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Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 7
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Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 7 in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $14.99

Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 7 in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $14.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
Just about every record ever cut by
Fiddlin' John Carson
and his daughter
Rosa Lee
(as
Moonshine Kate
) were reissued by
Document
in seven volumes near the close of the '90s. Naturally, some folks might feel a bit intimidated by that much material and wonder which disc to choose. On the level, volumes one, two, four, and six are recommendable as they each contain a decent number of well-played selections in fairly good condition. On the downside, the third volume has an unusually large number of excessively scratchy recordings, and number five contains maybe a few too many spoken comedy sketches for the common good. This leaves volume seven, which could stand by itself as perhaps the best choice of all. It opens with a pair of sides by
Moonshine Kate & Her Pals
, followed by her solo performance of
"My Man's a Jolly Railroad Man"
and a duet with dad called
"I Intend to Make Heaven My Home."
When this collection was assembled, the producers were unable to locate a copy of
Kate
's
"The Brave Soldier"
b/w
"Texas Bound."
These sides, which were cut in Atlanta in December 1930 and October 1931, turned out to be the very last
Okeh
records that either Carson would make. Not exactly a surprising development, given the fact that
Fiddlin' John
had been grinding out
Okehs
since 1923, and quite often recording the same song under several different titles.
The remainder of the
Carson
discography comes from two day's worth of activity which took place at the end of February 1934 in Camden, NJ, probably in the same church-made-over-into-a-recording-studio where
Victor
's engineers had recorded
Fats Waller
's hot pipe organ solos in 1926 and 1927.
introduces all but two of his
Victor/Bluebird
records with the words "This is old Fiddlin' John himself now, with Moonshine Kate -- look out, here she comes." He deviates slightly from this formula at the beginning of two duets by
and
Marion Peanut Brown
.
"Do You Ever Think of Me?"
is a slightly seasick handling of a love ballad garnished with a little bit of yodeling, and
"Stockade Blues"
opens with humorous dialogue during which
Peanut
proclaims "I ain't drunk, I'm just lazy". Even with essentially the same spoken intro on every side,
Bluebirds
amount to some of the best music he ever managed to weasel into the grooves of a stack of 78 rpm phonograph records. Never mind the fact that many of these songs already existed in several previous versions on
, with the exception of
"The Storm That Struck Miami,"
the sound quality is quite good, the playing is uniformly excellent, and the chemistry between the
Carsons
,
, and banjoist
Bill Willard
is about as cohesive as anybody could ask for, especially on
"Papa's Billy Goat,"
"When the Saints Go Marching In,"
"Since She Took My Liquor from Me."
Naturally, the lyrics to
"The New Comin' 'Round the Mountain"
are altered to give the impression that the female in question will be hauling a big cargo of bottled spirits while inebriated and getting more so by the minute. ~ arwulf arwulf
Fiddlin' John Carson
and his daughter
Rosa Lee
(as
Moonshine Kate
) were reissued by
Document
in seven volumes near the close of the '90s. Naturally, some folks might feel a bit intimidated by that much material and wonder which disc to choose. On the level, volumes one, two, four, and six are recommendable as they each contain a decent number of well-played selections in fairly good condition. On the downside, the third volume has an unusually large number of excessively scratchy recordings, and number five contains maybe a few too many spoken comedy sketches for the common good. This leaves volume seven, which could stand by itself as perhaps the best choice of all. It opens with a pair of sides by
Moonshine Kate & Her Pals
, followed by her solo performance of
"My Man's a Jolly Railroad Man"
and a duet with dad called
"I Intend to Make Heaven My Home."
When this collection was assembled, the producers were unable to locate a copy of
Kate
's
"The Brave Soldier"
b/w
"Texas Bound."
These sides, which were cut in Atlanta in December 1930 and October 1931, turned out to be the very last
Okeh
records that either Carson would make. Not exactly a surprising development, given the fact that
Fiddlin' John
had been grinding out
Okehs
since 1923, and quite often recording the same song under several different titles.
The remainder of the
Carson
discography comes from two day's worth of activity which took place at the end of February 1934 in Camden, NJ, probably in the same church-made-over-into-a-recording-studio where
Victor
's engineers had recorded
Fats Waller
's hot pipe organ solos in 1926 and 1927.
introduces all but two of his
Victor/Bluebird
records with the words "This is old Fiddlin' John himself now, with Moonshine Kate -- look out, here she comes." He deviates slightly from this formula at the beginning of two duets by
and
Marion Peanut Brown
.
"Do You Ever Think of Me?"
is a slightly seasick handling of a love ballad garnished with a little bit of yodeling, and
"Stockade Blues"
opens with humorous dialogue during which
Peanut
proclaims "I ain't drunk, I'm just lazy". Even with essentially the same spoken intro on every side,
Bluebirds
amount to some of the best music he ever managed to weasel into the grooves of a stack of 78 rpm phonograph records. Never mind the fact that many of these songs already existed in several previous versions on
, with the exception of
"The Storm That Struck Miami,"
the sound quality is quite good, the playing is uniformly excellent, and the chemistry between the
Carsons
,
, and banjoist
Bill Willard
is about as cohesive as anybody could ask for, especially on
"Papa's Billy Goat,"
"When the Saints Go Marching In,"
"Since She Took My Liquor from Me."
Naturally, the lyrics to
"The New Comin' 'Round the Mountain"
are altered to give the impression that the female in question will be hauling a big cargo of bottled spirits while inebriated and getting more so by the minute. ~ arwulf arwulf
Just about every record ever cut by
Fiddlin' John Carson
and his daughter
Rosa Lee
(as
Moonshine Kate
) were reissued by
Document
in seven volumes near the close of the '90s. Naturally, some folks might feel a bit intimidated by that much material and wonder which disc to choose. On the level, volumes one, two, four, and six are recommendable as they each contain a decent number of well-played selections in fairly good condition. On the downside, the third volume has an unusually large number of excessively scratchy recordings, and number five contains maybe a few too many spoken comedy sketches for the common good. This leaves volume seven, which could stand by itself as perhaps the best choice of all. It opens with a pair of sides by
Moonshine Kate & Her Pals
, followed by her solo performance of
"My Man's a Jolly Railroad Man"
and a duet with dad called
"I Intend to Make Heaven My Home."
When this collection was assembled, the producers were unable to locate a copy of
Kate
's
"The Brave Soldier"
b/w
"Texas Bound."
These sides, which were cut in Atlanta in December 1930 and October 1931, turned out to be the very last
Okeh
records that either Carson would make. Not exactly a surprising development, given the fact that
Fiddlin' John
had been grinding out
Okehs
since 1923, and quite often recording the same song under several different titles.
The remainder of the
Carson
discography comes from two day's worth of activity which took place at the end of February 1934 in Camden, NJ, probably in the same church-made-over-into-a-recording-studio where
Victor
's engineers had recorded
Fats Waller
's hot pipe organ solos in 1926 and 1927.
introduces all but two of his
Victor/Bluebird
records with the words "This is old Fiddlin' John himself now, with Moonshine Kate -- look out, here she comes." He deviates slightly from this formula at the beginning of two duets by
and
Marion Peanut Brown
.
"Do You Ever Think of Me?"
is a slightly seasick handling of a love ballad garnished with a little bit of yodeling, and
"Stockade Blues"
opens with humorous dialogue during which
Peanut
proclaims "I ain't drunk, I'm just lazy". Even with essentially the same spoken intro on every side,
Bluebirds
amount to some of the best music he ever managed to weasel into the grooves of a stack of 78 rpm phonograph records. Never mind the fact that many of these songs already existed in several previous versions on
, with the exception of
"The Storm That Struck Miami,"
the sound quality is quite good, the playing is uniformly excellent, and the chemistry between the
Carsons
,
, and banjoist
Bill Willard
is about as cohesive as anybody could ask for, especially on
"Papa's Billy Goat,"
"When the Saints Go Marching In,"
"Since She Took My Liquor from Me."
Naturally, the lyrics to
"The New Comin' 'Round the Mountain"
are altered to give the impression that the female in question will be hauling a big cargo of bottled spirits while inebriated and getting more so by the minute. ~ arwulf arwulf
Fiddlin' John Carson
and his daughter
Rosa Lee
(as
Moonshine Kate
) were reissued by
Document
in seven volumes near the close of the '90s. Naturally, some folks might feel a bit intimidated by that much material and wonder which disc to choose. On the level, volumes one, two, four, and six are recommendable as they each contain a decent number of well-played selections in fairly good condition. On the downside, the third volume has an unusually large number of excessively scratchy recordings, and number five contains maybe a few too many spoken comedy sketches for the common good. This leaves volume seven, which could stand by itself as perhaps the best choice of all. It opens with a pair of sides by
Moonshine Kate & Her Pals
, followed by her solo performance of
"My Man's a Jolly Railroad Man"
and a duet with dad called
"I Intend to Make Heaven My Home."
When this collection was assembled, the producers were unable to locate a copy of
Kate
's
"The Brave Soldier"
b/w
"Texas Bound."
These sides, which were cut in Atlanta in December 1930 and October 1931, turned out to be the very last
Okeh
records that either Carson would make. Not exactly a surprising development, given the fact that
Fiddlin' John
had been grinding out
Okehs
since 1923, and quite often recording the same song under several different titles.
The remainder of the
Carson
discography comes from two day's worth of activity which took place at the end of February 1934 in Camden, NJ, probably in the same church-made-over-into-a-recording-studio where
Victor
's engineers had recorded
Fats Waller
's hot pipe organ solos in 1926 and 1927.
introduces all but two of his
Victor/Bluebird
records with the words "This is old Fiddlin' John himself now, with Moonshine Kate -- look out, here she comes." He deviates slightly from this formula at the beginning of two duets by
and
Marion Peanut Brown
.
"Do You Ever Think of Me?"
is a slightly seasick handling of a love ballad garnished with a little bit of yodeling, and
"Stockade Blues"
opens with humorous dialogue during which
Peanut
proclaims "I ain't drunk, I'm just lazy". Even with essentially the same spoken intro on every side,
Bluebirds
amount to some of the best music he ever managed to weasel into the grooves of a stack of 78 rpm phonograph records. Never mind the fact that many of these songs already existed in several previous versions on
, with the exception of
"The Storm That Struck Miami,"
the sound quality is quite good, the playing is uniformly excellent, and the chemistry between the
Carsons
,
, and banjoist
Bill Willard
is about as cohesive as anybody could ask for, especially on
"Papa's Billy Goat,"
"When the Saints Go Marching In,"
"Since She Took My Liquor from Me."
Naturally, the lyrics to
"The New Comin' 'Round the Mountain"
are altered to give the impression that the female in question will be hauling a big cargo of bottled spirits while inebriated and getting more so by the minute. ~ arwulf arwulf

















