Folk Session Inside

Track Listings

 
1. Bluebirds Are Singing for Me
2. Sad and Lonesome Day
3. Girl Behind the Bar
4. Can't You Hear Me Calling
5. School House Fire
6. Nightwalk
7. Galveston Flood
8. Young Fisherwoman
9. This Morning at Nine
10. I Am Weary (Let Me Rest)
11. Aunt Dinah's Quilting Party
12. Heartaches
13. Dark as a Dungeon [*]

Folk Session Inside,The Country Gentlemen,Copper Creek,Bluegrass,Contemporary Bluegrass,Country,Pop,Progressive Bluegrass,Traditional Bluegrass
Folk Session Inside
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Brilliant!
Folk Session Inside
The Country Gentlemen
Manufacturer: Copper Creek
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Country | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Traditional Country | Country | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Bluegrass | Country | Styles | Music
ContemporaryContemporary | Bluegrass | Country | Styles | Music
TraditionalTraditional | Bluegrass | Country | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. The Complete Vanguard Recordings

ASIN: B0002DRDSW
Release Date: 2004-07-21

Tracks:

  1. Bluebirds Are Singing for Me
  2. Sad and Lonesome Day
  3. Girl Behind the Bar
  4. Can't You Hear Me Callin'
  5. School House Fire
  6. Nightwalk
  7. Galveston Flood
  8. Young Fisherwoman
  9. This Morning at Nine
  10. I Am Weary (Let Me Rest)
  11. Aunt Dinah's Quilting Party
  12. Heartaches
  13. Dark as a Dungeon [*]

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Brilliant!.......2005-09-02

At long last, this gem of a bluegrass album has been released on CD by Copper Creek. Recorded in 1963, the DC based Gents were at the top of their game. This is the "Classic" Country Gentlemen that was inducted into the IBMA Bluegrass Hall of Fame, the first honor bestowed upon musicians who were not the original founders of the genre. Bluegrass lovers should not be offput by the "Folk" in the title. Although the Gents famously incorporated folk tunes into the repertoire and played at college coffee shops during the "folk boom," this is bluegrass music (regardless of the corporate suits' marketing ideas). But it's bluegrass as presented by urban folks.

The close proximity of Washington to the Appalachians and the wave of migration of "mountain people" to the Nation's Capital and its surrounding suburbs in Maryland and Virginia after WWII to take advantage of job opportunities created an important new chapter in bluegrass. These good folks brought their music with them and inspired a legion of pickers raised far from a Blueridge mountain home. Before long this "hillbilly" music was regularly heard in the bars of Georgetown and Capitol Hill and the affluent bedroom communities bordering DC.

Sociological ruminations aside, this is powerful, bluesy music with the wonderful singing and stellar rhythm guitar of Charlie Waller, the searing tenor and aggressive mandolin of John Duffy, the innovative banjo of Eddie Adcock, and the virtuosic bass playing of Tom Gray. Gray's contribution to the Gents' classic sound cannot be overemphasized. For he was a bedrock bluegrass bassist fully versed in the language of jazz, and his walking bass lines give this music a texture and complexity that was wholly fresh and unique. This music was progressive and traditional at the same time and served as a blueprint and inspiration for the new grass wing of bluegrass.

Music Album:

  1. Freddy Fender - Greatest Hits (Master) [Import]
  2. George Strait, Vol. 2 [Karaoke]
  3. Hadacol Boogie
  4. Have a Little Fun
  5. Heaven's My Home 1927-1928
  6. Here I Am in Dallas
  7. Hit Parade Of Love [Live]
  8. Honeycomb
  9. Honky Tonk Heroine: Classic Capitol Recordings, 1952-1964
  10. I Am Just a Rebel

Music Album

Music Album