We use cookies to provide essential features and services. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies .

×

Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


Prison Songs, Vol. 1
By

Rating
Album: Prison Songs, Vol. 1: Murderous Home
# Song Title   Time
1)    Murderer's Home, The - Jimpson/Group
2)    No More, My Lord - Blind Lemon Jefferson
3)    Old Alabama - B.B. & Group
4)    Black Woman - B.B. & Group
5)    Jumpin' Judy - Hard Hair/Tangle Eye/Fuzzy Red/Group
6)    Whoa Buck - C.B.
7)    Prettiest Train - Twenty Two
8)    Old Dollar Mamie - Twenty Two
9)    It Makes a Long Time Man Feel Bad - Twenty Two
10)    Rosie - C.B./Axe Gang
11)    Levee Camp Holler - Bama
12)    What Makes a Work Song Leader? - (interview with Bama)
13)    Early in the Mornin' - Twenty Two/Hard Hair/Little Red/Tangle Eye/22
14)    How I Got in the Penitentiary - Alan Lomax (interview with Bama)
15)    Tangle Eye Blues - Tangle Eye
16)    Stackerlee - Bama
17)    Prison Blues - Alex
 

Album: Prison Songs, Vol. 1: Murderous Home
# Song Title   Time
1)    Murderer's Home, The - Jimpson/Group
2)    No More, My Lord - Blind Lemon Jefferson
3)    Old Alabama - B.B. & Group
4)    Black Woman - B.B. & Group
5)    Jumpin' Judy - Hard Hair/Tangle Eye/Fuzzy Red/Group
6)    Whoa Buck - C.B.
7)    Prettiest Train - Twenty Two
8)    Old Dollar Mamie - Twenty Two
9)    It Makes a Long Time Man Feel Bad - Twenty Two
10)    Rosie - C.B./Axe Gang
11)    Levee Camp Holler - Bama
12)    What Makes a Work Song Leader? - (interview with Bama)
13)    Early in the Mornin' - Twenty Two/Hard Hair/Little Red/Tangle Eye/22
14)    How I Got in the Penitentiary - Alan Lomax (interview with Bama)
15)    Tangle Eye Blues - Tangle Eye
16)    Stackerlee - Bama
17)    Prison Blues - Alex
 
Product Description
Product Details
Performer Notes
  • Producer: Alan Lomax.
  • Compilation producers: Anna L. Chairetakis, Jeffrey Greenberg.
  • This is part of Rounder's Alan Lomax Collection.
  • Personnel: Alex (harmonica).
  • Liner Note Author: Robin Roberts.
  • Recording information: 1947-1948.
  • Illustrator: Jay Sylvester.
  • Photographer: Alan Lomax.
  • Unknown Contributor Roles: Gideon d'Arcangelo; Bess Lomax Hawes; Matthew Barton; Steve Rosenthal.
  • In the late '40s, ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax went to Parchman Farm in Mississippi to record African-American prisoners. This penitentiary was renowned for its anachronistically harsh conditions, and it's something of a miracle that Lomax was allowed in to document the music in the first place. Most of the material was recorded while the men were actually at work, and reflects the rhythms of chopping trees, splitting fireweed, chopping weeds, and other such tasks. The liner notes make much of how the subjugation and misery of the community are reflected in the music. While the dreariness of their lives was no doubt genuine, the music itself -- mainly gospel-ish work songs and chants geared toward getting the men through their daily grinds, usually sung a cappella, often by groups -- is not depressing to hear. True, it's hard to call it uplifting knowing what the prisoners were enduring, but there's an enormous pride and spiritual strength. It's as convincing as any gospel, and a number of these made their way into pop and rock repertoires in adapted forms, such as "Rosie," "Early in the Mornin'," and "Stackerlee." [This record was originally issued on LP in 1957 as Negro Prison Songs, on Tradition 1020, and the tracks can also be heard on Legacy International's Negro Prison Blues and Songs, released in 1994. The Rounder CD has a new title and different, historically slanted liner notes.] ~ Richie Unterberger
Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
Look for similar items by category
Home » Music » Blues
This title is unavailable for purchase as none of our regular suppliers have stock available. If you are the publisher, author or distributor for this item, please visit this link.
Back to top