Newest Songs
Hell Bound Train
A cautionary tale of damnation and redemption

You know about the train that was "bound for glory". Well, this train was going the other way on the opposite track.
Jolly Roving Tar
A sea song from Newfoundland

I found this jolly sea song from Newfoundland on one of the old 'American Folksay' albums produced on Stinson records by Moses Asch, performed by Frank Warner.
No Peas No Rice
A Bahamian jazz song

A Bahamian song recorded in the 1930s by big band leaders such as Mart Brit and Count Basie and in the Bahamas by Blind Blake Alfonso Higgs.
Thorneymore Woods
A song of the noble poacher, and mean gamekeepers

An English poaching ballad as performed by Louis Killen.
La Bruja
Vampire story from Vera Cruz, Mexico. Boo!

The Devil and Bailiff McGlynn
The devil takes his due

What a fine old Irish tale. But it derives from a history that is not so jolly - the mass evictions and house levelings that took place during the Irish famine of the mid-nineteenth century. No wonder the mother in the story cries "May the devil take that awful Bailiff!".
Spotted Cow
A naughty little English folk song

Here is a traditional English song, at least I think so, I heard it from Steel Eye Span, that parcel of rogues who brought fuzz-tone electric guitar to English folk music.
Italian Carol
A christmas song from Italy

An Italian carol adapted by Pete Seeger from an old tradition in Naples in which shepherds come down from the Calabrian mountains for a festive stay in that city during the Christmas celebration.
Wild Women Don't Have No Blues
A blues for strong women

Mean Old Bedbug Blues
A blues from Bessie Smith

Uncle Joe Gimme Mo
Calypso from Trinidad

Monsieur Banjo
A creole song for kids

This children's song in Louisiana Creole. My version is an adaptation of Pete Seeger's English language version on 'American Favorite Ballads' and a French language version from the Magnolia Sisters on their delightful children's album 'Lapin Lapin'
Featured Songs
Hopalong Peter
An old time banjo song

This was recorded by J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers in the 1930's. I learned it from the NLCR.
Bill Morgan and his Gal
An old time string band tune from Charlie Poole

Heard the New Lost City Ramblers play this in concert in the tiny auditorium in Lee Park, Dallas in 1961. I was around thirteen and learning songs on my Sears and Roebuck Silvertone banjo from Pete Seeger's 'How to play the Five-String Banjo.' I had never heard anything quite like this and it knocked my socks off.
The Devil and the Farmer's Cursed Wife
A testiment to strong women

A very old song, this is listed by Child and variants show up in seventeenth century broad sheets. Surely intended as being a song of complaint about women, over the years it has taken on a different meaning. The last verse says it all, they're "better than men, they can go down to hell and come back again."
The Devil's Nine Questions
Riddles wisely expounded

This is an old chestnut is Child Ballad #1 as "Riddles Wisely Expounded" from as far back as the 15th century. This version, from the singing of Paul Clayton and Jean Ritchie, replaces the common refrain "And you are the weaver's bonny." with "The crow flies over the white oak tree." A haunting image.
Buckey Jim
Here is a lullaby from the Southern Appalachians

Chewing Gum
A kids song from the Carter Family

Little Willie's My Darlin
A nice variant of Down in the Valley

Little Joe the Wrangler
'Little Joe the Wrangler' was written by Jack Thorpe in 1898

Dear Okie
A dustbowl song by a cowboy singer

From Texas radio songster Doye O'Dell with help fellow Cowboy actor Rudy Sooter. Doye grew up on a Texas cotton spread in the dustbowl era. He started a radio career with WDAG in Amarillo and then the famous Mexican border station XCPM. He finally landed his own NBC radio show produced in New York.
Morning Blues
A blues from the country

Like most of us jug band geeks from the 60's I learned this song from a Jim Kweskin album. I should not have been too surprised to learn that it comes from the boundless repertoire of Uncle Dave Macon.
Kitty Waltz
A lovely waltz from the Carter Family

The Cater Family recorded Kitty Waltz in Atlanta in 1929. It is a lovely piece and quite unusual for them. It sounds more like nineteenth century parlor music than the traditional material they usually liked.
Uncle Joe Gimme Mo
Calypso from Trinidad
