festival stages.

Brandon Armstrong (string bass, trombone, tuba, jug, balaphone, mandolin, banjo, percussion, vocals)
Ron Bombardi (fiddle, guitars, mandolin, tinwhistles, accordian, jews harp, percussion, autoharp, vocals)
Bill Steber (vocals, guitars, banjo, ukelele, banjo-uke, harmonica, saw, mandolin, dujo, diddly-bow, autoharp)
Charlee Tidrick (vocals, fiddle, mandolin, washboard, percussion)
Sam Rorex (drums, percussion, guitar)

Hot Feet

Monday, October 29, 2018

The Even Dozen Jug Band - Jug Band Songs Of The Southern Mountains

File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Time: 26:13
Size: 60.0 MB
Released: 2009
Styles: Country Blues, Ragtime, Novelty, Folk Revival, Jug Band
Art: front

1. Come On In (2:39)
2. Mandolin King Rag (1:43)
3. Evolution Mama (3:16)
4. The Even Dozens (2:51)
5. I Don't Love Nobody (2:53)
6. Rag Mama (2:11)
7. France Blues (2:40)
8. The Original Colossal Drag Rag (2:56)
9. All Worn Out (2:50)
10. Sadie Green (2:10)

Personnel:
Banjo [5 String] - Frank Goodkin (tracks: 6), Pete Siegel (tracks: 10)
Banjo [6 String] - Pete Jacobson (tracks: 4, 6), Stefan Grossman (tracks: 2, 3, 8)
Blues Harp - John Benson (tracks: 7)
Fiddle - Fred Weisz (tracks: 4, 6, 8)
Guitar - Pete Jacobson (tracks: 2, 3), Pete Siegel (tracks: 5), Stefan Grossman (tracks: 1, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10)
Guitar [Second] - Pete Jacobson (tracks: 9)
Jug - Danny Lauffer (tracks: 1-3, 5-10)
Jug [First] - Danny Lauffer (tracks: 4)
Jug [Second] - Peggy Haines (tracks: 4)
Kazoo - John Benson (tracks: 8), Josh Rifkin (tracks: 1, 5-7, 10)
Mandolin - Dave Grisman (tracks: 2, 4-8, 10)
Piano - Josh Rifkin (tracks: 3, 4, 6, 8, 9)
Trumpet - Bob Gurland (tracks: 3, 5, 6, 8)
Vocals - Pete Jacobson (tracks: 3, 6, 9), Pete Siegel (tracks: 5), Steve Katz (tracks: 1, 7, 10)
Voice [Second] - Josh Rifkin (tracks: 3, 9), Maria D'Amato (tracks: 1, 7)
Washboard - Steve Katz (tracks: 2-9)

Notes: The Even Dozen Jug Band was founded in 1963 by the great country blues and ragtime guitarists Stephan Grossman and Peter Siegel in New York City. An old timey super-group of sorts, its members included John Sebastian (who later formed the Lovin' Spoonful), mandolinist extraordinaire David Grisman, guitarist Steve Katz (later with Blues Project and Blood, Sweat and Tears), vocalist Maria D'Amato (who later became singing star Maria Muldaur), and famed American musicologist and pianist Joshua Rifkin. The band was short lived and in 1964 released their only album, the highly influential "Jug Band Songs Of The Southern Mountains". The group made numerous appearances on television and performed at the famed Carnegie Hall in New York City. All selections newly remastered. ~ amazon

Jug Band Songs Of The Southern Mountains