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Alan Lomax / Ed McCurdy - Cowboy Songs of the Old West (1994) [Country/Folk]; mp3, 128 kbps

Country, Bluegrass
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Mike1985
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Alan Lomax / Ed McCurdy - Cowboy Songs of the Old West (1994) [Country/Folk]; mp3, 128 kbps

Unread postby Mike1985 » 28 Mar 2017, 18:35


Album: Cowboy Songs of the Old West
Genre: Country/Folk
Label: Legacy
Released: 1994
Quality: mp3, 128 kbps
Tracklist:
  1. Rambling Gambler
  2. I'm Bound to Follow the Loghorn Cows
  3. Lord Lovell
  4. The Rich Old Lady
  5. All the Pretty Little Horses
  6. Billy Barlow
  7. The Wild Rippling Water
  8. Rattlesnake
  9. Sam Bass
  10. The Dying Cowboy
  11. Eadie
  12. My Little John Henry
  13. When the Work's All Done This Fall
  14. Jack O'Diamonds
  15. Utah
  16. Punchin' the Dough
  17. Red River Valley
  18. Alongside The Santa Fe Trail
  19. Strawberry Roan

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The field recordings Alan Lomax gathered for the Archive of American Folk Music housed at the Library of Congress are among the most important recordings ever made, and in spite of whatever private agendas Lomax had at the time, they remain an invaluable glimpse into what America was singing before the music industry geared up and took over the radio waves. Lomax as a singer and interpreter of some of those same songs, however, which is what is collected here, is an entirely different matter. There is the veneer of the concert stage in his delivery, and instead of a back porch feel, which would allow these songs to live and breathe in something resembling their normal habitat, it is something nearer an oration. While Lomax's version of "My Little John Henry" is gentle and affecting, more often the results here come closer to his version of "All the Pretty Little Horses," which careens over the top into pitch-challenged territory, and it is nearly impossible to get past Lomax's singing of the song to the song itself. Ed McCurdy handles the vocals on the final eight tracks here, and while he is a more consistent singer than Lomax (McCurdy's version of the timeless "Red River Valley" is really quite moving), there is still the feel that these songs are being presented rather than sung.

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