Country Gentlemen - Complete Vanguard Recordings (2002)

  • 11 Dec, 15:27
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Artist:
Title: Complete Vanguard Recordings
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Vanguard Records
Genre: Country
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 01:11:28
Total Size: 418 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Traveling Kind
02. Don Quixote
03. One Morning In May
04. Casey's Last Ride
05. The Leaves That Are Green
06. Paradise
07. House Of The Rising Sun
08. Catfish John
09. Mother Of A Miner's Child
10. Bringing Mary Home
11. Souvenirs
12. The City Of New Orleans
13. Willow Creek Dam
14. Remembrance Of You
15. Irish Spring
16. Billy Mcghee
17. Home In Louisiana
18. King Of Spades
19. The Little Grave
20. Delta Queen
21. Heartaches
22. Welcome To New York
23. Lord Protect My Soul
24. Circuit Rider

Hearing a title like The Complete Vanguard Recordings sounds a little daunting, like some of the 12-disc Bear Family boxed sets. Fortunately (or unfortunately, as a matter of fact), the Country Gentlemen only released two LPs for the Vanguard label in the early '70s, so their complete output fit neatly on CD for this 2002 reissue. In this era, the group featured future bluegrass luminaries Doyle Lawson, Ricky Skaggs, Mike Auldridge, and Jerry Douglas alongside the established legends guitarist/vocalist Charlie Waller and banjo player Bill Emerson. With talented artists like these, it comes as no surprise that the music is top-notch -- the thing that really sets these recordings apart is the fact that the band was choosing to perform songs by decidedly non-bluegrass musicians such as John Prine, Gordon Lightfoot, Paul Simon, and Kris Kristofferson, and still managing to transform these progressive songwriters' works into down-home stomps. Another interesting hindsight is to hear the emerging voices of Skaggs and Lawson harmonizing with Waller, progressively getting bolder and finding their own sound. While the songs on 1973's The Country Gentlemen are the most traditional-sounding on the disc, the later material from 1974's Remembrances & Forecasts best-illustrates the group's push into increasingly progressive material like the vaudevillian "Heartaches" and Skaggs' own split-stereo "Irish Spring." While this album could be seen as an archival document, it works best as a living and breathing work to be listened to and enjoyed 30 years later, even more so than when the music originally was released.

  • whiskers
  •  11:37
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Many Thanks
  • mufty77
  •  14:33
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Many thanks.