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Audio CD review:
Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all Doc Watson reviews here, or go back to the Doc Watson tabs.
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| Doc Watson - Songs From Home |
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Band: Doc Watson Title: Songs From Home Rating: Release Date: 2002-10-22 Media: Audio CD Tracks: 1: My Creole Belle 2: T For Texas 3: Big Sandy / Leather Britches 4: Shady Grove 5: Matchbox Blues (Live) 6: Rambling Hobo 7: Southbound Passenger Train (Live) 8: Little Beggar Man / Old Joe Clark 9: Wild Bill Jones 10: Bonaparte's Retreat 11: Wake Up Little Maggie 12: Double File & Salt Creek 13: Daybreak Blues (Live) 14: Peartree 15: My Rose of Old Kentucky 16: St. James Hospital / Frosty Morn 17: Freight Train Boogie |
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More Great Music By Doc Watson But I have become an even bigger fan after recently beginning to purchase his CDs. I have fond memories of going to see Doc Watson play live at a small club in Black Mountain, North Carolina when I was student at nearby Warren Wilson College in the late 1980's. My favorite is still the outstanding "The Best Of Doc Watson 1964-1968". But this album is also excellent. It includes a few Watson originals such as "Rambling Hobo" as well some great blues and bluegrass tunes. But my favorites are two old Jimmie Rodgers songs "T For Texas" and "Daybreak Blues". These songs alone make the CD worth purchasing. But really all the music is terrific and would make a welcome addition to the collection of any fan of American traditional music.
By the early '70s Watson's late-blooming stardom (he was 40 when he made his legendary appearance at the Newport Folk Festival) was in full flower. His earlier work, first on Folkways, and then on Vanguard, had quickly cemented his legacy, and his 1972 star-turn on the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band's "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" propelled him forward, even as the first-flush of folk-revival interest tapered off. It was at this time that he began playing regularly with his son, Merle, who is heard prominently throughout this collection. His 1970's run on Poppy/United Artists displays the full breadth of his music. There's a generous helping of bluegrass influence (most notably in the unique guitar picking style, derived from transposing fiddle tunes to his six-string, as well as the banjo playing on tunes like "Rambling Hobo"), but also some terrific blues (the sublime dual acoustic playing on a live take of "Matchbox Blues"), gospel (the seemingly impossible live harmony singing of "Southbound Passenger Train"), hill tunes (the mournful acapella performance of "Wake Up Little Maggie"), and incredibly woven tapestries of strings such as the guitar, banjo and fiddle lineup of "Bonaparte's Retreat. " Among these seventeen tracks are previously unreleased takes of "T For Texas" and the aforementioned "Matchbox Blues. " The other fifteen (reaching back as far as 1972's "Freight Train Boogie," and providing a generous helping from 1975's "Memories" LP -- often reported to be Watson's favorite of his own albums) provide a fine survey of Watson's 1970's recordings. This disc is both a finely curated collection in its own right, and an excellent map to the treasure chest of original albums that have been reissued on CD.
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