Work Songs

New Arrivals

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    Leon Brock
     
    Ordinary People
    Acoustic guitar, piano and double bass. True songs that will stuck in your head
    Blues: Work Songs
     
     
    Apple Pie Hopes
     
    Molasses & Tin
    Enjoy this odd & endearing collection of cover songs, paying homage to "SF's Freakiest Behavior", Sugar&Gold. Brought to you by Apple Pie Hopes, "What America Should Taste Like."
    Blues: Work Songs
     
     
    Naphtalia
     
    The Cold Mountain - EP
    Imagine a city girl on a farm or a small town, Minnesotan in Chicago. Guitars, keys, accordion, and a solid rhythm section provide a comforting home for this soulful voice.
    Blues: Work Songs
     
     
    Karen Wolfe
     
    A Woman Needs a Strong Man
    Southern Soul with a R&B twist yet a little Churchy
    Blues: Work Songs
     
     
    The Crumb Sullivans
     
    Block Island Recordings
    "Acoustic folk (American definition) with a punk attitude, raw and edgy without striving for either, it‘s occasionally like speaking in tongues set to music." Americana-UK.com
    Blues: Work Songs
     
     
    J Shogren
     
    American Holly
    Music for your inner grifter
    Blues: Work Songs
     
     
    Alex Leggett
     
    Songs About People
    Acoustic songs with many musical influences and splendid lyrical ecstasy. Ahem.
    Blues: Work Songs
     
     
    Eric Thomas and Helen Wolfson
     
    My Slice of Forever
    From the blues on the hammered dulcimer to a string-bending guitar lead on Turlough O\'Carolan\'s eighteenth century \"George Brabazon,\" to Eric\'s original \"occupational angst\" music, Eric and Helen cover a lot of ground.
    Blues: Work Songs
     
     
    Robert German
     
    Unplug (limited edition single)
    A unique fusion of Folk, Jazz and Blues with vocal instruments, catchy tunes and witty lyrics
    Blues: Work Songs
     
     
    Blind Arvella Gray
     
    The Singing Drifter
    Blind Arvella Gray was a Chicago street singer and slide Dobro player who busked on the city's Maxwell Street and played a combination of lowdown blues, folk, gospel, country and field holler-inspired work songs.
    Blues: Work Songs
     
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    Top Albums

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    Scott Ainslie
    You Better Lie Down
    An album full of great singing: gospel, work songs and blues from Ainslie's fieldwork informants along with a lovely mix of traditional blues and R & B. Ainslie's arrangement of Wade In The Water is moving and wonderful, while the title cut is one of the
    What a title for a blues and gospel record! "You Better Lie Down" is a collection of songs learned from Ainslie's fieldwork and the field recordings of Dwight Devane, formerly the State Folklorist of Florida, who followed quite literally in the footsteps of Zora Neale Hurston. From a little heard B. B. King song (Losing Faith In You) to a stripped down bluesy version of Sam Cooke's "Bring It On Home to Me", this album talks to the brain stem. This is very emotional stuff for Ainslie and for the rest of us. Ainslie plays acoustic guitars, his vintage Nationals, mandolin, and fretless electric bass and sings his heart out. The gospel here is that non-evangelical, soulful stuff that lies so close to the blues traditions. And Ainslie's notes about Willie Malloy's "I Will Trust In The Lord" are not to be missed. (Check out www.cattailmusic.com for those). Ainslie's work as an acoustic blues performer has a different spin from most. In addition to good chops on slide and ragtime blues guitar and strong vocals; he's bringing twenty years of scholarship, and fieldwork with older blues and gospel musicians. His live shows include enough of the stories and background on the tunes to allow the songs to take their full-size in the experience of the audience. People go home slyly better educated about the history and genesis of the music, and I believe--knowing something of their origins--are moved more deeply by the tunes. In addition to his performing life, Ainslie wrote 'the book' on Mississippi Blues legend Robert Johnson, "Robert Johnson/At The Crossroads" which contained complete transcriptions of his recordings, complete annotated lyrics with all the black idioms explained, a biography and historical notes introducing each song. It lasted a decade in the fickle music press and he's hoping to have it back in a second edition in 2005. Ainslie also has a teaching video, "Robert Johnson's Guitar Techniques," on Starlicks 'Master Sessions' series and three blues CDs ["Jealous of the Moon", "Terraplane", and "You Better Lie Down". He tours widely playing festivals, clubs, community concert series, and works in educational settings as a visiting artist with programs on the African roots of American music, using live performances of Delta and Ragtime blues, gospel, and jazz to illustrate the history of American roots and pop music. Web resources are below, including two archived performances at the Kennedy Center's Millennium Stage from October, 2002 and July, 2003 at the kennedy-center.org site, and archived editions of his BluesNotes emailings, as well as a cut from his upcoming CD, "The Feral Crow" (October, 2004) are at http://cattailmusic.com. Thanks for your time, Cattail Music, Ltd. ainslie@musician.org Websites with reviews, bio, et cetera: http://www.guitarpicker.com/ainslie http://www.loydartists.com/ Archived live performances at the Kennedy Center's Millennium Stage: http://www.kennedy-center.org/ programs/millennium/search_results.cfm? w=500
    Blues: Work Songs
     
    The Crumb Sullivans
    Block Island Recordings
    Blues: Work Songs
     
    Karen Wolfe
    A Woman Needs a Strong Man
    Blues: Work Songs
     
    J Shogren
    American Holly
    Blues: Work Songs