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Popular Songbook | 
enlarge | Artist: The Alan Lomax Collection Label: Rounder Select Category: Music
List Price: $17.98 Buy New: $12.47 You Save: $5.51 (31%)
New (11) Used (4) from $12.47
Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 152131
Format: Original Recording Remastered Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 5.7 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 082161186328 EAN: 0682161186320 ASIN: B0000AUHRE
Release Date: August 26, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Joe Lee's Rock - Alan Lomax Collection | | • | Do Re Mi - Woody Guthrie | | • | Jesus on the Mainline - Alan Lomax Collection | | • | Midnight Special - Lead Belly | | • | Stagolee - Memphis Slim, Big Bill Broonzy, and Sonny Boy Williamson | | • | Trouble So Hard - Vera Ward Hall | | • | Motherless Children - Felix Dukes and Mississippi Fred McDowell | | • | Sometimes - Bessie Jones | | • | Black Betty - James "Iron Head" Baker and group | | • | Take a Whiff on Me - Lead Belly | | • | Didn't Leave Nobody but the Baby - Sidney Lee Carter | | • | Goin' Down the Road Feeling Bad - Woody Guthrie | | • | Rock Island Line - Kelly Pace and group | | • | Join the Band - John Davis and the Georgia Sea Island singers | | • | Sloop John B. (Histe Up the John B.'s Sails) - Cleveland Simmons Group | | • | Man Smart, Woman Smarter - Macbeth the Great | | • | Ugly Woman (If You Wanna Be Happy) - Duke of Iron | | • | Gallows Pole - Lead Belly | | • | Rosie - Alan Lomax Collection | | • | Alborada de Vigo - Alan Lomax Collection | | • | The House of the Rising Sun (Rising Sun Blues) - Georgia Turner | | • | Irene Goodnight (Goodnight Irene) -Lead Belly |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com The late Alan Lomax, like his father John A. Lomax before him, was one of America's most influential and tireless scholars and chroniclers of folk and ethnic music. Yet Lomax also enthusiastically embraced rock n' roll as it became a powerful cultural force in the 1950s. He also had a life-long fascination with the evolution of music performances and how particular songs were adapted from one style or era to the next. This intriguing 22-song collection was culled from the hundreds of grassroots recordings that Lomax, who died in 2002 at 87, collected from the early 1930s, onward. The common thread is that they have all found their way, in one form or another, into the lexicon of modern rock and pop music. Cuts like Leadbelly's 1934 rendition of "Midnight Special," Woody Guthrie's 1940 recording of an old slave lament called "Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad," the Cleveland Simmons Group's 1935 version of "Sloop John B," the Duke of Iron's 1946 calypso version of "Ugly Woman," and Georgia Turner's 1937 "House Of The Rising Sun" offer vivid glimpses at how great songs evolve with changing times and changing tastes, as they are passed from one generation of musicians to the next. --Bob Allen
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| Customer Reviews:
The Secret Origins of Moby January 12, 2005 Larry D (Los Angeles, CA United States) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
I already had a passing knowledge of the work of Alan Lomax before I first heard Moby's "Play" album in 2001. But the strangely exhilerating sound of the sampled Lomax field recordings mixed with electronic dance beats, made me curious to find and hear the original recordings. And I've really been meaning to do that -- since 2001. Fortunately, Rounder has done some serious legwork for me: "Popular Songbook" includes three tracks used by Moby for "Play" ("Sometimes", "Joe Lee's Rock", and Trouble So Hard" were heavily sampled in Moby's "Honey", "Find My Baby" and "Natural Blues", respectively), and the 1959 original version of "Didn't Leave Nobody But the Baby", which was re-worked and performed in the "O Brother Where Art Thou" soundtrack. Plus a 1937 "Midnight Special" by Lead Belly, a truly rockin' 1947 "Stagolee" by Memphis Slim, and that's just for starters. I have read some rather condescending reviews of this collection from folk music academics, getting all sniffy at the notion of 21st Century radio airplay dictating the track choices for a folk music collection -- yeah, whatevah! For us middlebrow-type music lovers who've been meaning to check out this Alan Lomax guy but never quite gotten around to it, "Popular Songbook" is a good starter kit.
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