Showing posts with label Lead Belly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lead Belly. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif – CKCU – February 6, 2024: A Tribute to Odetta


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/595/63807.html

Theme: A Tribute to Odetta (1930-2008).


Odetta, the magnificent and highly influential African American folk and blues singer, who died in 2008 at the age of 77, was born Odetta Holmes in Birmingham, Alabama. She originally trained to be an opera singer and her earliest professional jobs were in musical theatre. In 1949, while singing in the touring company of Finian’s Rainbow, she met some folksingers and fell in love with the genre. From then on, she turned her attention to folk and blues, performing concerts and recording prolifically starting in the mid-1950s.

I met Odetta for the first time in 1977 in the hallway of the hotel we were staying at during the Philadelphia Folk Festival. I was there with Priscilla Herdman, who knew Odetta, and when she introduced us, Odetta gave me one of her big hugs. In the 1980s, I brought Odetta to The Golem, the folk club I ran in Montreal, numerous times.

Odetta, pianist Dave Keyes & Mike Regenstreif (2008)

The last time I got to work with Odetta was when I hosted a workshop with her at the 2008 Ottawa Folk Festival, just a few months before she passed away. I was deeply honored when she told me that my friendship over the years meant a lot to her.

All of the songs on this show were from Odetta’s repertoire.


Odetta
- Stranger Here
Sometimes I Feel Like Cryin’ (RCA)

Lead Belly with The Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet- Alabama Bound
Take This Hammer – When the Sun Goes Down, Vol. 5 (Bluebird)
Bessie Smith- Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out
Bessie Smith: The Absolutely Essential 3 CD Collection (Big3)
Josh White- House of the Rising Sun
The Josh White Stories, Vols. I & II (Jasmine)

Odetta
- Roberta
Lookin’ for a Home: Thanks to Leadbelly (M.C.)

Odetta
- Freedom Trilogy: Oh Freedom/Come & Go with Me/I’m On My Way
Gonna Let It Shine (M.C.)

Gina Coleman- Glory Glory
Tell Me Who You Are: A Live Tribute to Odetta (Guitar One) 
Kim & Reggie Harris- Wade in the Water
Steal Away: Songs of the Underground Railroad (Appleseed)

Odetta
- Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
Odetta at Carnegie Hall (Vanguard)

Bob Dylan- No More Auction Block
The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 [Rare & Unreleased] 1961-1991 (Columbia)

Odetta
- Blowin’ in the Wind
Odetta Sings Dylan (RCA)

Chaim Tannenbaum- Ain’t No More Cane on the Brazos
Chaim Tannenbaum (StorySound)
Rhiannon Giddens- Waterboy
Tomorrow is My Turn (Nonesuch)
Sweet Honey in the Rock- The Midnight Special
A Tribute: Live! Jazz at Lincoln Centre (Appleseed)
Coco Love Alcorn- This Little Light of Mine
Rebirth (Coco Love Alcorn)

Odetta & The Holmes Brothers
- Down By the Riverside
Gonna Let It Shine (M.C.)

Tom Jones- Hit or Miss
Spirit in the Room (Island)
Penny Lang- Careless Love
Stone + Sand + Sea + Sky (Borealis)
Misty Blues- Go Down, Sunshine
Tell Me Who You Are: A Live Tribute to Odetta (Guitar One) 

Odetta & Dr. John
- Oh Papa
Blues Everywhere I Go (M.C.)

Odetta- Goodnight Irene
Lookin’ for a Home: Thanks to Leadbelly (M.C.)

Next week: A Tribute Jelly Roll Morton on Mardi Gras Day.

--Mike Regenstreif

Friday, August 20, 2021

Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif – CKCU – Tuesday August 24, 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/595/53196.html

Theme: Rare Collaborations – each song features artists collaborating with an artist or artists they don’t or didn’t usually work with.

The Band & The Staple Singers- The Weight
The Last Waltz (Capitol)

Kate & Anna McGarrigle, Emmylou Harris, Loudon Wainwright III- Green Green Rocky Road
The McGarrigle Hour (Hannibal)
Jean Ritchie & Oscar Brand- Paper of Pins
The Riverside Folklore Series, Volume Three: Singing the New Traditions (Riverside)
Priscilla Herdman & Utah Phillips- I Remember Loving You
Darkness into Light (Flying Fish)
Eric Bibb & Odetta- ‘Tain’t Such a Much
Friends (Telarc)
Perla Batalla & David Hidalgo- Ballad of the Absent Mare
Bird on the Wire: The Songs of Leonard Cohen (Mechuda Music)

Barbara Dane & The Chambers Brothers- Study War No More (Down By the Riverside)
Hot Jazz, Cool Blues & Hard-Hitting Songs (Smithsonian Folkways)

Stringband & Stan Rogers- Tugboats
The Indispensable 1972-2002 (Nick)
Tom Russell & Iris DeMent- Big Water
The Long Way Around (HighTone)
Kimmie Rhodes & Townes Van Zandt- I’m Gonna Fly
West Texas Heaven (Justice)
Josh White, Jr. & Guthrie Thomas- Don’t Mean a Thing
Delicate Balance (Silverwolf)
Dave Alvin & Christy McWilson- Here in California
West of the West (Yep Roc)

Odetta & Dr. John- Please Send Me Someone to Love
Blues Everywhere I Go (M.C.)
Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee & Chris Barber's Jazz Band- Betty and Dupree
London, 1958 (Jasmine)
Geoff Muldaur's Futuristic Ensemble & Martha Wainwright- There Ain’t No Sweet Man That’s Worth the Salt of My Tears
Private Astronomy: A Vision of the Music of Bix Beiderbecke (Edge Music)
Members of The Duke Ellington Orchestra & B.B. King- Don’t Get Around Much Anymore
The Stereophonic Sound of Duke Ellington (Bright Orange)

Dave Van Ronk & Christine Lavin- Two Sleepy People
Hummin’ to Myself (Gazell)
Michael Jerome Browne & Roxane Potvin- Remember When
That’s Where It’s At! (Borealis)
Big Daddy Wilson & Shaneeka Simon- Meatballs
Hard Time Blues (Continental Blue Heaven)

Woody Guthrie & Lead Belly (1940s)

Woody Guthrie, Lead Belly, Sonny Terry & Cisco Houston- We Shall Be Free
Woody at 100: The Woody Guthrie Centennial Collection (Smithsonian Folkways)
The Klezmatics & Susan McKeown- From Here On In
Wonder Wheel: Lyrics by Woody Guthrie (Jewish Music Group)
Tom Rush, Arlo Guthrie, Eric Andersen & Judy Collins- Will the Circle Be Unbroken
Judy Collins Wildflower Festival (Wildflower)

Connie Kaldor & Roy Forbes- Saskatoon Moon
Wood River (Coyote)

Next week: Remembering Nanci Griffith (1953-2021)

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

And on Facebook. facebook.com/mikeregenstreif

--Mike Regenstreif

Sunday, May 9, 2021

Bob Dylan at 80

Photo: John Shearer (for Columbia Records)

Note:
This is an updated version of my essay, Bob Dylan at 75, which was an updated version of my essay, Bob Dylan at 70.

Bob Dylan turns 80 on May 24 – 60 years and a few months after he first arrived in New York City with a repertoire of folksongs learned from Odetta and Woody Guthrie records.

Within a relatively short time, Dylan was one of the premier folk artists in Greenwich Village and was well on his way to becoming, arguably, but certainly in my opinion, the most important and influential songwriter ever.

I’m reminded now of something the young Dylan said.

In 1963, talking to Nat Hentoff for the liner notes to The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan about his ability to pull off a song as difficult as “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall,” Dylan said, “It’s a hard song to sing. I can sing it sometimes, but I ain’t that good yet. I don’t carry myself yet the way that Big Joe Williams, Woody Guthrie, Lead Belly and Lightnin’ Hopkins have carried themselves. I hope to be able to someday, but they’re older people.”


Dylan was all of 21 years old when he made that statement. Woody Guthrie – hospitalized with the Huntington’s disease that would kill him in 1967 – and Lightnin’ Hopkins were both then around 50. Big Joe Williams was about 60 and Lead Belly had died in 1949 at 61.

Dylan now is significantly older than Williams, Guthrie and Hopkins were then – and older than Lead Belly was when he died (as am I, for that matter). The young Dylan was highly influenced by those legendary artists who had come along decades earlier – his own influence would soon surpass all others. He changed what was possible to do in the context of a song.

And, yes, he does carry himself with all of the musical gravitas that Williams, Guthrie, Lead Belly and Hopkins had then.

Dylan’s music has been part of my life for most of my life. I bought Dylan’s first few LPs in 1967 when I was 13 and have listened intently to everything that he’s released over the past 60 years (and a fair bit of what’s never been released). I’ve seen him in concert many times and I’ve read most of the good books (including his own Chronicles Volume One), and maybe a few too many of the bad books, that have been written about Dylan over the years.

I was even introduced to him once – in 1975 – for about half a second. “Pleased to meet ya,” he said. I was 21, he was 34, ages that now seem so young.

I’ve written about a bunch of Dylan albums and books over the years in newspapers and magazines (and here on the Folk Roots/Folk Branches blog), I’ve produced and hosted a bunch of radio specials on him and his songs, but I don’t know Dylan. He is easily the most enigmatic, the most unknowable, person I’ve ever encountered.

As I noted in my book review of Bob Dylan in America by Sean Wilentz in a 2011 issue of Sing Out! magazine, I’ve long thought that one of the reasons I so appreciate so much of Bob Dylan’s oeuvre is that (I think) we’ve listened to so much of the same music. To the traditional folk and blues songs, and to so many of the musicians who played them. When Dylan sang, “no one can sing the blues like Blind Willie McTell,” I knew what he was talking about because I’ve listened to all those old Blind Willie McTell records. When he borrows lines or settings from Woody Guthrie or Lead Belly or others, I know where they come from. Dylan’s music is rooted ever so strongly in what Greil Marcus termed the “old weird America,” the folk music and the folk-rooted blues and country music that developed in particular regional locations and began to spread everywhere in the first half of the 20th century.

This leads me to the point I wanted to make when I started writing this little essay. Even before Dylan went electric at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965, there have been commentators who’ve said that Dylan left folk music behind. I don’t think that’s at all true. To this day, Dylan’s songwriting continues to be rooted in the “old weird America.” Dylan didn’t leave folk music behind when he embraced rock ‘n’ roll, he changed what was possible in a folk music context; both in how it’s played and how it’s expressed. I hear folk music at the heart of so much of Dylan’s songwriting – from his earliest work to his most recent.

As I noted last year when Dylan released Rough and Rowdy Ways, “On his first album of new songs in eight years, Bob Dylan, at 79, has given us his some of his most fascinating songs in decades. From the opening song, “I Contain Multitudes,” an exploration of complicated identity, to the final, epic song, “Murder Most Foul,” ostensibly about the assassination of John F. Kennedy, but also much about iconic music, cinema and literature, Dylan continues to use a musical foundation drawing on folk music, blues and the Great American Songbook composers to complement his often-spellbinding lyrics.

And anyone who thinks that folk music is necessarily defined by acoustic guitars does not understand folk music.

Even the three albums celebrating the Great American Songbook that Dylan released between 2015 and 2017, in my opinion, are less a homage to Frank Sinatra, than they are a recognition that those classic songs somehow form part of that “old weird America.” It’s not so much the circumstances of how and when they were written as the context in which they are interpreted.

When jazz musicians like Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie developed bebop, they weren’t leaving jazz behind, they were changing it; even though some of the traditional jazz greats like Louis Armstrong were slow to accept or understand what Parker and Gillespie were doing. Just like some in the folk establishment of 1965 were slow to accept and understand what Dylan was doing. Bob Dylan changed folk music in much the same way Charlie Parker changed jazz.

As far as I’m concerned, Dylan playing his folk-rooted songs with rock musicians in his time is not very different from the Weavers playing folksongs with the Gordon Jenkins Orchestra in theirs.

Anyway, real rock ‘n’ roll, is a folk-rooted form. Just listen to the Sun-era recordings of Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash or Jerry Lee Lewis. Listen to Wanda Jackson’s 1950s records, listen to Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly, Bill Haley or Little Richard. The folk and blues roots are there in that music.

By the way, Louis Armstrong was a folksinger, too.

Happy Birthday, Bob!

I will be hosting a series of three radio specials “The Times They Are A-Changin’: A Nod to Bob Dylan at 80,” on CKCU during the week surrounding Dylan’s birthday.

            Part 1 will be on Stranger Songs on Tuesday May 18, 3:30-5 pm (EDT). Click on "LISTEN NOW" at this link to hear the show.

            Part 2 will be on the Saturday Morning show on Saturday May 22, 7-10 am (EDT). Click on "LISTEN NOW" at this link to hear the show.

            Part 3 will be on Stranger Songs on Tuesday May 25, 3:30-5 pm (EDT). Click on "Listen Now" at this link to hear the show.

All of those shows can be heard at 93.1 FM in the Ottawa area or online at ckcufm.com at the time of the broadcast. They will also be available 24/7 for on-demand streaming. I will update this post with links for each show’s stream here as soon as they are available (a few days before each broadcast).

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

And on Facebook. facebook.com/mikeregenstreif

–Mike Regenstreif

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Saturday Morning with Mike Regenstreif – CKCU – Saturday February 3, 2018



Saturday Morning is an eclectic roots-oriented program on CKCU in Ottawa heard live on Saturday mornings from 7 until 10 am (Eastern time) and then available for on-demand streaming. I am one of the four rotating hosts of Saturday Morning and base my programming on the Folk Roots/Folk Branches format I developed at CKUT in Montreal.

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

This episode of Saturday Morning can be streamed on-demand at https://cod.ckcufm.com/programs/128/36059.html.

Extended feature – Songs Celebrating the Legacy of Lead Belly.

The Fugitives- See This Winter Out
The Promise of Strangers (Borealis)

Amber Rubarth- New York
American Folk (American Folk)
True North- Dark Horse Bar & Grill
Open Road, Broken Heart (True North Band)
Shelley Posen- Roseberry Road
Roseberry Road (Well Done Music)
John McCutcheon- Perfect Day
Ghost Light (Appalseed Productions)

Terry Garthwaite- Apple of My Eye
Rosalie Sorrels- The Pine
Live at the Great American Music Hall (Flying Fish)
Tom Mitchell- You Save Everything
When the Moon is Right (Truesongs)
Laura Smith- What Goes Around (Comes Around)

Ronney Abramson- Three O’Clock Ride
Three O’Clock Ride – single (Ronney Abramson)
Jesse Winchester- All of Your Stories
Third Down, 110 to Go (Stony Plain)
Bruce Murdoch- Fool Like Me
Bruce Murdoch (Radio Canada International)
Wade Hemsworth with the Mountain City Four (lead vocal: Anna McGarrigle)- Foolish You
Wade Hemsworth with the Mountain City Four (Peter Weldon)

The Wailin' Jennys- Bring Me Little Water, Sylvie
The Wailin’ Jennys (The Wailin’ Jennys)
Ian & Sylvia- Ella Speed
Four Strong Winds (Vanguard)
Jayme Stone, Eli West, Margaret Glaspy, Bittany Haas & Greg Garrison- Whoa, Back, Buck
Lead Belly- Good Morning Blues #2
Bourgeois Blues (Smithsonian Folkways)
Ben Hunter, Joe Seamons & Phil Wiggins- Po’ Howard
A Black & Tan Ball (Tantamount)

Huddie Ledbetter aka Lead Belly, circa 1940s
Eric Bibb & JJ Milteau- Rock Island Line
Lead Belly’s Gold (Stony Plain)
Guy Davis & Fabrizo Poggi- Take This Hammer
Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee- Midnight Special
Midnight Special (Fantasy)
Lead Belly & the Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet- Alabama Bound
Take This Hammer (Bluebird)
Howard Armstrong- John Henry
Louie Bluie (Blue Suit)

Dave Van Ronk- Duncan and Brady
Down in Washington Square (Smithsonian Folkways)
Paul Geremia- Leavin’ Blues
Self Portrait in Blues (Red House)
Nina Simone- Silver City Bound
Folksy Nina (Colpix)
Lead Belly- Cotton Fields
Where Did You Sleep Last Night? (Smithsonian Folkways)
Tim Williams- When I was a Cowboy
When I was a Cowboy (Cayuse)

Happy & Artie Traum- Titanic
Mud Acres: Music Among Friends (Rounder)
Long John Baldry- We’re in the Same Boat Brother
Remembering Lead Belly (Stony Plain)
Lead Belly- Governor Pat Neff
Shout On (Smithsonian Folkways)
Odetta- Goodnight Irene
Lookin’ for a Home: Thanks to Leadbelly (M.C.)
Pete Seeger- Huddie Ledbetter was Helluva Man
Pete (Living Music)

Tom Russell (intro: Augie Meyers)- Harlan Clancy
Folk Hotel (Frontera)
Aaron Copland & the London Symphony Orchestra- Fanfare for the Common Man
Copland Conducts Copland (CBS Masterworks)

The LYNNeS- Blue Tattoo
Heartbreak Song for the Radio (The LYNNeS)
John Gorka- Tattooed
True in Time (Red House)
Missy Burgess- Don’t Go to Cincinnati
Play Me Sweet (Missy Burgess)
Russ Kelley- Whiskey Stone Blues
In Plain Sight (Ark Road Music Productions)
Curtis Salgado & Alan Hager- I Want You By My Side
Rough Cut (Alligator)

Bill Garrett- Crossties on a Railroad
Bill Garrett (Borealis)

Rob Lutes- Spence
Walk in the Dark (Lucky Bear)

My next Saturday Morning show would normally be on March 3 – but Pat Moore will be subbing for me that day.

Find me on Twitter. @MikeRegenstreif


--Mike Regenstreif