The Dust Bowl Ballads are
currently available on a number of labels
– Rounder, always a good source of material,
Buddha and Camden are just three of the single
disc labels devoted to them - whilst Recall’s
three disc set has the Ballads spread throughout
- I’ve not checked exhaustively but I think
they’re all there. Add to these other reissues
that contain most if not all of them and you
gave a rather saturated market for these,
some of the most important discs of their
kind.
Since Guthrie’s influence
has been so pervasive – on Pete Seeger and
on Bob Dylan and now on Bruce Springsteen
whose big band recreations have a certain
emphatic charm – it’s important that this
body of work is made available in good transfers,
well annotated. That’s the case here, even
to the extent of retaining some surface noise
in the interest of keeping that all important
treble openness.
Recorded a week apart the
Ballads codified the protest of the land –
remarkably these Victors were the only major
record company discs that he recorded – and
resonate powerfully. He plays harmonica on
a fair few, and restyles that old ballad John
Henry as Tom Joad. Pervasive influences
are the balladry imported by British pioneers,
the rural blues, as exemplified by Blind Lemon
Jefferson on New York Town where he’s
joined by Cisco Houston, and Jimmy Rogers
- a strong vocal influence on Dust Pneumonia
Blues.
The folk, blues, spirituals
and traditional material was wrought by Guthrie
into his own form of social protest, and it’s
especially interesting to hear the early Almanac
Singers sides of 1941 where Guthrie was joined
by Seeger, amongst others. They were the precursors
of the Weavers, a group of even greater popularity,
whose discs Living Era has also released.
Well transferred and embracing
a wide range of songs and ballads this is
a good single disc selection of Guthrie’s
work.
Jonathan Woolf
Well transferred and embracing
a wide range of songs and ballads this is
a good single disc selection of Guthrie’s
work. ... see Full Review