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Prayers From Hell
White Gospel & Sinners Blues 1927-1940
TRIKONT US-0267
compiled by: Keith Chandler & Christoph Wagner
CD in Digipak with detailed Booklet in english and german
In the words of one old song, "I´ll get drunk on Saturday night and go to church on Sunday.` The hills and valleys of the rural Southern states of ´20s and ´30s America were no different to anywhere else, with the repertory of songsters frequently reflecting the dual aspects of sin and redemption.
Tales of drunkenness, the despair of imprisonment, betrayal and cold blooded murder, sit edgily alongside visions of the gloryland and eternal bliss. The road may be beset with temptation, alienation, and visions of eternal damnation, but it is also possible to embrace spiritual comfort and social cohesion.
Appropriately enough, trains bound in both directions - up to Heaven, down to Hell - are represented here. In addition to many of the greats of old time music our roster includes a number of more obscure but no less worthy performers.
The Wire, may 2002
Prayers From Hell... is a checklist of string bands (Byron Parker & His Mountaneers, The Dixon Brothers and white blues artists (Frank Hutchison) who felt the push and pull of a 'sinful' career in music versus sacred obligations. Dock Boggs experienced this opposition more deeply than most. His career trajectory saw him forsake coal mining for notoriety as a banjo player of freakish talent and a singer of scalding intensity. During the first wave of enthusiasm for his music, Boggs quit his career in 1930 at his wife's insistence that he was being led down the wrong path. Interest in his work was stirred by the inclusion of tracks such as "Sugar Baby" and "Count Blues" on Smith's Anthology, these and others (included here as well) led to Boggs's return to performing three decades later, a welcomed presence at 60s folk festivals. Homebrewed musical physicists, The Monroe Brothers accelerated the quantum particles of the shape note hymns and square dance music on which they were raised. Bluegrass was the eventual result of their high-speed renditions of religious (I Am Ready To Go") and secular material, though none of Bill Monroe's later solo work would touch the feral verve o tracks such as these.
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Tracklist
1. CAROLINA RAMBLERS STRING BAND: That Lonesome Valley [02:54]
2. MONROE BROTHERS,THE: I Am Ready To Go [02:45]
3. CARTER FAMILY,THE: Church In The Wildwood [03:11]
4. DOCK BOGGS: New Prisoner's Song [02:52]
5. DIXON BROTHERS: Didn't Hear Nobody Pray [03:41]
6. CARLISLE,BILL: The Heavenly Train [02:19]
7. HUTCHISON,FRANK: Hell Bound Train [02:58]
8. PARKER,BYRON & HIS MOUNTAINEERS: We Shall Rise [02:40]
9. DOCK BOGGS: Down South Blues [03:06]
10. COLLINS,EDITH AND SHERMAN: What Will You Take In Exchange [03:05]
11. DIXON,DORSEY AND BEATRICE: Shining City Over The River [02:24]
12. ROGERS & NICHOLSON: Worried Man Blues [03:00]
13. CARTER FAMILY,THE: It Is Better Farther On [03:00]
14. DOCK BOGGS: Country Blues [03:02]
15. MONROE BROTHERS,THE: What Would The Profit Be [02:28]
16. CARLISLE'S,BILL KENTUCKY BOYS: Unclouded Sky [02:40]
17. HUTCHISON,FRANK: Stackalee [03:04]
18. DIXON BROTHERS: When Gabriel Blow His Trumpet For Me [02:59]
19. PARKER,BYRON & HIS MOUNTAINEERS: I Love My Savior [03:06]
20. DOCK BOGGS: Sugar Baby [02:57]
21. CARLISLE,BILL: He Will Be Your Savior Too [03:06]
22. NICHOLSON,LEDFORD & DANIEL: Ninety Nine Years [02:59]
23. DIXON,DORSEY AND BEATRICE: When Jesus Appears [03:07]
24. DOCK BOGGS: Pretty Polly [03:03]
25. COLLINS,EDITH AND SHERMAN: I Can't Feel At Home In This Worls Anymore [02:44]
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