New Local Honeys and a bunch more // Additional discographical, biographical information was added by Lawrence Azrin, check out the links at your leisure.
Time
Performer [Composer]
Song
Album [Format]
Misc
Misc –
REQ:Request
BED:Music Played Whilst Talking
NEW:New Release
( ):Label, Year Rec/Rel
Accordion player of acoustic gypsy punk, Americana, ghost town country, murder ballads, and drinking songs. / Click on the Link above, left, to view the CD.
* - HEY, that's what their _actual_ label says (due to vinyl manufacturing delays); want proof? - Click the Link above, left to read the notice from Smithsonian Folkways
From Athens, Georgia - the album title comes from a venue where founding members Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley performed at the start of their careers: “There were no cool bars in town and Club XIII was the best we had - it wasn’t all that good, and our band [Adam’s House Cat] wasn’t particularly liked there....". // Click the Link above, left to view the article that I lifted that quote from.
* - HEY, that's what their _actual_ label says (due to vinyl manufacturing delays); want proof? - Click the Link above, left to read the notice from Smithsonian Folkways
'Colder Streams' CD anti-bio {by Dallas Good}, October 2021: " 'Colder Streams' is, by far, the best record that has ever been made by anyone. Ever. ". Dallas Good of the The Sadies died February 17, at age 48.
From upstate New York - also known as 'Gandalf Murphy And The Slambovian Circus Of Dreams' / "Psychedelic americana from the misty hills of Sleepy Hollow." - Bandcamp page
This Scottish/ Irish folk song is also known as 'Purple Heather', or 'Will Ye Go, Lassie, Go?'. There have been many versions since 1958, but probably best known by Judy Collins (1961) and The Byrds (July 1966, the 'Fifth Dimension' LP)
... Recorded October 8, 1973 at the Boarding House in SF, by Owsley Stanley and Vickie Babcock using eight microphones (four per channel) mixed live onto a stereo Nagra tape recorder. /// PERSONNEL: Vassar Clements – fiddle / Jerry Garcia – banjo, vocals / David Grisman / mandolin, vocals / John Kahn – acoustic bass / Peter Rowan – guitar, vocals /// * - on their 'The Adventures of Panama Red' album, Oct 1973
* - This was first released, in a different version than the familiar one on the 'Let It Be' album, on the English comp 'No One's Gonna Change Our World', Jan 1969 // FORMER WMBR DJ Joan Hathaway: "More stellar playing from the master of the telecaster (and other axes), Duke Levine. Never disappoints."
Time:
6:45
Artist:
Gillian Welch [John Prine] [Billed as 'Gillian Welch & David Rawlings']
Song:
Hello in There [Originally by John Prine, from his debut LP, 1971]