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Interview
with Jack Wright on "All Things Considered" on NPR Radio |
The Lonesome Pine Office on Youth announces the release of the two-CD set Music
of Coal: Mining Songs from the Appalachian Coalfields. Two
years in the making, this pair of audio CDs contains 48 songs addressing various
aspects of coal mining history and culture, including black lung, union organizing,
environmental impacts and the contribution of coal to the national economy. The
CDs are accompanied by a richly detailed book of liner notes with striking historical
photographs. This
has been a collaborative effort involving many people in the Wise County area
as well as noted experts across the country, said Paul Kuczko, director
of the Lonesome Pine Office on Youth and executive producer of the CD project.
Weve assembled more than two hours of music that truly gives the flavor
of our coal mining heritage. According
to Jack Wright, who produced the CDs and wrote the liner notes, the musical collection
is a hybrid of old and new songs - some previously recorded, others
produced specifically for this project. We chose some songs that came out
previously on independent labels and may not have been well known, but are vital
in telling original stories from the heart of the coalfields, Wright said.
In addition, we have well established artists represented here, like Ralph
Stanley, Dwight Yoakum, Natalie Merchant, Tom T. Hall, Blue Highway and the Carter
Family.
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Tom
T. Sings Miss Dixie & TOM T.
HALL Producer(s):
Dixie Hall Genre: COUNTRY Label: Blue Circle
This
modest bluegrass session is evidence that, four decades after his recording debut,
Tom T. Hall still ranks with country's greatest storytellers, and his beloved
wife and songwriting partner, Dixie, is one big reason why. Though the mood is
generally upbeat, funerals figure prominently in "Jimmy Martin's Life Story"
(recorded shortly before yodeling guitarist Martin's 2005 death and humorously
suggesting the avoidance of hard-drinking blues songs at the memorial ceremony),
"A Headstone for Harry" and the great "A Hero in Harlan,"
an unsentimental look at a small-town soldier's return for burial. Elsewhere,
pastoral memories of dirt roads, county borders and green hills surround acknowledgement
about not fitting in with the young folks. Sometimes Hall's just along for a relaxed
ride among an all-star cast of pickers and strummers, and he talks more than he
sings. But then, he's always been a great talker. Chuck Eddy
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August 14th CD Review: Tom T. Sings Miss Dixie and Tom T. |

Bluegrass Music Profiles Record Review: Carolina Road
Sept Issue 2007 - BY HAL COTTRELL

Lorraine
Jordan and Carolina Road have a great new project out entitled, of course, what
better name than Carolina Road! The title track is sung by new band member Jerry
Butler, formerly of Pine Mountain Railroad, and he does a fantastic job with his
new gang of grassers. What a vocal talent he is and joining forces with Lorraine
Jordan - what a great match for great grass! This band has been around for
quite some time - and headed by Grassy Girl Lorraine - has always produced high
quality music/songs/picking. Kudos to Lorraine and her illustrious band! My favorite
cuts besides the title track of course are Run Little Fox, Maybe You Will Change
Your Mind, Cant You Hear The Mountains Calling! Its all good.
~ BMP ~ Visit BMP online at:
www.blugrassmusicprofiles.com | |