Ronnie Earl
Blues for ShawnHealing Time 2000 via Telarc
a note about this track
"When Music Is tight, It All Becomes Beautifully Loose." Traditions! Returns Next Week
Traditions! Is A Weekly Two-Hour Presentation Following Musical Streams Passed Down Through Generations; Pathways Linked By A Sincere Appreciation And Acknowledgement Of The Influential Styles That Continue Shaping The Landscape Of Roots Music: Early Influences - Pioneering Legends - Roots Revivalists - Indigenous Cultures. Thanks For Joining Us!
"When Music Is tight, It All Becomes Beautifully Loose." Traditions! Returns Next Week
St. Joseph, MI - Written By Bob Wills And Tommy Duncan, 1941
Pokey's Latest Drops September 10
Nice Reworking Of The Gershwin Standard
Support today on WYCE comes from Audiotree presenting Larkin Poe
Brought Together By Eli Paperboy Reed - Old-School, Get Up And Shout Southern Gospel
Appearing With Greensky Bluegrass And Steppin' In It During The Weekend Of July 16th At Shagbark Farms, Caledonia, MI
Minneapolis, MN - Joyann Knows Her Way Around A Song
Austin, TX
A Chicago Classic Jazz Octet - Picture Yourself In A Smoky, Depression Era Chicago Jazz Club, With A Nostalgic Smile On Your Face
The Tex-Mex Stylings Of The Texas Tornados: Flaco Jimenez, Augie Meyers, Doug Sahm, And Freddy Fender
Orbison Wrote It As The B-Side For The Rock And Rollin' Chart Topper Claudette
The Blues Lost Ellen Earlier This Week At The Age Of 75 - Running Through 'Crawlin Kingsnake'; It's Origins Are That Of A Delta Blues In the 1920's, Related To Earlier Songs, Such As 'Black Snake Blues' By Victoria Spivey And 'Black Snake Moan' By Blind Lemon Jefferson - John Lee Hooker Began Performing The Song Early In His Career After Arriving In Detroit In The Early 1940
Lawrence County, KY - Celebrating Number 30 A Few Days Ago - 100% Of The Profits From The Album Will Be Used To Support Underserved Communities In The Appalachian Region
Covering All The Traditions!
Composer Noah Lewis - Merle Watson And T. Michael Coleman Joining Doc On The Vintage 1928 Song By Cannon's Jug Stompers
McMurtry's New Album "The Horses And The Hounds" Is Due In August
New Album Into 'YCE - The Current Solo Tour Concludes In July - The Wood Brothers Back On The Road In August
Returning Home To Woodstock And The Levon Helm Studios To Record Amy's Third Solo Release
For More Than Twenty Years, Blind Lemon Jefferson Played His Guitar With A Tin Cup Around His Neck On The Streets Of Dallas. His Free-Form Style Showed Little Regard For Regular Time And Structure, Allowing His Direct And Expressive Songs To Shine Through. Lemon Roamed Throughout The South And The Midwest As A 'Wandering Songster', A Number Of Years With Traveling Companion 'Lead Belly', Ending In 1918 When Ledbetter Was Given Thirty Years In The Penitentiary. Blind Lemon Recorded Niney-Plus Sides Beginning In 1925; Four Years Later He Was Gone At The Age Of 32. The Legacy Of The Songs Handed Down Through The Years, In Their Original Form Or Adapted By Other Players, Are A Rich Inheritance.
September 24, 1893 TX - December 9, 1929 IL
'820' Jazz Presents: Louis Hayes, Drums..Paul Chambers, Bass...Tommy Flanagan, Piano...Kenny Burrell, Acoustic Guitar...Donald Byrd, Trumpet...Pepper Adams, Baritone Saxophone - - - - - A 1961 Blowing Session, 'Motor City Scene" Is An Excellent Example Of The Wealth Of Talent In The Detroit Area During The 40's, 50's, And 60's. Adams And Byrd Lead A Veritable Who's Who Of Jazzmen On Their Respective Instruments; Each With A Statement Complimenting The Others
American Roots Stringband Founded In Boston In 2005 - The Band Is No Longer Together
Alison Brown, Stuart Duncan, Trey Hensley, Sierra Hull, Tim O'Brien & Todd Phillips Joining The 89 Year-Old Bluegrass Legend On A Grassed Up Version Of The Merle Haggard Classic
Debut Album - Music From Northern Michigan
Juno Award Recipient - A Consummate Troubadour
GR Pipes & Drums - One Folklore Anecdote Regarding This Melody Has It That The Original "Bonaparte's Retreat" Was Improvised On The Bagpipe By A Member Of A Scots Regiment That Fought At Waterloo - The Song Can Be Traced To An Early 19th Century Fiddle Song Common In The Eastern Hills Of Kentucky