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Snakewinder
Roger Wilford Cooper
Roger Wilford Cooper is a "younger generation" fiddler
from Garrison, Kentucky (Lewis County). There were musicians
on both sides of the family, and Roger grew up surrounded by aunts
and uncles who played and sang oldtime music. Roger can recall
around thirty fiddlers living within the county and there were
many more in the surrounding counties. But his main influences
were Joe Stamper, Bob Prater, and Buddy Thomas, a noted fiddler
in the northeast Kentucky style. In recent years, Roger has performed
as part of the Kentucky Folk Music Tours sponsored by the Kentucky
Folklife Program, and he has been recognized as a master folk
artist
through the Kentucky Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program.
Includes Old Bell Cow, Pumpkin Vine, Greek Melody, Headwaters of Tygart, Feed
My Horse Corn and Hay, Soapsuds Over the Fence, Old Blackberry Blossom, Portsmouth
Airs, Snakewinder, Short's Addition, Salt Lick, Flannery's Dream, General Lee,
Brickyard Joe, and Dance All Night. Research and liner notes by John Harrod.
($8.00)
Puncheon Camps
Clyde Davenport
Clyde Davenport, from Wayne County, Kentucky, is one of America's
finest oldtime fiddlers and banjo players. He won a prestigious
National Heritage Award in 1992 from the National Endowment for
the Arts for his musicianship and contribution to the preservation
of traditional arts in America. This cassette (recorded in 1990
by Jeff Todd Titon) features 29 tunes including: Jenny in the Cotton
Patch, Sugar in My Coffee, Blackfoot, Puncheon Camps, Ladies in
the Ballroom, Old Cow Died in the Forks of the Branch, Johnny Come
Along, Iowa Center, Cornstalk Fiddle and Shoestring Bow, and Smokey
Hornpipe. Notes on 5-panel insert by Jeff Todd Titon. Clyde performed
at the Celebration of Traditional Music with W. L. Gregory in 1975
and with folklorist, Bob Fulcher, in 1984 and 1987.
($8.00)
Rocky Island
Reverend Philip Kazee
Kazee descends from musical people on the Mash Fork in Magoffin
County, Kentucky. His father, the Reverend Buell Kazee, was a
noted recording artist in the 1920's. Philip Kazee is a Southern
Baptist minister and is pastor of the First Baptist Church in
Oneida, Tennessee. He mostly keeps his folk music separate from
his church music, but he has performed at many functions and
festivals. His interest in traditional music has grown in recent
years. He mainly plays and sings the music performed by his father,
a rich and varied legacy. Includes Darling Cory, Blackjack Davy,
Rock Little Julie, Blind Man's Lament, The Moonshiner, Look Up
and Down That Lonesome Road, Rocky Island, The Roving Cowboy,
The Butcher Boy, Gambler's Blues, Wild Bill Jones, The Orphan
Girl, Little Bessie, and Barbara Allen. Research and liner notes
by Loyal Jones.
($8.00)
Blackjack Grove
Walter McNew
Walter McNew is a fiddler from Rockcastle County, Kentucky. As
a boy, he listened to his father, a telegraph operator for the
L&N Railroad, play late into the night at the train depot.
His music idol, however, was Fiddlin' Doc Roberts from Madison
County. As a young man, Walter won a fiddle contest in Louisville
but passed up a chance to enter show business on the Renfro Valley
Barn Dance, preferring to lead a quiet life at home. Walter's music
reflects a mixture of styles but stands apart from "modern" or "contest" fiddling
commonly heard today. Some rare tunes like Blackjack Grove and
Pinetop are included, and Doc Roberts' fans will be amazed to hear
Walter's rendition of pieces like All I've Got's Done Gone and
Brickyard Joe. Also included: Cluck Old Hen, The Cat Came Back,
Rickett's Hornpipe, Waynesburg, Billy in the Lowground, The Lost
Girl, Hawk Caught a Chicken, Martha Campbell, Callahan, Dreamy
Georgiana Moon, Goodnight Waltz, Mamie Potts' Schottische, and
ten other great fiddle solos. Field recordings and liner notes
by Stephen Green.
($8.00)
Raglif Jaglif Tetartlif Pole
Leonard Roberts
As a storyteller, Leonard Roberts was always a delight. In his
lectures he often dropped into a narrative style, with storyteller's
inflections, but underneath was a thorough knowledge of literature,
folklore and culture. He taught and headed English departments
at several Appalachian colleges. Although he had grown up in Floyd
County, Kentucky, in the midst of ballad and folktale traditions,
it was not until he began teaching and collecting at Berea that
he discovered the richness of Appalachian tradition and its aesthetic
and social value in a new age. His students and their families
became his teachers, and they led him to a rich vein of traditional
lore. Although he was known mostly for his published collections
of folktales, songs and riddles, he was also a consummate storyteller
with a wonderful repertoire of material. These recordings were
made in classes at Berea College when Dr. Roberts was a guest lecturer-storyteller.
Includes Raglif Jaglif Tetartlif Pole, The Irishman and the Pumpkin,
Pat and Mike and the Snake, Jack Outwits the Giants, Daniel Boone's
Hunting Trip, Jack and the Bullstrap, and also riddles and comments.
Research and liner notes by Loyal Jones.
($8.00)
Home Recordings 1941-1942, Volume I
John Morgan Salyer
John M. Salyer, born in 1882 in Magoffin County, Kentucky, was
no ordinary fiddler; he was master of an older eastern Kentucky
style that is only barely discernible in the playing of fiddlers
today. In 1941-42, his sons Grover and Glen Salyer used a home
disc cutting machine to record some of their father's oldtime fiddle
and banjo tunes. Many of these tunes have not been documented elsewhere.
After five years of production work, the Appalachian Center is
proud to make John Salyer's music available to a wider audience.
The old home recordings are rough by today's standards, but technical
difficulties retreat before the power and beauty of this music.
Includes Last of Harris, Jenny Get Around, Vance No More, Indian
Ate the Woodchuck, Lost Boy, Gilda Roy, William Riley, Bill Brown,
Featherbed, Duck River, Flander's Dream, Polly Grand, Sallie Cooper,
Little Bobby, Speed the Plow, Jeff Sturgeon, Rose of the Mountain,
and thirteen other tunes. Research and liner notes by Bruce Greene.
($8.00)
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