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Tag Archives: Field Recordings

Harry Smith

Eccentric Harry Smith occupies an almost mythical function in 20th century American music, being a curator and, in his very own fashion, promoter of essential folk forms. The three-volume Anthology of American Folk Music that he put together for Folkways in the first ’50s was instrumental in revealing much root …

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Wrekmeister Harmonies

Focused in Chicago and using a name motivated by director Bela Tarr’s 2000 film, Wrekmeister Harmonies was founded by sound artist, multi-instrumentalist, and composer J.R. Robinson, who continues to be its only continuous member. Robinson is normally a audio installationist known for his ambient functions in spaces like the Andy …

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Edward Hazelton

Hazelton is mainly recognized to blues enthusiasts while the harmonica participant who break up an album using the more renowned Eddie “One-String” Jones. Both Hazelton and Jones had been found out by Frederick Usher, Jr. and Richard Barlow in Los Angeles’ skid row in 1960; both had been documented, and …

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Yoshio Machida

Given birth to in Japan in 1967 and currently located in Tokyo, Yoshio Machida explains himself like a trans-boundary audio and visual designer. He analyzed music and minimalist and cinematic arts in the Tama Artwork University or college, where his mentors had been Kuniharu Akiyama, Sakumi Hagiwara, Kishio Suga, and …

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Buell Kazee

Buell Kazee was a minister who played banjo and sang the ancient tunes of his beloved Kentucky mountains through the 1920s. Regarded as among the absolute best folk performers in U.S. background, he was a grasp from the high, “lonesome” performing design of the Appalachian balladeer. Kazee was created in …

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Leo Soileau

Leo Soileau was among the dominating Cajun musicians from the 1930s and early ’40s. His a lot more than 100 recordings included such important music as “Hackberry Hop,” “La Gran Mamou,” La Valse De Gueydan,” and his best strike, “Jolie Blonde.” Taught the fiddle by important Cajun fiddlers Dennis McGee …

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Jimmie Strothers

Jimmie Strothers was a blind banjo and guitarist from Virginia who recorded 15 monitors for Alan Lomax and Harold Spivacke in 1936. Biographical information are sketchy, but Strothers was evidently a medicine present entertainer for a while prior to going to function in the mines, where an explosion had taken …

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Jesse Wadley

Guitarist and vocalist Jesse Wadley recorded five monitors (“Alabama Jail Blues,” “St. Adam Infirmary,” and three will take of “GET IT DONE in Weldon Back yards”) for John Lomax at Bellwood Jail in Atlanta, GA, on Dec 11, 1934. Of particular curiosity is Wadley’s customized blues music, “Alabama Jail Blues,” …

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Lee Sexton

A master from the drop-thumb banjo design (rather than too shabby at two-finger finding, either), Lee Sexton has lived his very existence close to his birthplace in Letcher State, KY. Delivered in 1927, he obtained his initial banjo, a homemade solid wood fretless model using a groundhog epidermis head, for …

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Wade Ward

Although Wade Ward made his living like a Virginia farmer, his long lasting legacy is that of a strongly talented banjo participant who emerged from a talented musical family in the first area of the 20th century. It had been Ward’s older sibling, Crockett, who was simply his main impact. …

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