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November 26, 2010

Happy Buy Nothing Day!!!



You'll notice on my description it says: "Artist, guitarist, inactivist, wizard." Well today is for the inactivist in me. A few decades ago Utah Phillips had this to say:

Mark Twain said, "Those of you who are inclined to worry have the widest selection in history." Why complain? Try to do something about it - you know, it's [been] goin' on nine months now, since I decided that I was gonna declare that I am a candidate for the presidency of the United States. Oh yes, I'm going to run.

Shopped around for a party. Well, I looked at the Republicans. Decided talking to a conservative is like talking to your refridgerator. You know, the light goes on, the light goes off, it's not gonna do anything that isn't built into it. But I'm not gonna talk to a conservative any more than I talk to my damn refridgerator. Working for the Democratic party, now, that's kind of like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.

So I created my own party: it's called the Sloth and Indolence Party. I'm running as an anarchist candidate in the best sense of that word. I've studied the presidency carefully. I have seen that our best presidents were the do- nothing presidents: Millard Fillmore, Warren G. Harding. When you have a president who does things we are all in serious trouble. If he does anything at all: if he gets up at night to go to the bathroom, somehow, mystically, trouble will ensue.

I guarantee that if I am elected, I will take over the White House, hang out, shoot pool, scratch my ass, and not do a damn thing.

Which is to say: if you want something done, don't come to me do it for you, you gotta get together and figure out how to do it yourselves. Is that a deal?

And today, on Black Friday, I honor his spirit. Be a bum for a day. Realize that the most toxic, destructive, and bloody thing on the planet today is the Consumer Culture. And take today to discover how you can have more fun by not buying into that consumer dream. Eat your leftovers. Take a walk. Have a snowball fight. Knit a pair of socks. Begin gathering stories to give as presents this Christmas. Organize a barter economy. Do a seed-swap. Learn about wild foods in your area. Sleep. Make love. Stand on your head. Today, I'm giving you some funky old music. Do what you want with it!

here's some inactivistic info:

VA - Rural Parlor Guitar - Recordings from 1967-1971


So by now most of you have gotten used to this pirate disappearing for 3-month stretches, with little-to-no notice. This was another one of those, also involving travel and relocation. Thanks for your patience! I'm beginning to get settled into my new home, and may perhaps soon begin posting all the vinyl I ripped the last time I was at my parent's house. Until then, rest assured that all is well on the stormy seas, and enjoy this little ditty from time immemoral:

Parlor Guitar. This is the original American guitar style. The first Guitar Soli. This is where blacks and whites first came together and combined their heritage into a new innovation. Without Parlor Guitar, there would be no John Fahey, no Elizabeth Cotten, no John Hurt, no Norman Blake. The tunes are from a time when there was no radio or records. If you wanted music, you had to make it yourself. If you have been reading this blog, I probably don't need to tell you that you need to hear this. Humility suffuses the music. Grace too. Old virtues we don't think too much about in the modern era, now that we worship the ego. Let this gift be a reminder that the best things in life are free, homemade, imperfect, and full of surprises. And if you don't play an instrument, maybe you should start. It's easier than you think.

a bit of a bio:
Like so many great musicians in what we generally term ‘folk music’, I don’t feel that Estil Ball got as much recognition as he deserved during his lifetime. It wasn’t that nobody was aware of his existence - as early as 1941 he had been recorded by Alan Lomax, and possibly even two or three years prior to that. Lomax had apparently met Ball at an early Galax Fiddler’s Convention. Ball lived roughly 30 or so miles from Galax in the tiny community of Rugby, Virginia, a few miles from where he was born and where he and his wife Orna continued to live until hiss untimely death in July 1978. It was at Rugby where Lomax recorded Ball on the porch of the Henderson household. Sylvia Henderson is a cousin to Orna and the house occupied by her and her husband was the only one in Rugby at that time to have electricity.

Lomax again recorded Estil and Orna Ball during his well documented field trips in 1959 and 1960. It was a BBC/Lomax documentary programme featuring recordings made on this trip that first introduced me to his wonderful fingerpicking guitar style, I had never heard anybody make an acoustic guitar swing like that. Lomax announced him as “my friend E C Ball, a school bus driver from Virginia”, and the sound just blew me away. I couldn’t then understand how a musician of that calibre should have to drive a bus for a living. Since that time however I have found that it was not an unusual occupation for musicians in the South. Fiddling Fred Price over in Trade, Tennessee was another.


VA - Rural Parlor Guitar - Recordings from 1967-1971

Label: COUNTY CD-2744
Artists: E. C. Ball, Earl Blair, Lena Hughes, Lewis Thomasson

RURAL PARLOR GUITAR is the one of the very few commercial recording to focus on this genre, and the only one to include multitude artists from different regions. Each of the four musicians was raised in rural areas in the early 1900s: Lena Hughes in northwest Missouri; Earl Blair in the Arkansas Ozarks; Lewis Thomasson in the open plains of Coryell County, Texas, and E. C. Ball in the southwest mountains of Virginia. They learned to play — without sheet music, radio or recordings – from family and other musicians.

All the defining characteristics of the parlor guitar genre are here: open tunings; the use of three and four fingers, arpeggios, hammer-ons, pull-offs, slides and harmonics. Many of the tracks have never been available commercially before; each is an excellent representation of parlor guitar. The tuning for each song is included.

“The guitar styles depicted in this CD are all different, yet very representative of what one might have found in the rural south eighty or more years ago. Only a handful of guitarists in the 1920s, such as Roy Harvey and Leonard Copeland, made commercial recordings in this flavor, making this collection an invaluable resource for parlor-style guitar.” - Jeremy Stephens

“19th century parlor guitar was the foundation or an influence for the playing of early rural guitar players as diverse as Elizabeth Cotten and Sam McGee. Probably even the early blues players. This CD presents some of the last players of this rarely recorded style.” - Mike Seeger

All the recordings, save for E. C. Ball’s two self-recordings, were made by Charlie Faurot on his trips to their homes from 1967 to 1971. The format is a guitar based follow-up to his highly successful Clawhammer Banjo Series, originally released on County LPs. The Clawhammer digital release was equally successful. Produced by Charlie Faurot and Jeremy Stephens, RURAL PARLOR GUITAR was digitally edited by Jeremy Stephens. It was mastered by Dave Glasser, twice a Grammy winner.


Customer Review:
If you're interested in blues guitar or country guitar, you should own--no, you MUST own this cd. This is where the history of American guitar begins.

Until about 1875, guitars were handmade and expensive. About that time, industry began applying to the guitar the same manufacturing techniques it had earlier applied to the fiddle (making it cheap and affordable--and a common folk instrument). This made guitars affordable. Unfortunately, hardly anyone knew how to play them.

In stepped a series of entrepreneurs who turned out books on how to play guitar. They aimed at the same market as had bought the piano--young, middle class ladies. The books included light classics, intermezzos, novelties, and numbers written especially for teaching the instrument. Later, when the syncopated music craze began to hit in the 1890s, cakewalks and rags were included in the books. Many of the numbers were in standard tuning. But, to help make learning more simple, many were also written in various opening tunings, particularly G, C, and D tunings.

Now, what does this have to do with country music and blues? Country first. One of the young ladies who started playing parlor guitar, about 1881, was Alice DeArmond Jones of Muhlenberg County, Kentucky. Later, she taught her son, Kennedy Jones, to play the instrument as she had learned it. Kennedy taught many youngsters in the area, including Mose Rager. And Rager, too, had a student--Merle Travis. And Travis became the model for Chet Atkins.

Now blues. Two of the most popular songs in the parlor guitar guitar repetoire were "The Spanish Fandango" and "The Seige of Sebastopol" (both included here). "The Spanish Fandango" was typically played in G tuning, and "Sebastopol" (as it was often known) was played in D tuning (here, however, it's in C tuning). To this day, country bluesmen still describe the open G tuning as "Spanish" tuning and the open D as "Vastapol." So, somebody sure was listening. Delta blues styles probably weren't greatly influenced by parlor guitar, except that some of the upper-register slides and devices that parlor guitarist played with fingers, the Delta players played with a slide. Also, listen to "Cannon Ball Rag" on this cd and compare it to Mississippi John Hurt's "Louis Collins." Spooky. If you want to hear a style midway between parlor guitar and blues, check out Elizabeth Cotton's two cds on Smithsonian Folkways, Freight Train And Other North Carolina Folk Songs and Tunes and Shake Sugaree.

The performances on this cd were recorded 1967-1971 by four musicians who grew up in the early part of the century. The songs are, by our standards, sedate. They display, however, impeccable musicianship and an unmatched musical pedigree. The history of the American popular guitar begins here.


Tracks:
1 - Spanish Fandango - 2:41 - Lena Hughes
2 - Dewdrop - 2:19 - Earl Blair
3 - Sevastopol - 2:42 - Lewis Thomasson
4 - Walking The Wires - 1:23 - E.C. Ball
5 - Alone In My Rocking Chair - 2:24 - Lena Hughes
6 - Midnight Fire Alarm - 1:53 - Earl Blair
7 - Arlington - 2:52 - Lewis Thomasson
8 - Cannon Ball Blues - 2:20 - E. C. Ball
9 - Old Spinning Wheel - 2:08 - Lena Hughes
10 - Winter's Waltz - 3:06 - Lewis Thomasson
11 - Mother's In Heaven - 2:15 - Lena Hughes
12 - Home Sweet Home Waltz - 1:41 - Earl Blair
13 - Virginia Rag - 1:47 - E. C. Ball
14 - Echoes - 1:33 - Lewis Thomasson
15 - Lamplighting Time In The Valley - 2:10 - Lena Hughes
16 - Lewis Thomasson's Schottische - 2:04 - Lewis Thomasson
17 - Sioux City Sue - 2:17 - Lena Hughes
18 - Grandfather's Clock - 3:23 - E. C. Ball
19 - San Saba - 1:12 - Lewis Thomasson
20 - Wild Rose Medley - 1:44 - Earl Blair
21 - Pearly Dew - 2:35 - Lena Hughes

recycled music.
(or alternate link)
mp3 >256kbps vbr | w/ scans

oh, and i'm looking for other recordings of E.C. Ball. Here's a list of the ones that are out there somewhere:
1967 - E.C. Ball and the Friendly Gospel Singers - County - 711
1972 - E.C. Ball - Rounder - 0026
1976 - Fathers Have A Home Sweet Home - 0072
1996 - E.C. Ball - Rounder - 11577 - Reissue of Rounder 0026, plus 9 additional tracks
1999 - E.C. Ball and Orna: Through the Years, 1937-1975 - Copper Creek - 0141

if you have any of the above, let me know!


You just can't keep a good wizard down


He's back! And better than ever!

With brilliant new material!

You'll find him at Merlin's New Rags.


And yes, you can commence rejoicing...