Music Millennium

Delmore Brothers - Classic Cuts 1933-1941

Details

Format: CD
Label: JSP
Catalog: 7727
Rel. Date: 05/11/2004
UPC: 788065772727

Classic Cuts 1933-1941
Artist: Delmore Brothers
Format: CD
New: In Stock $28.99
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Formats and Editions

DISC: 1
MP3
1. I Ain't Got Nowhere to Travel
2. Smokey Mountain Bill and His Song
3. Gonna Lay Down My Old Guitar
4. Lonesome Yodel Blues
5. Brown's Ferry Blues
6. I'm Mississippi Bound
7. I've Got the Big River Blues
8. Girls Don't Worry My Mind, The
9. Bury Me out on the Prairie
10. Frozen Girl, The
11. Lonesome Jailhouse Blues
12. Blue Railroad Train
13. When It's Summertime in a Southern Clime
14. Blow Yo' Whistle, Freight Train
15. Down South
16. Brown's Ferry Blues, Pt. 2
17. I Got the Kansas City Blues
18. Alabama Lullaby
19. Fugitive's Lament, The
20. I'm Going Away
21. I Long to See My Mother
22. Lorena, The Slave
DISC: 2
MP3
1. Nashville Blues, The
2. Lover's Warning, The
3. I'm Worried Now
4. Take Away This Lonesome Day
5. Promise Me You'll Always Be Faithful
6. Don't You See That Train
7. It's Takin' Me Down
8. That Yodelin' Gal -- Miss Julie
9. I'm Gonna Change My Way
10. Happy Hickey -- The Hobo
11. Lonesome Yodel Blues
12. Put Me on the Train to Carolina
13. My Smokey Mountain Gal
14. Take Me Back to the Range
15. No Drunkard Can Enter There
16. Southern Moon
17. False Hearted Girl
18. Budded Rose, The
19. Blind Child, The
20. Are You Marching With the Savior
21. No One
DISC: 3
MP3
1. Lead Me
2. I Need the Prayers of Those I Love
3. I've Got the Railroad Blues
4. Weary Lonesome Blues, The
5. Heavenly Light Is Shining on Me
6. Wonderful There
7. Singing My Troubles Away
8. They Say It Is Sinful to Flirt
9. Till the Roses Bloom Again
10. When We Held Our Hymn Books Together
11. Hi De Ho Baby Mine
12. Goodbye Booze
13. Careless Love (Bring My Baby Back)
14. In That Vine Covered Chapel in the Valley
15. Cannon Ball, The
16. 15 Miles from Birmingham
17. Where Is My Sailor Boy
18. Just the Same Sweet Thing to Me
19. Better Range Is Home, A
20. Don't Let My Ramblin' Bother Your Mind
21. Wabash Blues
22. Go Easy Mabel
DISC: 4
MP3
1. Over the Hills
2. Dying Truckdriver, The
3. Scatterbrain Mama
4. Happy on the Mississippi Shore
5. Rainin' on the Mountain
6. See That Coon in a Hickory Tree
7. Storms Are on the Ocean, The
8. Back to Birmingham
9. Eastern Gate, The
10. God Put a Rainbow in the Clouds
11. There's Trouble on My Mind Today
12. Silver Dollar
13. Old Mountain Dew
14. In the Blue Hills of Virginia
15. Make Room in the Lifeboat for Me
16. When It's Time for the Whip-Poor-Will to Sing
17. Will You Be Lonesome Too?
18. Broken Hearted Lover
19. I Now Have a Bugle to Play
20. Baby Girl
21. Gospel Cannonball
22. Honey I'm Ramblin' Away

Details:

Boxed Set

More Info:

The Delmore Brothers adapted their style with the times. At the start of their career, their then innovative approach, superseded many pioneer country artists. Toward the end of their career they adapted to the sounds of the 1940s and '50s, arguably pioneering the rockabilly sound. Alton usually took lead vocals, but they could switch high and low parts between them. Their influence on The Monroe Brothers is undoubted. Apart from harmony singing, their recordings are characterised by clear diction and clean-cut guitar playing. Born in Alabama in the early 20th century Alton and Rabon were sons of tenant farmers. Seeking better land, they moved to Tennessee. Their fortunes did not improve. The family worked on other farms as day laborers. These tough experiences would re-emerge in Delmore songs. Alton later said that the shadow of poverty never quite left them. But their mother could play and read music. She taught Alton and, settling on guitar, he became a fine musician. He also attended gospel singing schools. The early interest in gospel music was later reflected in their use of sacred material which continued throughout their career. Later, in the 1940s and early 1950s, even when they had a string of nationwide hits, they insisted on recording gospel material. By 1926 The Delmores were already working on their harmony singing and instrumental work. At some point Alton had bought a tenor guitar. Taught by Alton, Rabon could play it by the time he was ten - apparently using banjo chords. Alto chose the tenor guitar - smaller than the standard six-string guitar and having only four strings - after he'd seen a vaudeville double act use one. It was an example of their willingness to step outside rigid country traditions. By the end of their careers (Rabon died from lung cancer in 1952) the brothers had been Opry stars (and fallen out with the Opry) and written over 1000 songs including Freight Train Boogie - a key link in the Rock 'n' Roll story.
        
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