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Pioneering Women of Bluegrass

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Download links and information about Pioneering Women of Bluegrass by Hazel Dickens, Alice Gerrard. This album was released in 1996 and it belongs to Folk Rock, World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 26 tracks with total duration of 01:08:22 minutes.

Artist: Hazel Dickens, Alice Gerrard
Release date: 1996
Genre: Folk Rock, World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 26
Duration: 01:08:22
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. T.B. Blues - They're At Rest Together 3:28
2. The One I Love Is Gone 3:11
3. Who's That Knocking? 3:00
4. Walkin' In My Sleep 2:10
5. Won't You Come and Sing for Me 2:47
6. Can't You Hear Me Calling 3:16
7. Darling Nellie Across the Sea 2:22
8. Coal Miner's Blues 2:44
9. Sugar Tree Stomp 2:08
10. Train On the Island 1:44
11. Cowboy Jim 2:05
12. Lee Highway Blues 1:42
13. Memories of Mother and Dad 2:39
14. Long Black Veil 3:22
15. Gonna Lay Down My Old Guitar 2:58
16. Difficult Run 1:35
17. Mommy Please Stay Home With Me 3:13
18. Gabriel's Call 2:16
19. Just Another Broken Heart 2:45
20. A Distant Land to Roam 3:02
21. John Henry 1:50
22. I Just Got Wise 2:29
23. Lover's Return 3:09
24. A Tiny Broken Heart 3:05
25. Take Me Back to Tulsa 2:16
26. I Hear a Sweet Voice Calling 3:06

Details

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Hazel Dickens & Alice Gerrard recorded a couple of albums in the mid-'60s that are now acknowledged as groundbreakers in demonstrating that women could play and record quality bluegrass. This collection remasters and re-sequences 26 tracks from the sessions, as well as adding lengthy historical liner notes, much of them contributed by the performers themselves. Historical significance aside, it's pretty good bluegrass, the two singers and instrumentalists supported by other good musicians, including a young David Grisman. Their set leaned heavily on covers of tunes by the Carter Family and Bill Monroe (who specifically gave "I Hear a Sweet Voice Calling" to the duo), with additional items by the Delmore Brothers, the Stanley Brothers, and the like. Alice Gerrard's low vocals give this a greater gravity than much bluegrass. A special highlight is their cover of the magnificently mournful "The One I Love Is Gone," another tune that Monroe donated to the pair. Inverting the usual bluegrass cliché, one might call it an example of the low and lonesome sound.