The Carter Family - Country's First Family (1976) [Hi-Res]
Artist: The Carter Family
Title: Country's First Family
Year Of Release: 1976
Label: Columbia Nashville Legacy
Genre: Country
Quality: 24-bit/192kHz FLAC
Total Time: 00:32:37
Total Size: 1.2 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
The Carter Family are justifiably called “The First Family of Country Music”. The “Family” consisted of A.P. his wife Sara and her cousin Maybelle who was married to A.P.’s older brother Ezra.Title: Country's First Family
Year Of Release: 1976
Label: Columbia Nashville Legacy
Genre: Country
Quality: 24-bit/192kHz FLAC
Total Time: 00:32:37
Total Size: 1.2 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
A.P. Carter played the fiddle and guitar and had a strong bass voice. He never played an instrument on their studio recordings but on his solo performances on the radio he played a guitar and these show what a fine musician he was. However A.P.s main contribution to the group was as a writer and collector of songs.
Sara played the autoharp and legend has it she was singing “Engine One Forty-Three” and playing the autoharp at the time she met A.P. Her voice was strong and pure and as Jonny Cash wrote “the beauty of the Appalachian dialect was never so enflowered as in the voice of Sara Carter”.
Maybelle’s style of guitar playing was unique. What she did was play the melody on the bass strings while maintaining a rhythm on the treble strings. Later this style was to be imitated to the note by literally thousands of guitar players. Maybelle played more than the guitar she was also accomplished on the banjo and fiddle as well as the autoharp. She played the autoharp in a way it hadn’t been played before. Rather than strumming across the harp while barring a chord, Maybelle actually picked out the melody with her thumb and finger picks.
On early hillbilly recordings the singers barely sang over the instruments. The Carter style was built around the vocals and they incorporated them into the instrumental background. In essence the Carter Family violated the main traditions of hillbilly music but in doing so created a whole new style and a whole new sound.
In July 1927 the Carter’s went to Bristol, Tennessee where Ralph Peer of the Victor Recording Company was auditioning local talent. Ralph Peer was immediately impressed with Sara’s voice, as he put it, “As soon as I heard her voice, I began to build round it and all those first recordings were on that basis.”
Although A.P. and Sara separated in 1933 the Family continued to work together and then in 1938 they moved to Del Rio, Texas to work on Border Station XERA. The stations powerful transmitters brought their music to the ears of new fans right across the USA and sales of their records increased dramatically. However in 1942 the Family split up and went their separate ways, A.P. moved back to his beloved Clinch Mountains, Sara to California with her new husband and Maybelle and her daughters (Helen, June & Anita) began a new singing career which would lead eventually to seventeen years as regular members of the Grand Old Opry.
Their lasting legacy was a hundred great songs, a standard for duet singing, and a guitar style that helped define country music. Music historian Tony Russell wrote “Whenever singers and pickers gather to play ‘Keep on the Sunny Side’ or ‘Can the Circle Be Unbroken’, Sara, Maybelle and A.P. are there, benign immortal spirits.
Tracklist:
01. The Carter Family - My Ship Will Sail (02:36)
02. The Carter Family - My Father's Fiddle (03:41)
03. The Carter Family - I'm Here to Get My Baby Out of Jail (03:19)
04. The Carter Family - No Distinction There (02:47)
05. The Carter Family - Summer Storms (04:36)
06. The Carter Family - Mountain Lady (03:09)
07. The Carter Family - Good Time Cake Walk Blues (02:27)
08. The Carter Family - Papa's Sugar (03:49)
09. The Carter Family - Far Side Banks of Jordan (03:15)
10. The Carter Family - In the Pines (The Longest Train I Ever Saw) (02:54)