Tennessee Ernie Ford - Civil War Songs Of The North (1987/2018)

  • 22 Oct, 16:43
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Civil War Songs Of The North
Year Of Release: 1987/2018
Label: Capitol Records
Genre: Country
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:34:47
Total Size: 83 mb | 214 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. The Army Of The Free
02. Virginia's Bloody Soil
03. Marching Song (Of The First Arkansas Negro Regiment)
04. The Why And The Wherefore
05. The Vacant Chair
06. The Fall Of Charleston
07. The New York Volunteer
08. The Faded Coat Of Blue
09. Marching Through Georgia
10. Just Before The Battle, Mother
11. The Girl I Left Behind Me
12. Union Dixie

It says something about the true cultural outcome of the War Between the States that the Union songs aren't generally as well known as their Confederate counterparts. Still, if anyone could have turned these pieces into popular favorites 100 years on, it was Tennessee Ernie Ford he holds nothing back, from "The Army of the Free" to "Union Dixie," although these performances, curiously enough, sound much more like, and less natural than, his work on the accompanying Civil War Songs of the South, which have a more spontaneous and subtle feel, whereas the work here is more arch and self-conscious. It's a subtle difference, but one that becomes apparent listening to the two albums side-by-side, and it may explain, in part, why Civil War Songs of the North didn't sell half as well, or for a third as long, as its southern counterpart. Ford's baritone is in superb shape throughout, and most impressive on "Virginia's Bloody Soul," and there's something of a history lesson here in the form of songs such as "Marching Song (Of the First Arkansas Negro Regiment)" (set to "Battle Hymn of the Republic"). The most familiar song here is "The Girl I Left Behind Me," but many of the melodies will be recognizable from other settings and uses. A lot of the repertory is serious and profound, but some of it is lighthearted, and Ford fits both moods, taking on his twangier, higher-pitched approach to singing on "The Fall of Charleston." Some of the material here, such as "Marching Through Georgia," could still be the basis for starting brawls in the territory mentioned, 100 years after the fact, which explains another reason for the southern album's greater popularity the south never put aside or forgot the war or the sentiments behind it, while the north mostly consigned it and the songs surrounding it to history. The accompaniment, in addition to fife and drums, includes acoustic guitars (rather refreshingly on "The Girl I Left Behind Me") and autoharps.


  • whiskers
  •  21:55
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Thanks for share
  • mufty77
  •  22:47
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.