Showing posts with label Joe Ely. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Ely. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif – CKCU – August 26, 2025: Songs of August & Highway 61 Revisited – Revisited


Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif finds connections and develops themes in various genres. The show is broadcast on CKCU, 93.1 FM, in Ottawa on Tuesdays from 3:30 until 5 pm (Eastern time) and is also available 24/7 for on-demand streaming.

This episode of Stranger Songs was recorded and can be streamed on-demand, now or anytime, by clicking on “Listen Now” at … https://cod.ckcufm.com/programs/595/71687.html

Themes: Part 1 – Songs of August; Part 2 – Highway 61 Revisited – Revisited.

Part 1 – Songs of August

Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer with Chao Tran- August Flower
From China to Appalachia (Community Music)

Emily Triggs- Beautiful August
The Great Escape (Emily Triggs)
Jay Linden- August Night
Satchel (Jay Linden)
The Lucky Sisters- On an August Night
So Lucky (Patio)
Preservation Hall Jazz Band- August Nights
That’s It (Legacy)
Joan Baez- The 33rd of August
Blessed Are (Vanguard)
Jeanie Stahl- The August of Our Years
Mysteries (Daring)

Benny Carter- August Moon
Aspects (United Artists)

Part 2 – Highway 61 Revisited – Revisited.


It was 60 years ago, on August 30, 1965, that Bob Dylan released his monumental folk-rock album, Highway 61 Revisited.

Rory Block- Like a Rolling Stone
Positively 4th Street: A Tribute to Bob Dylan (Stony Plain)
Tim O’Brien- Tombstone Blues
Red On Blonde (Sugar Hill)
Ian Hanchet- It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry
Dealin’ from the Bottom (of My Heart) (Ian Hanchet)
Bob Dylan- From a Buick 6
Highway 61 Revisited (Columbia)
Ben Sidran- Ballad of a Thin Man
Dylan Different (Bonsai)

Emma Swift- Queen Jane Approximately
Blonde on the Tracks (Tiny Ghost/CRS)
Ray Benson- Highway 61 Revisited
Swingin’ and Skankin’ (Primary Wave Music)
Tom Russell & Joe Ely- Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues
Folk Hotel (Frontera)
Bill Camplin- Desolation Row
Bob Dylan Project One (Bill Camplin)

Bob Dylan recorded versions of the next three songs during the sessions for Highway 61 Revisited but did not include them on the album.

Lucinda Williams- Positively 4th Street
The Village: A Celebration of the Music of Greenwich Village (429)
Bob Dylan & The Hawks- Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window (single version)
Side Tracks (Columbia/Legacy)

Bob Dylan- Sitting On a Barbed Wire Fence
The Best of the Cutting Edge 1965-1966 (Columbia/Legacy)

Next week: Crazy Blues and Other Crazy Songs.

--Mike Regenstreif

Thursday, May 13, 2021

Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif – CKCU – Tuesday May 18, 2021


Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif finds connections and develops themes in various genres. The show is broadcast on CKCU in Ottawa on Tuesday afternoons from 3:30 until 5 pm (Eastern time) and is also available 24/7 for on-demand streaming.

CKCU can be heard live at 93.1 FM in Ottawa and https://www.ckcufm.com/ on the web.

This episode of Stranger Songs was prerecorded at home and can already be streamed on-demand by clicking on “Listen Now” at … https://cod.ckcufm.com/programs/595/51999.html

Theme: The Times They Are A-Changin’: A Nod to Bob Dylan at 80, Part 1. Bob Dylan, arguably, the most important and influential songwriter ever, will turn 80 on May 24 and this is the first of three shows I will present on CKCU in the week surrounding Dylan’s 80th. 

Part 2 will air on the May 22 edition of the Saturday Morning show and can already be streamed on-demand by clicking on “Listen Now” at … https://cod.ckcufm.com/programs/128/52060.html

Part 3 will be on the May 25 edition of Stranger Songs and can already be streamed on-demand by clicking on “Listen Now” at … https://cod.ckcufm.com/programs/595/52102.html

Visit https://frfb.blogspot.com/2021/05/bob-dylan-at-80.html to read my essay, “Bob Dylan at 80.”

Finest KInd- The Times They Are A-Changin’
Silks & Spices (Fallen Angle)

Dave Van Ronk- Song to Woody
Somebody Else, Not Me (Philo)
Jenny Whiteley- Oxford Town
The Original Jenny Whiteley (Black Hen)
Sneezy Waters & His Very Fine Band- When the Ship Comes In
Live (Sneezy Waters)
Eliza Gilkyson- A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall
2020 (Red House)
Bob Dylan- The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll
The Times They Are A-Changin’ (Columbia/Legacy)

Bettye LaVette- Mama, You Been On My Mind
Things Have Changed (Verve)
Penny Lang- One Too Many Mornings
Stone + Sand + Sea + Sky (Borealis)
Bob Dylan- She Belongs to Me
Bringing It All Back Home (Columbia/Legacy)

Mike Regenstreif & Jimmy LaFave (2017)

Jane Lewis
- I Shall Be Released
Stay with Me (Jane Lewis)
Jimmy LaFave- My Back Pages
Peace Town (Music Road)
The Brothers & Sisters- Chimes of Freedom
Dylan’s Gospel (Columbia)
Bob Dylan- Restless Farewell
The Times They Are A-Changin’ (Columbia/Legacy)

Ian Hanchet- Ballad of a Thin Man
Dealin’ from the Bottom (of My Heart) (Ian Hanchet)
Tom Russell & Joe Ely- Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues
Folk Hotel (Frontera)
Bill Camplin- Desolation Row
Bob Dylan Project One (Bill Camplin)

Duke Ellington- Blowin’ in the Wind
Ellington ’65 (Reprise)

Next week – A Nod to Bob Dylan at 80, Part 3 (A Nod to Bob Dylan at 80, Part 2 will be heard on the Saturday Morning show on May 22)

Find me on Twitter. www.twitter.com/mikeregenstreif

And on Facebook. facebook.com/mikeregenstreif

--Mike Regenstreif

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Tom Russell – Folk Hotel



TOM RUSSELL
Folk Hotel
Frontera Records

I checked into the Folk Hotel when I was a teenager in the late-1960s. Tom Russell, who is about five years older than me, was already there. Both of us encountered many of the same legendary figures who were there before us – legends whose spirits loom large over Folk Hotel, Tom’s brilliant new masterwork; a collection that comes hot on the heels of Play One More: The Songs of Ian Sylvia, a wonderful tribute to a couple of the legendary residents who were already on the upper floors of the Folk Hotel before either of us got there.

There are 14 tracks on Folk Hotel – 13 written or co-written by Tom – and every one of them is worthy of great praise.

The album open s with “Up in the Old Hotel,” a song inspired by stories and legends of New York’s Chelsea Hotel, a residence favored by writers, musicians, actors and artists for more than a century. References to “Ma and Pa Kettle on the radio,” Louis Armstrong singing “I Guess I’ll Get the Papers and Go Home,” and the death of Dylan Thomas, who died at the Chelsea in 1953, suggest a timeframe for the narrator sweetly singing about “falling in love up in the old hotel.”

Although Tom was conjuring images from another time in the opening track, the second song, “Leaving El Paso,” is a reflection of his own life. Tom lived for many years in El Paso, across the river from Juarez, Mexico, until he and his wife Nadine Russell sold their place a couple of years ago and moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico. The song features wonderful playing by Joel Guzman on guitar and Red Volkaert on Spanish guitar and, like many of Tom’s border ballads from his El Paso years, has a lovely Tex-Mex feel.

A conversation with Canadian folk and cowboy music legend Ian Tyson – with whom Tom has co-written a bunch of songs including “Navajo Rug” and “When the Wolves No Longer Sing” – inspired “I’ll Never Leave These Old Horses.” Describing Ian in the verses and channeling him in the chorus, Tom lets us in on why Ian, well into his 80s, won’t give up the hard life on his Alberta ranch.

“The Sparrow of Swansea (For Dylan Thomas),” co-written by Katy Moffatt and recorded by her on the 1996 album Midnight Hotel, is an older song that Tom never released himself. But, in the context of the Folk Hotel, it’s one that needed to be here. It’s a lovely song – with harmony by Eliza Gilkyson – that captures the seemingly contradictory beauty of Thomas’ poetry and the rage of his alcoholism.

“All on a Belfast Morning,” introduced with the recitation of “He Stumbled Home from Clifden Fair” by Irish poet James H. Cousins, is a Tom Russell song steeped – like some of the songs Tom wrote for The Man from God Knows Where – in the Irish folk tradition. The alcohol that flowed through “The Sparrow of Swansea” is here, too, but, so, too is the wisdom of the poets and the Irish ballad singers.

In “Rise Again, Handsome Johnny,” Tom recalls a fleeting encounter he had as a young boy with presidential candidate John F. Kennedy in 1960, the assassination of the president in 1963, and a high school football game he played that day. There’s an infectious Mississippi John Hurt vibe to the arrangement courtesy of Max de Bernardi’s fine fingerpicked guitar playing.

He doesn’t say so in the song, but I think the title protagonist in “Harlan Clancy” is one of those fed-up white voters in Ohio who probably supported Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012 but went for Donald Trump out of frustration in 2016. “I ain’t no racist, I ain’t no redneck,” sings the character as he explains his frustrations. Without specific reference to the Trump campaign, the song helps provide a measure of understanding of why some voters might have gone that way. (By the way, I’m writing this review the day after the racist, anti-Semitic, neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, Virginia and I’d like to think that the Harlan Clancys of this world would be appalled by what happened there and by Trump’s response.)

Tom relates a dream in “The Last Time I Saw Hank” in which imagined memories of Hank Williams and Jesus intermingle with real (or really possible) memories of George Jones and his parents.

“The Light Beyond the Coyote Fence” is a song from Tom’s life. The coyote fence describes the fence around Tom and Nadine’s new house in Santa Fe that is meant to keep the coyotes out and on “Some nights we can see light of fires as Indians dance/And the eyes of God shine through the coyote fence” – but, mostly, it’s a song about being a traveling folksinger, about what that lifestyle entails, and about the refuge from that lifestyle that the home inside the coyote fence represents.

I think “The Dram House Down in Gutter Lane” is the third part of a trilogy begun in “The Sparrow of Swansea” and “All on a Belfast Morning” that helps us understand the thin, fragile edge and human frailties that have defined so many.

It’s followed by a three-part track – a poem, a short song, and a standard-length song: “The Day They Dredged the Liffey/The Banks of Montauk/The Road to Santa Fe-O.” The poem is a tribute to Irish writers that, in four short verses, references James Joyce, Samuel Beckett, Oscar Wilde, Brendan Behan, Patrick Kavanagh and William Butler Yeats. The short song references the first cattle ranch in the United States (on Long Island of all places) and leads into a love song in which Tom uses the template of an old folk whaling ballad to describe meeting Nadine, the Swiss woman who became his wife, and their journey to a new home in Santa Fe.

In “The Rooftops of Copenhagen,” Tom describes observing a real-life character in a Copenhagen bar, hearing the guy’s story from a waitress, and then – 20 years later – finding out how the story ends.

The only non-original on Folk Hotel has Tom conversationally trading verses with Joe Ely on perhaps the most beautiful ever version of the Bob Dylan classic, “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues.” Tom’s acoustic guitar and Joel Guzman’s accordion provide perfect backdrop.

The album ends with the epic “Scars on his Ankles,” a song about blues legend Lightnin’ Hopkins, writer Grover Lewis, and the relationship shared by the older African American man and younger white man. Tom’s singing storytelling glides seemingly effortlessly for nine minutes on top of Max de Bernardi’s intense, Hopkins-styled playing on acoustic guitar.


Mike Regenstreif & Tom Russell (2012)
Tom Russell, as I’ve said many times before and will, no doubt, say again in the future, is the finest songwriter of my generation. He proves it, yet again, on Folk Hotel.

Folk Hotel will be released on September 8 but is now available for pre-order at Frontera Records. You can also order the companion book which contains all the lyrics, Tom’s thoughts on the songs, some stories from the Folk Hotel and Tom’s original paintings inspired by some of the residents.

I will be featuring several songs from Folk Hotel during a multi-artist feature on “Songs of Tom Russell” when I host the August 19 edition of the Saturday Morning show (7-10 am EDT) on CKCU. Listen live at 93.1 FM in Ottawa or live or on demand (after the live show) on the web at ckcufm.com.

Find me on Twitter. twitter.com/@mikeregenstreif

And on Facebook. facebook.com/mikeregenstreif

--Mike Regenstreif

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Tom Russell – The Rose of Roscrae: A Ballad of the West



TOM RUSSELL
The Rose of Roscrae: A Ballad of the West
Frontera Records

The Rose of Roscrae: A Ballad of the West is the third in a series of extraordinary concept albums Tom Russell has delivered in addition to the many other superb albums he’s recorded over the past three decades.

The first release in what should now be regarded as a trilogy was The Man from God Knows Where, a brilliant folk opera, released in 1999, about immigration and the American dream partially based on Tom’s own Irish and Norwegian ancestors and the generations that followed. Then came the equally-brilliant Hotwalker, released in 2005, an audio collage of original songs, poetry, stories, rants and outside voices that paid tribute to forgotten aspects of real American culture.

Expanding on the forms he developed in the two earlier works, The Rose of Roscrae, running two-and-a-half hours on two CDs, is perhaps Tom’s most ambitious work yet, a folk opera whose plot, although fictional, incorporates ideas and experiences drawn from a number of historical figures and from Tom’s real life sister-in-law who spent decades running a ranch on her own.

Much of the story is told through the eyes of the main protagonist, Johnny Dutton, an old man looking back on a life of adventure and misadventure that began in Ireland in the 1880s when the teenaged Johnny is beaten up by his girlfriend’s father and he escapes to America to become a cowboy and outlaw in what was by then the rapidly dying old west.

As the plot unfolds, Johnny works as a cowboy for the legendary real life trail boss Charles Goodnight, escapes the gallows with the help of a crooked judge, reunites with his Irish girlfriend, Rose Malloy – the Rose of Roscrae – and then marries and loses her due his philandering ways, outruns the lawman/preacher on his trail, and becomes enraptured with the story of Father Damien and his leper colony on the Hawaiian island of Molokai. Johnny’s travels also take him south into Mexico and north up to Canada. As a prisoner in Louisiana and Texas he encounters the likes of Lead Belly and other prison singers recorded by folklorists like John and Alan Lomax.

Other parts of the story are told through the eyes of Rose. How she follows Johnny to the American west, marries him, throws him out, and spends decades as a woman alone running her ranch. Some of the specific things that happen to her are based on the experiences of Tom’s sister-in-law, Claudia Russell.

Eventually, the elderly Rose returns to Ireland and Johnny follows – no longer as her husband, but as her old friend.

Tom’s performances are riveting throughout the long piece. So, too, are the other singers who take on various roles in the folk opera. These include Jimmie Dale Gilmore, David Olney, Joe Ely, Augie Meyers, Jimmy LaFave, Thad Beckman, Sourdough Slim, Maura O’Connell, Eliza Gilkyson, and Gretchen Peters. The orchestral overture, incorporating melodies from traditional folksongs, is played beautifully by the Norwegian Wind Ensemble, the orchestra that Tom collaborated with a couple of years ago on the Aztec Jazz album.

There is an embarrassment of riches among the songs Tom composed for The Rose of Roscrae but I’ll mention that some of the standout moments include Tom’s performances of “The Rose of Roscrae,” “Johnny Behind the Deuce,” the several soliloquys, “Poor Mother Mexico” “Damien (A Crust of Bread, A Slice of Fish, A Cup of Water),” and “The Bear,” sung as a duet with Eliza Gilkyson.

Two of the most stunning performances are by Maura O’Connell singing “I Talk to God” and Gretchen Peters singing “When the Wolves No Longer Sing.”

As well as vehicle to tell the story through about 25 new songs written or co-written by Tom for The Rose of Roscrae, the piece also serves as a homage to traditional folksongs and to the singers who sang them on field and commercial recordings – as well as to some contemporary singers and songwriters who have added to the tradition. Among the borrowed voices we hear singing songs or fragments of songs are Johnny Cash, Moses “Clear Rock” Platt, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, Jack Hardy & David Massengill, Tex Ritter, A.L. Lloyd, Finbar Furey, Blackie Farrell, Ross Knox, Glenn Ohrlin, Henry Real Bird, John Trudell, Ana Gabriel, Ian Tyson, Bonnie Dobson, Lead Belly, Guy Clark and Dan Penn.

Mike Regenstreif & Tom Russell in Montreal (2012).
In addition to the 2-CD set, Tom has released an almost essential companion book which includes the folk opera’s libretto, as well as extensive background information on the piece, all of the songs and the many contributors.

The Rose of Roscrae: A Ballad of the West is yet another masterwork by Tom Russell. It is a work of rare ambition and rare brilliance that is beautifully and artfully executed. Bravo to Tom and to his many collaborators on this project.

Find me on Twitter. twitter.com/@mikeregenstreif

And on Facebook. facebook.com/mikeregenstreif

--Mike Regenstreif