Searchability

Friday, February 28, 2025

Hate Basement - 2012 - Pathetic CS

 

Anabolic Dimensions ‎– AD-011

Grunt - 2016 - Swarm Of Parasites CS

Freak Animal Records ‎– none

Grunt - 2016 - Chance To Be Cruel CS

Freak Animal Records ‎– none

GRVD - 2017 - Rituals Of Shame CS

Grey Matter Productions ‎– 037

Guam River - 2005 - The New Maps Of Hell LP

 Ultra Eczema ‎– 018

Gudsforladt - 2016 - ST CS

Defiled Light ‎– 038

Haare - 2007 - Satanic Freakout CDr

 Chondritic Sound ‎– 162

Haare - 2010 - Exogenesis CS

 Abgurd ‎– 060

Hallow - 2009 - Soundtrack 2xLP

Youth Attack ‎– 047

Hand Of Glory & Sanguine Relic - 2017 - Split CS

Perverse Homage ‎– 003

Happy Halloween - 1985 - Four Days In Monotony CS

Turntable Tapes ‎– 001 

Thursday, February 27, 2025

Harold Budd - 2013 - Budd Box 7xCD

All Saints ‎– 001

Grøn - 2018 - Forms & Constellations CS

 Audio. Visuals. Atmosphere. ‎– 061

Grinning Death's Head - 2009 - No Afterlife LP

Youth Attack ‎– 054

Degredo - 2018 - A Noite dos Tempos 2xLP

Harvest Of Death ‎– 042

Duskhymn - 2018 - Hymnal Of Ruin CS

 Winter Solace Productions ‎– 325

Wulkanaz - 2018 - Wulkanaz LP

 Brugmanziah ‎– none

Exumbras & Immatura Morte - 2018 - Compendium U.C.F.N. CS

 Perverse Homage ‎– 035

Immatura Morte - 2018 - The Schizophrenic Damnation CS

 Perverse Homage ‎– 041

Realglaube - 2018 - Erfahrungen CS

 Kaladruna ‎– 013

Guttersnipe - 2016 - B'rxvaiww Vgr​-​aiz'vst Eicaeqcyxy L'vranndkhb'vorr Vts'aicraexxth CS

Self Realeased ‎– none

Obscurité - 2010 - Aphotic Incantations & Lurid Visitations CS

Aborted Existence ‎– 004

Obscurité - 2018 - Selected Works LP

 Livor Mortis ‎– 008

Spiral Staircase - 2018 - Collection I LP

 Livor Mortis ‎– 007

Hand Of Glory - 2018 - To Mollest the Dreaming LP

 Livor Mortis ‎– 001

Vrasësinerëzve - 2015 - Demo I CS

Death Manifestations ‎– 001

Grim - 2018 - Body CS

  Atelier5-7-5 ‎– 014

Grim - 2017 - Discharge Mountain CS

Eskimo Records ‎– none

Grim - 2015 - Maha 2xCD

Steinklang Industries ‎– 088

Grim - 2014 - Vital 1983-86 CS

 Lust Vessel ‎– 016

Griefer - 2007 - Russian Business Network CS

Negation Is Freedom ‎– 006

Grausamkeit - 1996 - Frozen Souls CS

Not On Label ‎– none

Grant Evans ‎- 2017 - And The Body Beneath CDr

Adversary Electronics ‎– 013

Sutcliffe Jügend - 2016 - The Muse CD

Death Continues Records ‎– 008

Sutcliffe Jügend - 2016 - Offal CD

 Cold Spring ‎– 209

Sutcliffe Jügend - 2016 - Masks CD

 Old Europa Cafe ‎– 224

Maurizio Bianchi & Abul Mogard - 2017 - Nervous Hydra / All This Has Passed Forever LP

Ecstatic ‎– 027

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

VA - 2013 - Your Victorian Breasts 2xLP

Three:four records ‎– 017

Named after an 1988 unreleased, to this date, Supreme Dicks song, 'Your Victorian Breasts' is a collection of 20 otherwise unreleased tracks by the likes of Alastair Galbraith, Black To Comm, A R P, Pigeons, Ignatz, William Tyler, Filipe Felizardo, Hamilton Yarns. It also hosts 3 new collective projects: Mendrugo, which features Josephine Foster joining forces with husband Victor Herrero, José Luis Herrero, José Luis Rico and Takuhiko Nochimoto; Raajmahal, the reunion of Pat Murano (No-Neck Blues Band, Decimus), Carla Baker (Baba Yaga, Flower Orgy) and Santa Wolanczyk (Flower Orgy); and Syracuse Ear, a first-class improv gathering featuring David Maranha, Manuel Mota, Margarida Garcia and Chris Corsano.

The comp's range stretches from demos (Date Palms, Arlt) to soundtracks (Roger Tellier-Craig), archival material shelved for years (Supreme Dicks), cover songs (Bridget St John as revisited by Alvarius B, Daniel Johnston by Circuit des Yeux, and an anonymous Serbian ballad by Eric Chenaux), live takes (Mendrugo, Syracuse Ear) and new studio works (Robert Hampson, Corridors, ...).

 
Track Listing
----------------
[01/20] Phase IV (excerpt) (A R P) (5:40) 320 kbps 13.08 MB
[02/20] Do Not Wake Me (Ignatz) (4:00) 320 kbps 9.22 MB
[03/20] Where the Oyster remains shut; and the Mole pisses at the sun, extinguishing its Light (Filipe Felizardo) (4:44) 320 kbps 10.90 MB
[04/20] Tu m'as encore crevé un cheval (Arlt) (4:20) 320 kbps 10.00 MB
[05/20] A Portrait of Sarah (William Tyler) (6:09) 320 kbps 14.19 MB
[06/20] Retour à la chaleur (Robert Hampson) (6:55) 320 kbps 15.92 MB
[07/20] New Heart of Darkness (Alastair Galbraith) (2:37) 320 kbps 6.03 MB
[08/20] Dust Bowl Theme (demo) (Date Palms) (3:04) 320 kbps 7.10 MB
[09/20] Transit (Roger Tellier-Craig) (4:11) 320 kbps 9.64 MB
[10/20] Nord (Black To Comm) (5:04) 320 kbps 11.67 MB
[11/20] Na Te Mislim (Eric Chenaux) (6:34) 320 kbps 15.15 MB
[12/20] Earth of Vitreous (Syracuse Ear) (4:11) 320 kbps 9.63 MB
[13/20] What Comes (Hamilton Yarns) (5:40) 320 kbps 13.06 MB
[14/20] Broken Ellipses (Corridors) (5:05) 320 kbps 11.74 MB
[15/20] Mésanges (Pigeons) (3:55) 320 kbps 9.05 MB
[16/20] Goodbaby Goodbye (Alvarius B) (2:58) 320 kbps 6.86 MB
[17/20] Despair Came Knocking (Circuit des Yeux) (3:56) 320 kbps 9.08 MB
[18/20] Estrella Fugaz (Mendrugo) (3:34) 320 kbps 8.24 MB
[19/20] My Boy is a Good Child, Sleep (Raajmahal) (8:44) 320 kbps 20.13 MB
[20/20] 4 Come In (For Gaelle) (Supreme Dicks) (3:07) 320 kbps 7.19 MB


Total number of files: 20
Total size of files: 217.95 MB
Total playing time: 94:28

VA - (2013) The Rise & Fall of Paramount Records, Volume 1 (1917-1927) 6xLP

 Third Man Records ‎– 203

How did a Wisconsin chair company, producing records on the cheap and run by men with little knowledge of their audience or the music business, build one of the greatest musical rosters ever assembled under one roof? The answer lies in ‘The Rise and Fall of Paramount Records 1917-1932,’ an epic, two-volume omnibus of art, words and music housed in a limited-edition, hand-sculpted cabinet-of-wonder, to be jointly released by Jack White’s Third Man Records and John Fahey’s Revenant Records.
‘Volume One,’ which covers the label’s improbable rise from 1917-1927, will be released exclusively through Third Man on October 29, and worldwide on November 19. The project is co-produced by leading Paramount authority Alex van der Tuuk, and ‘Volume 2’ will be released in November 2014.

Paramount Records was founded on a modest proposition: produce records as cheaply as possible, recording whatever talent was available. Over its lifetime, the label would become a “race records” powerhouse, its sound and fortunes directly linked to the Great Migration.

By the time Paramount ceased operations in 1932, it had compiled a dizzying array of performers still unrivaled to this day, spanning early jazz titans (Louis Armstrong, King Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton, Fats Waller), blues masters (Charley Patton, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Son House, Skip James), American divas (Ma Rainey, Alberta Hunter, Ethel Waters), gospel (Norfolk Jubilee Quartette), vaudeville (Papa Charlie Jackson), and the indefinable “other” (Geeshie Wiley, Elvie Thomas). Paramount would also directly influence the style of Robert Crumb and countless other 20th century artists and illustrators, through a series of hand-drawn ads promoting its releases in the pages of the Chicago Defender.

The ‘Rise and Fall’ wonder-cabinet gives equal status to page-turning narrative and new scholarship; original and newly created graphic art; industrial design; and a compelling analog to digital download music experience. ‘Volume One’ contains the following:



 Tracklist
A1     –Sister Cunningham And T.C.I. Sacred Singers     Sign Of Judgement   
A2     –Blind Blake     Dry Bone Shuffle   
A3     –Jimmy O'Bryant's Famous Original Washboard Band  My Man Rocks Me  
A4     –Danny Small And Ukelele Mays     Sweet Georgia Brown   
A5     –Handy's Memphis Blues Band     St. Louis Blues   
A6     –Bo Weavil Jackson     Pistol Blues   
A7     –Harkreader And Moore     Old Joe Clark   
B1     –Papa Charlie Jackson     Coffee Pot Blues   
B2     –Jones' Paramount Charleston Four     Old Steady Roll   
B3     –Famous Jubilee Singers     Wait 'Till I Put On My Robe   
B4     –Jimmy Blythe And His Ragamuffins     Messin' Around   
B5     –Banjo Joe     Madison Street Rag   
B6     –Lottie Beaman     Mama's Can't Lose   
B7     –Sunset Four     Barnum's Steam Calliope   
C1     –O'Bryant's Washboard Band     Skoodlum Blues   
C2     –Norfolk Jazz Quartette     Jelly Roll's First Cousin   
C3     –Alberta Hunter     Come On Home   
C4     –Lone Star Fiddlers     Drunk Man's Blues   
C5     –The Washingtonians     Rainy Nights   
C6     –Ida Cox     How Long Daddy, How Long   
C7     –Jelly Roll Morton's Steamboat Four     Mr. Jelly Lord   
D1     –Viola Bartlette     Anna Mina Forty And St. Louis Shorty   
D2     –Ida Cox     Coffin Blues   
D3     –Blythe's Sinful Five     Pump Tillie   
D4     –Beale Street Sheiks     You Shall   
D5     –C.H. Gatewood     Well Of Salvation   
D6     –John Williams' Synco Jazzers     Goose Grease   
D7     –Ethel Waters And The Jazz Masters     Brown Baby   
E1     –Leola B. Wilson     Dying Blues   
E2     –Lovie Austin And Her Blues Serenaders     Charleston Mad   
E3     –Pace Jubilee Singers     Certainly Lord   
E4     –Blanche Johnson     216 Blues   
E5     –Junie Cobb's Home Town Band     Chicago Buzz   
E6     –Ed Bell     Mamlish Blues   
E7     –North Carolina Ramblers And Roy Harvey     I'm Glad I'm Married   
E8     –Jelly Roll Morton's Stomp Kings     Steady Roll   
F1     –Nelson's Paramount Serenaders     Nelson Blues   
F2     –T.C.I. Section Crew     Track Linin'   
F3     –Ma Rainey     Bessemer Bound Blues   
F4     –William And Versey Smith     Everybody Help The Blues Come Home   
F5     –Dixon's Jazz Maniacs     Crazy Quilt   
F6     –Buddy Boy Hawkins     Shaggy Dog Blues   
F7     –Trixie Smith     My Man Rocks Me With One Steady Roll   
F8     –Ollie Powers     Jazzbo Jenkins   
G1     –J. Churchill     Sleep Baby Sleep   
G2     –Freddie Keppard's Jazz Cardinals     Salty Dog   
G3     –Rev. James Beard     Memory Of Departed Friends   
G4     –Big Bill And Thomps     House Rent Stomp   
G5     –Ukulele “Bob” Williams     West Indies Blues   
G6     –Sodarisa Miller     Nobody Knows   
G7     –Lovie Austin And Her Blues Serenaders     Steppin' On The Blues   
G8     –Watts And Wilson     Walk Right In Belmont   
H1     –Norfolk Jubilee Quartette     When I Was A Moaner   
H2     –Wilson's T.O.B.A. Band     Steady Roll   
H3     –Rev. W.M. Clark And Sisters     Satan At Church   
H4     –Ethel Waters' Jazz Masters     Pacific Coast Blues   
H5     –Papa Charlie Jackson     Look Out Papa Don't Tear Your Pants   
H6     –Marion Harrison     Baby Can't You Understand   
H7     –Wood's Famous Blind Jubilee Singers     Seek And Ye Shall Find   
I1     –Blind Connie Rosemond     Will My Mother Know Me There   
I2     –Jimmy O'Bryant's Washboard Band     Hot Hot Hottentot   
I3     –Four Harmony Kings     Ain't It A Shame   
I4     –Lena Wilson     The Wicked Fives' Blues   
I5     –James Blythe     Armour Ave. Struggle   
I6     –Elzadie Robinson     Houston Bound   
I7     –D.C. Nelson's Serenaders     Coo Coo Stomp   
J1     –Bo Weavil Jackson     You Can't Keep No Brown   
J2     –Jasper Taylor And His State Street Boys     Stomp Time Blues   
J3     –Rev. T.T. Rose And Gospel Singers     I've Got A Hiding Place   
J4     –Osey Helton     Cacklin' Hen   
J5     –Perry Bradford's Jazz Phools     Fade Away Blues   
J6     –Sweet Papa Stovepipe     Mama's Angel Child   
J7     –Edmonia Henderson     Black Man Blues   
K1     –Jack Penewell     Hen House Blues   
K2     –Pickett-Parham Apollo Syncopators     Mojo Strut   
K3     –Rev. M.L. Gipson And Various     Sympathetic Christ   
K4     –Ethel Waters And Her Jazz Masters     That Da Da Strain   
K5     –Blind Lemon Jefferson     Wartime Blues   
K6     –Dixie-Land Thumpers     There'll Come A Day   
K7     –Wiseman Sextette With Various     Oh Calvary   
L1     –Chicago De Lux Orchestra     St. Louis Blues   
L2     –Johnnie Blakey     On This Rock I Will Build My Church   
L3     –Alberta Hunter     Don't Pan Me   
L4     –Ollie Powers' Orchestra     Play That Thing   
L5     –Homer Quincy Smith     I Want Jesus To Talk With Me   
L6     –Lovie Austin And Her Blues Serenaders     Peepin' Blues   
L7     –Danny Small And Ukelele Mays     Cecilia

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

VA - 2014 - The Rise & Fall of Paramount Records: Volume 2 (1928-1932) 6xLP

 Third Man Records ‎– 204
 
The first volume in this collection was called "spectacular" (New York Times), "unprecedented" (Rolling Stone), "breathtaking" (Boing Boing), and "a cabinet of wonder, indeed" (Pitchfork).

On November 18, Third Man and Revenant proudly bring you The Rise & Fall of Paramount, Volume Two - already being hailed by Wired as "the ultimate box set of iconic American music."

Volume One (1917-27) chronicled Paramount's improbable rise from also-ran to jazz-blues juggernaut, launching the recording careers of giants like King Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton, Louis Armstrong, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Alberta Hunter, Blind Blake, Ethel Waters, Ma Rainey, Papa Charlie Jackson, Big Bill Broonzy, and Fats Waller. Order Volume One here.

But just as it seemed Paramount might be losing steam, it began a second act that threatened to dwarf its first. This astonishing second act is the subject of The Rise & Fall of Paramount, Volume Two (1928-32), the final chapter in our commemoration of America's greatest record label.

In its final 5 year push from 1928-32, Paramount embarked on a furious run for the ages, birthing the entire genre of Mississippi Delta blues recordings and issuing some of the most coveted records in the history of wax - a staggering playlist including Skip James, Charley Patton, Son House, Tommy Johnson, Willie Brown, King Solomon Hill, Tampa Red, Lottie Kimbrough, Rube Lacy, Meade Lux Lewis, Buddy Boy Hawkins, Jaydee Short, George "Bullet" Williams, Cow Cow Davenport, Clifford Gibson, Ishman Bracey, Louise Johnson, Geeshie Wiley & Elvie Thomas, The Mississippi Sheiks. and hundreds of other artists.

Paramount simply killed. But more than that, it changed how this country thought of itself. It was the first enterprise of any kind to capture what America really sounded like in the 1920s and '30s - on its street corners, at its fish fries and country suppers, in its nightclubs and dance halls and showtents. In the process, it was profit-minded Paramount - not a preservationist body like the Library of Congress - that inadvertently created the most significant repository of this young nation's greatest art form.

Six LPs, housed in a polished aluminum case evoking the era's high art deco stylings and America's own Machine Age take on modernist design.

A joint release by Third Man and Revenant, co-produced by leading Paramount scholar Alex van der Tuuk, with all Paramount masters issued under license agreement with GHB Jazz Foundation.  


 -----------------------------------------------

For a decade, Paramount Records was one the most influential labels in the country. Now, a two box set collection tracks its rise and fall in the early 20th century...
ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:
This music is part of the legacy of Paramount Records. The label was an offshoot of the Wisconsin Chair Company created in 1917 to help sell the phonographs the furniture company built. As one music expert put it, it was like Apple creating iTunes in order to sell iPods. Paramount was incredibly influential in its 15-year run. And now its classic recordings are available in a pair of limited edition box sets called "The Rise And Fall Of Paramount Records." Meredith Ochs has been delving into that history.
MEREDITH OCHS, BYLINE: In the late 1920s, Paramount Records was struggling. As the Great Depression set in, their cash flow dried up. New technology began to make their scratchy-sounding, cheaply-made records less desirable. And the public's taste in music was evolving. Paramount scrambled to keep up, their talent scouts searching the American South and West for the next big thing. But even as it was slowly failing, the label discovered some of the most influential figures in American music, like Delta bluesman Charley Patton. A top seller for Paramount, Patton was famous for flashy moves like playing guitar behind his head.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "PONY BLUES")
CHARLEY PATTON: (Singing) Tell you when I get out, yeah, I don't want to marry - just want to be your man.
OCHS: Paramount folded in 1933, shutting down so abruptly that employees were offered master recordings in lieu of payment - or so the story goes. The workers supposedly responded by tossing these priceless artifacts into the Milwaukee River. But every now and then, a lost treasure resurfaces.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "SUN TO SUN")
BLIND BLAKE: (Singing) A man can worry from sun to sun.
OCHS: Like this 1931 Blind Blake recording, found just eight years ago at a mobile home park in North Carolina.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "SUN TO SUN")
BLIND BLAKE: (Singing) But a woman's worries have just begun.
OCHS: After Paramount shut down, some of its artists quit music for decades. Virginia banjo virtuoso Dock Boggs was one of them.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "FALSEHEARTED LOVER'S BLUES")
DOCK BOGGS: (Singing) I'm sure my falsehearted lover will drive me to my lonesome grave.
OCHS: With alternate tunings and finger-pick melodies, his style was innovative and haunting. But he had to earn a living. So he went back to what he knew, working as a coal miner for many years, before he was rediscovered during the 1960s folk revival.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "FALSEHEARTED LOVER'S BLUES")
BOGGS: (Singing) From your heartstrings weave silk garters. Build their dog house on your grave.
OCHS: This second volume of the Paramount Records story is a painstakingly-assembled scholarly project that never loses its magic in the details. The sheer number of songs is remarkable - 800 of them, by 175 artists, ghostly voices that tell the stories of sharecroppers, women who hadn't yet won the right to vote when the label was founded and even bootleggers. This collection effectively shows how these artists laid the groundwork for so much contemporary roots and rock music. And the history of Paramount itself is just as fascinating, a tale of race, region, economics and our evolving culture in the early 20th century.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "TERRIBLE MURDER BLUES")
BERTHA HENDERSON: (Singing) I can't take it no more.
SIEGEL: Meredith Ochs is a talk show host and DJ at SiriusXM Radio. She reviewed the double box set "The Rise And Fall Of Paramount Records."

 Tracklist
A1     –Skip James     I'm So Glad (Pm 13098, L-759-1)     2:50
A2     –Wilmer Watts And The Lonely Eagles     Knocking Down Casey Jones (Bwy 8248, 2455--)     3:12
A3     –Mississippi Sheiks     Please Baby (Pm 13153, L-1562-2)     3:35
A4     –The Famous Blue Jay Singers Of Birmingham Alabama     Clanka A Lanka (Sleep On Mother) (Pm 13119, L-1230-1)     3:08
A5     –Charley Patton     I'm Goin' Home (Pm 12883, 15227--)     3:15
A6     –Dixie Four     Five O'Clock Stomp (Pm 12674, 20657-1)     2:35
A7     –Clifford Gibson     Tired Of Being Mistreated Part 1 (QRS R7079, 484 - A)     3:10
B1     –Carver Boys     Tim Brook (Pm 3199, 15546--)     2:11
B2     –Jabo Williams     Jab Blues (Pm 13141, L-1404-2)     3:23
B3     –Elvie Thomas     Motherless Child Blues (Pm 12977, L-264-2)     3:22
B4     –Bob Coleman     Tear It Down (Pm 12731, 21102-1)     2:50
B5     –Soileau & Robin     Easy Rider Blues (Pm 12808, 15344--)     2:56
B6     –The Tub Jug Washboard Band     San (Pm 12671, 20671-2)     3:04
B7     –Bessie Mae Smith And Wesley Wallace     St. Louis Daddy (Pm 12922, L-78-1)     3:05
C1     –Lottie Kimbrough     Rolling Log Blues (Pm 12850, 14162--)     3:18
C2     –Cow Cow Davenport     Chimes Blues (Ch 15726, 14978--)     3:19
C3     –Edward Thompson     West Virginia Blues (Pm 13018, 2416-A)     3:10
C4     –Biddleville Quintette     Wasn't That A Mighty Day (Pm 12845, 422-A)     2:52
C5     –Blind Blake - Charlie Spand     Hastings St. (Pm 12863, 15457--)     3:15
C6     –Emry Arthur     Reuben Oh Reuben (Pm 3237, L-107-1)     3:00
C7     –Skip James     Special Rider Blues (Pm 13098, L-760-2)     3:03
D1     –Ollie Hess     Mammy's Lullaby (Bwy 8322, L-1369-1)     4:03
D2     –King Solomon Hill     The Gone Dead Train (Ch 50022, L-1254-2     3:21
D3     –Blind Arthur Groom And Bro., Blind Roosevelt Graves     Take Your Burdens To The Lord (Pm 12874, 15645-A)     3:12
D4     –Blind Leroy Garnett     Louisiana Glide (Pm 12879, 15767--)     3:11
D5     –Winston Holmes And Charlie Turner     Rounders Lament (Pm 12798, 15259--)     3:07
D6     –Willie Brown     M & O Blues (Ch 50023, L-413-2)     3:05
D7     –Norfolk Jazz Quartette     Oh What Is The Matter Now (Pm 12844, 6112-1)3:18     3:06
E1     –The Hokum Boys     Gamblers Blues (St. James Infirmary Blues) (Pm 12897, 21463-1)     2:49
E2     –Charley Patton     High Water Everywhere - Part I (Pm 12909, L-59-1     3:05
E3     –Windy Rhythm Kings     South African Blues (Pm 12770, 21255-1)     3:15
E4     –Emry Arthur And Della Hatfield     A Railroad Lover For Me (Bwy 8266, L-132-2)     2:52
E5     –Jaydee Short     Lonesome Swamp Rattlesnake (Pm 13043, L-468-1)     2:52
E6     –James Wiggins     Frisco Bound (Pm 12860, 15769-A)     3:20
E7     –Tommy Settlers & His Blues Moaner     Big Bed Bug (Pm 13056, L-603-1)     2:38
E8     –King Solomon Hill     Down On My Bended Knee (Cr 3325, L-1253-2)     2:56
F1     –Bogus Ben Covington     Adam And Eve In The Garden (Pm 12693, 20863-1)     2:42
F2     –Son House     Walkin' Blues (Pm Unissued, 9/2#1)     2:57
F3     –Dobby Bragg     Fire Detective Blues (Pm 12827, 15557--)     3:09
F4     –Skip James     Hard Time Killin' Floor Blues (Pm 13065, L-752-2)     2:51
F5     –Walter And Byrd     Wasn't It Sad About Lemon (Pm 12945, L-276-3)     3:03
F6     –Blind Joe Reynolds     Cold Woman Blues (Pm 12983, L-147-3)     2:57
F7     –Wilmer Watts And The Lonely Eagles     Sleepy Desert (Pm 3282, 2463--)     3:06
F8     –Geeshie Wiley     Last Kind Words Blues (Pm 12951, L-257-4)     3:01
G1     –Johnnie Head     Fare Thee Well - Part II (Pm 12628, 20275-2)     2:38
G2     –Slim Barton & Eddie Mapp     Wicked Treatin' Blues (QRS R7089, 471-A)     2:58
G3     –B.L. Pritchard Acc. By Scottdale String Band     Stone Mountain Wobble (Pm 3320, L-1503-2)     3:22
G4     –Ma Rainey     Black Eye Blues (Pm Unissued, 20898-1)     3:21
G5     –Teddy Darby     Lawdy Lawdy Worried Blues (Pm 12828, 15566--)     3:07
G6     –Little Brother Montgomery     Vicksburg Blues (Pm 13006, L-502-1)     3:00
G7     –Charley Patton     Jim Lee Blues - Part I (Pm 13080, L-57-2)     3:05
H1     –Blind Willie Davis     When The Saints Go Marching In (Pm 12658, 20298--)     1:58
H2     –Clarence Williams And His Orchestra     Long, Deep And Wide (QRS R7004, 151-)     2:29
H3     –Rube Lacy     Mississippi Jail House Groan (Pm 12629, 20419-2)     3:26
H4     –'Boodle It' Wiggins     Keep A Knockin' An You Can't Get In (Pm 12662, 20378-1)     2:44
H5     –Son House     Dry Spell Blues - Part I (Pm 12990, L-425-4)     3:12
H6     –Skip James     If You Haven't Any Hay Get On Down The Road (Pm 13066, L-766-1)     2:56
H7     –The Mississippi Sheiks     Tell Me To Do Right (Pm 13156, L-1550-2)     3:33
H8     –Elder J.J. Hadley     Prayer Of Death - Part 2 (Pm 12799, 15225-A)1:58     2:48
I1     –The Famous Blue Jay Singers Of Birmingham Alabama     I Declare My Mother Ought To Live Right (Ch 50026, L-1245-2)     3:03
I2     –Ishman Bracey     Woman Woman Blues (Pm 12970, L-239-2)     3:26
I3     –Clarence Black And His Savoy Trio     'Cause I Feel Low Down (Pm 12683, 20776-2)     2:38
I4     –Blind Blake     Diddie Wa Diddie (Pm 12888, 15459-A)     2:58
I5     –Frank Palmes     Troubled 'Bout My Soul (Pm 12893, 21413-2)     2:53
I6     –Charley Patton     Rattlesnake Blues (Pm 12924, L-63-2)     2:47
I7     –The Hokum Boys    Only The Blues (Pm Unissued, 21073-2U     2:54
I8     –Blind Joe Taggart     He Done What The World Couldn't Do (Pm Unissued, L-699-2)     3:01
J1     –The Mississippi Sheiks     The New Stop And Listen (Pm 13134, L-1551-3)     3:50
J2     –Brother Fullbosom     A Sermon On A Silver Dollar (Pm 13078, L-866-1)     3:03
J3     –Blind Joe Reynolds     Nehi Blues (Pm 12927, L-146-2)     3:14
J4     –Bill Moore     One Way Gal (Pm 12648, 20309-1)     3:18
J5     –Skip James     Devil Got My Woman (Pm 13088, L-746-1)     3:01
J6     –Louise Johnson     By The Moon And Stars (Pm 13008, L-420-2)     2:53
J7     –Mr. Freddie Spruell     Tom Cat Blues (Pm 12665, 20727-2)     3:07
K1     –Son House     My Black Mama - Part II (Pm 13042, L-409-2)     3:16
K2     –Virginia Dandies     God’s Getting Worried (Cr 3145, 1221-1)     2:42
K3     –Jesse Johnson And His Singers     I Wish I Had Died In Egyptland - Pt. I (Pm 12829, 15570--)     3:24
K4     –Geeshie Wiley     Pick Poor Robin Clean (Pm 13074, L-824-1)     3:14
K5     –Blind Lemon Jefferson     See That My Grave Is Kept Clean (Pm 12608, 20374-1)     2:54
K6     –George "Bullet" Williams     The Escaped Convict (Pm 12651, 20593-2)     2:59
K7     –Tommy Johnson     Lonesome Home Blues (Pm 13000, L-230-2)     3:08
L1     –Mandel Terry And Orchestra     Black And Tan Fantasy (Bwy 1498, L-1199-2)     3:37
L2     –Kentucky Ramblers     Good Cocaine (Mama Don't Allow It) (Bwy 8271, L-552-2)     3:18
L3     –Blind Joe Taggart     In That Pearly White City Above (Pm 13059, L-703-2)     3:08
L4     –Walter Hawkins     A Rag Blues (Pm 12814, 15212--)     3:00
L5     –Bessie Mae Smith     Farewell Baby Blues (Pm 12922, L-90-2)     2:56
L6     –Blind Willie Davis     I Believe I'll Go Back Home (Pm 12979, L-113-1)e (Pm 12979, L-113-1)     3:06
L7     –Lottie Kimbrough     Going Away Blues (Pm 12850, 14163-A)     2:41

VA - 2017 - Roll Columbia: Woody Guthrie's 26 Northwest Songs 2xCD

 Smithsonian Folkways Recordings ‎– 40226

Woody Guthrie’s 26 Northwest Songs is a trove of new discoveries, and a celebration of Guthrie’s genius and lasting contributions to both the history and musical traditions of the Pacific Northwest. In 1941, the Bonneville Power Administration commissioned Guthrie to write songs to help promote to the public the construction of dams along the Columbia River. 75 years later, present-day artists with ties to the Pacific Northwest who have been influenced by this fruitful time in Guthrie’s career have gathered together to record their own interpretations. Roll Columbia is the first and only complete collection of these 26 songs, including nine that had never before been recorded, such as “Eleckatricity and All” and “Portland Town to Klamath Falls,” as well as classic Guthrie tunes “Pastures of Plenty” and “Hard Travelin’.” 2 discs, 104 minutes.