Album 2015 on Combine Records label
Folk (Folk)
Danville Girl Hobos, trains, gambling and wild women, timeless elements of many a great folksong brought together here. I’ve heard many perform it- Dock Boggs, Woody Guthrie, Tom Paxton, Barbara Dane, and a favorite, Hedy West. I put together this one from several versions to make a good story in the old time style. Don’t You Know Me? My response to my future Monther-in-law’s concern over how my future wife and I planned our children’s religious education stayed in my head for 37 years. The overtones have been understood ever since. The McCoy Hotel I wrote this in 1966 after it was revealed that the Chairman of the Chicago Housing Authority, one of that city’s biggest slumlords, owned the Skid Row flophouse where Death stalked the weakest each night. Every word is true. The Battleship Maine In 1898 the US Battleship blew up at Havana, Cuba. The US blamed Spain, invaded Cuba and took over Spanish possessions. This dog soldier’s view of the conflict is from a 1927 recording by Red Patterson's Piedmont Log Rollers, famously interpreted by the New Lost City Ramblers in 1958. Tom Paley, of the original Ramblers takes up his guitar again for it. The Rough Riders were elite cavalry in which Theodore Roosevelt, served, the 26th US President after McKinley’s assassination in 1901. The Killing of Michael Brown A tale of injustice representing many such events which continue to eat at the myth of the American Dream, turned to dust at the hands of corrupt, power crazed authority. Will people remember Michael Brown and Ferguson Missouri? Will retelling the story help to stop the killings? Sail Away Ladies could have originated as an Irish set dance tune. Uncle Dave Macon’s stomping 1927 recording was the source of the New Lost City Ramblers 1963 version. Tom Paley sings and plays banjo. Mr Bojangles written in 1968 after a chance jail cell meeting between a man masquerading as the old dancer of the title and musician Jerry Jeff Walker. It has been popular ever since, recorded by a great many artists, no doubt for its story line and originality. Nina Simone’s transported me to that time and place. Troubadour was written for Pete Seeger’s 94th birthday, May 3 2013. Each stanza is a chapter in his life, from his rambles with Woody Guthrie across the USA to teaching “This Land is Your Land” to millions at the Presidential Inauguration of 2008 and more. Going ‘Cross the Mountain describes a Southern man who went to fight on the Union (boys in blue) side in the Civil War. It comes from Frank Proffitt, North Carolina singer and fretless banjo player, whose grandfather was said to have gone “cross the mountain” and may have composed the song. Frank Warner helped his songs reach a wider audience. Proffit performed at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival, two years before he died. 700 Miles In the 1960s the distance from Oxford, Ohio to New York City before the Interstate network was built took at least 14 hours. We shared driving, started liaisons, fed at truck stops and nursed that 1949 Oldsmobile to and fro on those long vacations. Dink’s Song Collected by John Lomax on the Texas Brazos in 1904. Dink’s man worked on the levee while she washed his overalls and kept his ten “right nice” The lost original recording has been re-interpreted many times, most powerfully and beautifully by Barbara Dane in the 1950s. Tornado Alley Among the rescue team in the aftermath of the twister that flattened Moore, Oklahoma on May 20, 2013 was Betsy Randolph of the State Highway Patrol. I copied down Betsy’s radio commentary after a long night of heart breaking labor and the song wrote itself with very little shaping by me. The people of Moore have come to accept rebuilding their town again and again. Snoopers Orwell’s 1984 was child’s play compared to revelations by Edward Snowdon and others of how the NSA in the US and GCHQ in the UK have been collecting everything we do and say through electronic media for years. The lyrics fit back-to front to Uncle Dave Macon’s “Wreck of the Tennessee Gravy Train.” Lord Thomas and Fair Ellender This version of the Scottish ballad Lord Thomas and Fair Annet, Child No 73, widespread in America from colonial times. Pressure to marry for wealth versus true love for a poor girl opens a tragedy of Greek proportions, which unfolds beautifully and sparingly. I first heard this version around 1960, probably from the Mike and Peggy Seeger, sang it often with soul mate Kathy Davis through our college days. The harmonies and instrumentation, developing and amplify the story’s emotion, as they should. Tom Cat Blues Direct sexual content, far too risky almost a hundred years ago was frequently “coded” in songs, jokes and stories. Recorded by Cliff Carlisle in 1932, the Ramblers stayed faithful to the slide guitar arrangement which made this song stand out. I have loved it ever since I heard it in the early 60’s. Charlie Hebdo Would-be oppressors always strike at the art, music, culture, language and expression of their victims. The murder of cartoon artists at the French satirical journal Charlie Hebdo was intended to breed fear and self-censorship in free people everywhere. But the outpouring of emotion amongst the millions who marched in Paris and around the world put free expression at the heart of what makes us human. Long may we poke fun at all fakes and fools. Notes by Jack Warshaw
Jack Warshaw g, voc, acg, *1942 US artist, music by, lyrics by, lead vocals, acoustic guitar, 5 string banjo, autoharp, album by |
Jack Warshaw |
No | Title | Artist | Composer | Duration | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Danville Girl | Jack Warshaw | 3:44 | ||
2 | Don't You Know Me? | Jack Warshaw | 4:14 | ||
3 | The McCoy Hotel | Jack Warshaw | 3:55 | ||
4 | The Battleship Maine | Jack Warshaw | 3:54 | ||
5 | Killing of Michael Brown | Jack Warshaw | 4:30 | ||
6 | Sail Away Ladies | Jack Warshaw | 3:08 | ||
7 | Mr Bojangles | Jack Warshaw | 5:05 | ||
8 | Troubadour | Jack Warshaw | 4:59 | ||
9 | Going 'Cross the Mountain | Jack Warshaw | 3:13 | ||
10 | 700 Miles | Jack Warshaw | 3:06 | ||
11 | Dink's Song | Jack Warshaw | 5:48 | ||
12 | Tornado Alley | Jack Warshaw | 4:31 | ||
13 | Snoopers | Jack Warshaw | 3:34 | ||
14 | Lord Thomas and Fair Ellender | Jack Warshaw | 4:58 | ||
15 | Tom Cat Blues | Jack Warshaw | 3:06 | ||
16 | Charlie Hebdo | Jack Warshaw | 4:35 |
30sec audio samples provided by