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Early Southern Guitar Styles

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Download links and information about Early Southern Guitar Styles by Mike Seeger. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 28 tracks with total duration of 01:16:11 minutes.

Artist: Mike Seeger
Release date: 2007
Genre: World Music, Country, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 28
Duration: 01:16:11
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Wildwood Flower 0:54
2. Old Chisholm Trail 1:53
3. Spanish Fandango 2:19
4. Shakin the Pines In the Holler 2:03
5. Weary Lonesome Blues 2:33
6. White Oak Mountain 3:15
7. I'm Crazy Over You 2:20
8. Can't Get a Letter from Home 2:47
9. Guitar Rag 3:08
10. Smoketown Strut 2:58
11. Big Kid's Barroom 2:49
12. Fishing Blues 3:26
13. After All Has Been Said and Done 2:47
14. Joe Lee's Tune 1:59
15. Carroll County Blues 2:34
16. Birmingham Tickle 2:39
17. Worried Blues 3:48
18. Kenny Wagner's Surrender 2:51
19. Arizona 2:24
20. Pearly Dew 2:20
21. Risselty Rosselty 1:47
22. Johnny Doyle 4:09
23. Black Jack David 2:59
24. John Henry 3:36
25. Buckdancer's Choice 3:23
26. Riley and Spencer 4:27
27. When This World Comes to an End 2:26
28. Leaning On the Everlasting Arm 1:37

Details

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Folklorist/singer/multi-instrumentalist Mike Seeger may not bear the cultural weight of his better-known cousin Pete, but between the two a veritable encyclopedia set of sepia-tone Americana resides. Seeger's follow-up to his excellent 2003 Smithsonian Folkways release True Vine is as much a historical artifact as it is the perfect front porch/parlor room soundtrack for a hot summer's day. Early Southern Guitar Sounds is just that, a 28-track musical lecture on the styles, body shapes, and songs that mythically described the guitar from around 1850 to 1930. Seeger takes the listener through ragtime, blues, Celtic-infused old-timey ballads and straight up traditional folk and country on a multitude of different instruments, from pre-World War I arch tops to a turn of the century banjo, lending his voice to a few and his formidable instrumental skills to the majority. This isn't flashy or progressive noodling, rather it's the musical equivalent of the slow food movement, offering up samples of cuisine that haven't seen a dinner table since the first World War, let alone been injected with any commercial additives. As with all Smithsonian Folkways releases, Early Southern Guitar Sounds features exhaustive liner notes that include dissertation-worthy descriptions of playing styles, detailed photos of period instruments, and song-by-song histories that make you want convert your listening room into an old oak library or pine box saloon.