The Document

Editorial Reviews

URB
As Portishead's touring DJ and club legend ... Smith takes more of a neo-classical DJ approach by seamlessly segueing vintage funk, R&B, and soul with doses of contemporary hip-hop. Deft cuts, scratches and pitch manipulation show up here and there, but Smith's greatest skill lies in the blend.

The Document,DJ Andy Smith,Polygram Records,Club/Dance,Dance,Electronica,Pop,Popular Music,Rock,Trip-Hop
Document
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Ends the I.R.S. days on a high note
  • Document of a Great Band at their Peak
  • REM5 Document CD
  • The manifesto
  • 'Document' of Brilliance
Document
R.E.M.
Manufacturer: Capitol
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
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  1. Lifes Rich Pageant
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ASIN: B000002UW1
Release Date: 1998-01-27

Tracks:

  1. Finest Worskong
  2. Welcome to the Occupation
  3. Exhuming McCarthy
  4. Disturbance at the Heron House
  5. Strange
  6. It's the End of the World As We Know It (and I feel fine)
  7. The One I Love
  8. Fireplace
  9. Lightnin' Hopkins
  10. King of Birds
  11. Oddfellows Local 151

Amazon.com essential recording

Singer Michael Stipe finally confesses that even he doesn't know what he's trying to say--among the lines flying by are "tryin' to tell you something we don't know" and "there's something going on that's not quite right." But R.E.M.'s roar is at its sharpest, as Peter Buck's guitars twist up surf riffs and the Bill Berry-Mike Mills rhythm section captures the force of forebears Big Star and the Byrds. After half a decade of college-rock heroism, R.E.M. achieved its first hit album thanks to the rambling "It's the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" and the gentle (but subtly barbed) "The One I Love." --Steve Knopper

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R.E.M. Photos

More from R.E.M.

Lifes Rich Pageant

The Best of the I.R.S. Years: Collector's Edition

Fables of the Reconstruction

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Ends the I.R.S. days on a high note.......2007-07-05

After years of being virtually unknown away from the indie/college scene, R.E.M. makes a break for the pros thanks to commercial breakthroughs like "The One I Love" and "It's the End of the World As We Know It." And unlike their next album, these hits were actually pretty darn good! This is an eclectic R.E.M. at their best; consistency in sound and mood reigns over their other great albums, but this one feels thrown together with purpose and sense. It also continues the progression towards a clearer, richer production that started with Pageant; too bad the overall quality can't match the previous record.

Because this effort does a good job of straddling their indie and popular phases, this is a good entry point for R.E.M. starters (along with Automatic). No one said that message songs need to be drab and somnolent, but is the goofy pop hook on "Exhuming McCarthy" really the best choice? And thus is the quarrel with Document: it's already pushing for the slick sound when the music would be better suited with an edge. Despite the hiccups, there are several quality moments here, and still a good choice for fans and newbies alike. "Disturbance At the Heron House," "King of Birds," and the aforementioned hits are the best bets.

Best cuts: "The One I Love," "Disturbance At the Heron House," "It's the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)," "King of Birds," "Finest Worksong," "Strange," "Welcome to the Occupation," "Lightnin' Hopkins"

5 out of 5 stars Document of a Great Band at their Peak.......2007-03-06

R.E.M. one of the few good bands of the '80's (along with U2 and a few others), and this is arguably the best record of the decade, not to mention easily the best thing the group ever did. This was also the group's breakthrough, containing their first Top 40 hit: The One I Love, which can best be described as Led Zeppelin filtered through The Byrds, only without each group's bad elements - none of the former's brainless lyrics or the latter's ill-advised forays into psychedelia. The One I Love happens to be their best song, with a jangly riff, simple yet cryptic lyrics (I'm with Michael Stipe's interpretation about how it's people who use others over and over, but that's just me), and a dramatic ending. Hit #2 was It's the End of the World As We Know It (and I Feel Fine) - Subterranean Homesick Blues for the information age, namechecking everyone from Lester Bangs to Lenny Bruce (Right? Right!) and featuring what may very well be the best sing-along refrain of all time. There have been several, let me add. Finest Worksong also got, and deserved plenty of attention - a straight ahead rock 'n' roller that's uncharacteristic of the group's classic sound, but rocks just the same. Some of this has been unjustly overlooked, though: King of Birds is an experiment with Indian instrumentation and rhythms that works better than most others do, calling to mind similar-sounding Beatles tracks such as Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown). Continuing in the bird thing, there's also the disquieting Disturbance at the Heron House. Plus this contains one of the group's most experimental tracks, period: Exhuming McCarthy, which works in keyboards, horns and even a vocal sample of Joseph Welch damming McCarthy. Pretty creative, and one of the best here. Strange and Fireplace (both featuring Michael Stipe's ill-advised hard-rock singer impression) don't really work out, but the rest does. It's too bad R.E.M. sold out RIGHT after this release, seeing just how good it is.

5 out of 5 stars REM5 Document CD.......2007-01-16

Product was in excellent shape, Item cost & shipping were reasonably priced, and arrived in a very timely manner considering I ordered it late in the 2006 holiday season. Thank you AMAZON.

5 out of 5 stars The manifesto.......2006-12-01

The most aptly-titled R.E.M. album, this is really, in a nutshell, the mission statement if you will of the band. Using this album as a base of comparison, a person can listen to each of its other albums and get an appropriate read of the test subject's poppiness, or its political tone, or almost whatever angle they want to look at.
It's their manifesto, if you will, and the album which (appropriately so) everything after would be compared to due to the fact that it is the album first widely accepted by both the college radio and pop radio communities as well as critics.
Starting with the songs (almost) everyone knows, "The One I Love" and "The End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" are staples of classic modern rock, and deservedly so. Michael Stipe could really be singing the alphabet in "The One I Love" and I wish that people would get over the issue of it begin a misunderstood song. It's the MUSIC and vocal melody of it that made it great. Pete Buck's guitar in that song is likely his most memorable single lick, and the dynamics of the song (from subdued verses to screaming chorus) paved the way for a lot of later pop music by many alt acts (Nirvana in particular).
"The End of the World..." has admittedly devolved over the years into a frat-party favorite, but that's not R.E.M.'s fault. It remains one of the best takes on apocalypse I've ever heard. Bring it on...
But as per usual the hits (both real and imagined) aren't the best songs on an R.E.M. album, and they're certainly not the most important ones on Document.
"Welcome To The Occupation" and "Disturbance At The Heron House", as well as "Oddfellows Local 151" and "Exhuming McCarthy" are the best examples of sociopolitical songwriting the band ever had. This is perhaps due to the fact the band became so big (and thus less on the pulse of the everyday man) on subsequent releases. These four, and in particular the first two listed, are among my personal favorites of the band's career.
1987 was a huge year for alternative rock, perhaps the biggest between 1976 and 1991. Key releases by many artists (U2's The Joshua Tree, INXS's Kick, 10,000 Maniacs' In My Tribe, The Replacements' Pleased To Meet Me) really pushed the genre toward the end of that decade with more energy than gathered at one point prior.
Document was at the center of that push, and is a must-own for not just alt. rock fans, but really anyone who studies and enjoys the development of pop music in America.

5 out of 5 stars 'Document' of Brilliance.......2006-09-11

'Document' is arguably R.E.M.'s best album. That's a pretty bold statement, considering R.E.M. has had the best roll of studio albums of any group since the Beatles. Now just like the latter, critics and fans could easily pick out 'Murmur,' 'Out of Time,' and 'Automatic for the People' as their magnum opus; however, there is at least enough evidence to put 'Document' at least among their top works.

It must be conceded that not all of the lyrics make sense. However, it doesn't take too much scholarship to point out that the theme of reform is in every corner on every song. (Notice, too, the image of fire is a major thread in several songs.) There's the call to justice and equality on the opener "Finest Worksong". With troubadour vocals and Peter Buck's blaring guitar, it is a majestic anthem. Then, U.S. policy in South America is addressed in "Welcome to the "Occupation," a stirring protest with beautiful, intricate guitars and spare, poignant lyrics. "Exhuming McCarthy" stirs up the smugness of the newly rich and arrogant. With bright instrumentation, it is a perfectly pleasing piece of pop music. Next, "Disturbance at the Heron House" gets confused, but it seems to speak about environmentalism, equality, and Darwinism in the same breath. Shimmering musically, Michael Stipe's needling vocals zero in on the subject matter like few songs previously. The variety is remarkable and the energy is laudable, but their next two numbers outdo both with "Strange," an honest caveat about dangerous drugs, and, especially, with "It's the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)". The latter is played and sung like it's Armageddon. The lyrics are presented like rap with a trajectory the genre usually lacks. Bill Berry's drumming, Michael's annunciation, and Mike Mill's and Peter's playing come together synergistically for what has to be their all time best song. The second half isn't a slouch either. "The One I Love," their first top ten hit, is beautiful for its devotion, angst, and able guitar. "Fireplace" continues the theme of reform with an able commentary about the church or state, or a similar organization. The extended metaphor and the firey saxophone work together well in one their better written songs for this outing. "Lightning Hopkins" continues the firey language and skilled musicianship, delivering a scathing sermon. One of the most dramatic moments starts off slowly. The truly eloquent "King of Birds," a beautiful, soaring song articulately speaks of a vision of flight from oppression. Then, the fire of reform is also given some its most idiosyncratic treatment on the finale "Oddfellows 151," a stab at some decadent group or another.

The energy, variety, and concept all solidify 'Document'. Also, the recent acquisition of producer Scott Litt enabled the band to reach heights not known previously. What a trek they took from their brilliant debut 'Murmur' to this expert classic! 'Document' has to be one of the top ten albums of all time.
Complete Recorded Works of Son House & the Great Delta Blues Singers
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • WARNING TO JSP COLLECTORS
  • Son House was the grandaddy of 'em all!
  • Great Stuff, Some Repeats
  • Awesome
  • A COLLECTION OF SOME OF THE FINEST DELTA BLUES
Complete Recorded Works of Son House & the Great Delta Blues Singers
Son House
Manufacturer: Document
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B000000J26
Release Date: 1994-05-27

Tracks:

  1. My Black Mama-Part I
  2. My Black Mama-Part II
  3. Preachin' The Blues-Part I
  4. Preachin' The Blues-Part II
  5. Dry Spell Blues Part I
  6. Dry Spell Blues Part II
  7. Walking Blues
  8. M & O Blues
  9. Future Blues
  10. Mississippi Bottom Blues
  11. Rowdy Blues
  12. Cottonfield Blues-Part 1
  13. Cottonfield Blues-Part 2
  14. Dough Roller Blues
  15. Jumpin' And Shoutin' Blues
  16. Bedside Blues
  17. Fare Thee Well Blues
  18. Traveling Mama Blues
  19. Outside Woman Blues
  20. Nehi Blues
  21. Married Man Blues
  22. Third Street Woman Blues
  23. Mississippi Jail House Groan
  24. Ham Hound Crave

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars WARNING TO JSP COLLECTORS.......2007-05-30

First of all, this is a great album, but I wanted to issue a warning to those that like to get the JSP Box Sets. Songs 1-9 are on the Charlie Patton JSP Box set. Blind Joe's "Outside Woman Blues", and "Nehi Blues", as well as all of the Rube Lacy selections are on the Paramount masters JSP Box Set. I'm not really sure about the remainder of the material. Still it's a great album & a great listen (If nothing else, I could use it in my car).

5 out of 5 stars Son House was the grandaddy of 'em all!.......2006-04-16

If you're interested in the blues roots of rock, you've come to the right place. Son House laid down tracks that have echoed down to this day, and he may have been the first true wellspring of what became rock. I've been a listener and collector of what's now called classic rock for more than 40 years, and I have never found an earlier or truer original source than Son House. With all the fuss being bestowed on Robert Johnson these days, here's a clue: Son House taught RJ how to play! Listen to this album and hear the foreshadowings of ALL the great music to come... Truly great guitar pickin', and a voice as rough, plain and honest as Mississippi dirt clods... You may not want to put this album on Infinite Repeat, but you will not walk away unimpressed or unmoved. IMHO, Son House truly deserves the title of Great Grandaddy of Rock!

4 out of 5 stars Great Stuff, Some Repeats.......2005-01-30

Son House is essential to any blues collection. And as is usually the case with pre-war blues artists, Son's early stuff is better than the 60's revival stuff. That said, the company put songs on here by other artists that already appear on Mississippi Masters--which I also highly reccomend, especially for Geechie Wiley's "Last Kind Words." This CD would be 5-star and beyond if it weren't for those repeated songs.

5 out of 5 stars Awesome.......2003-12-10

"Son House & The Great Delta Blues Singers" isn't entirely devoted to Son House. There are cuts by several other musicians, including Rube Lacy, Joe Calicott, and House's onetime playing partner Willie Brown, but this disc, which contains Son House's complete 1930 session, is the best place to get his earliest songs.
The sound quality is not excactly stellar, mainly due to the inferior quality of Columbia Records' original masters and horrible quality pressings, yet the power and intensity of Son House's huge voice and slashing slide guitar playing cuts through the pops and hisses like...well, a cutting thing.
Also, this CD is one of the very few which features both the previously unreleased test acetate of "Walking Blues" (the basis for Robert Johnson's song, not the other way around), and the second parts of House's three two-part singles. Listen to "My Black Mama part II", and you'll recognize it as the original version of "Death Letter Blues", complete with House's magnificent, wailing slide guitar riff.

House's seven songs are the highlights of this collection, but there is a lot of other stuff here which is certainly of interest to fans of classic Delta blues. The gruff-voiced Willie Brown's two cuts are almost as powerful as Son House's, particularly the great "Future Blues" (listen to Brown snapping the bass strings).
And fine waxings by Kid Bailey and Joe Reynolds in particular makes this a great collection of Delta blues as recorded by Paramount Records in 1929-30.

5 out of 5 stars A COLLECTION OF SOME OF THE FINEST DELTA BLUES.......2003-02-06

I absolutely love this CD and find myself listening to it over-and-over again. I ordered it for the Son House material but have found the Willie Brown and the Garfield Akers songs to be every bit as fantastic! Although I especially like the three musicians already mentioned, there is not a dud in any of the remaining tracks. If you like delta blues and don't have this CD you are missing one of the greatest musical treats you're liable to find.
Complete Recorded Works (1928-1929)
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • The Complete Recordings Of Tommy Johnson
  • As good as it gets.
  • Essential!
  • One of the Most Unique of the Early Blues Players
  • The Victor tracks are worth the price of the CD
Complete Recorded Works (1928-1929)
Thomas "Snake" Johnson
Manufacturer: Document
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

Delta BluesDelta Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
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ASIN: B000000J25
Release Date: 1994-05-27

Tracks:

  1. Cool Drink OF Water Blues
  2. Big Road Blues
  3. Bye-Bye Blues
  4. Maggie Campbell Blues
  5. Canned Heat Blues
  6. Lonesome Home Blues (Take 1)
  7. Lonesome Home Blues (Take 2)
  8. Big Fat Mama Blues
  9. I Wonder To Myself
  10. Slidin' Delta
  11. Lonesome Home Blues
  12. Untitled Song-Take 1 (Morning Prayer Blues)
  13. Untitled Song-Take 2 (Boogaloosa Woman)
  14. Black Mare Blues (Take 1)
  15. Black Mare Blues (Take 2)
  16. Ridin' Horse
  17. Alcohol And Jake Blues

Amazon.com

Evidence of the strange genius of Mississippi bluesman Tommy Johnson is limited to 17 recordings from two late-1920s sessions. It is the first of these, for the Victor Company, that produced the recordings upon which Johnson's lofty reputation rests. Sung in a husky falsetto, somewhere between an African field holler and an Alpine yodel, "Cool Drink of Water Blues" stands atop a pinnacle in the richly inventive Delta blues tradition with younger cousin Robert Johnson's "Hellhound on My Trail" and Skip James's "Devil Got My Woman." "Canned Heat Blues" is a bittersweet paean to the older Johnson's penchant for imbibing tins of jellied kerosene, and was a modest hit in that era's "race record" market. Also notable from his 1928 session were the influential "Maggie Campbell Blues," "Big Road Blues," and "Big Fat Mama Blues," while the recently discovered Paramount session was remarkable for "Slidin' Delta" and "I Wonder to Myself." --Alan Greenberg

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The Complete Recordings Of Tommy Johnson.......2006-11-10

Tommy Johnson was one of the most unique and influential delta blues men in the history of American music. He has inspired such artists as Howlin' Wolf, Houston Stackhouse, and Robert Nighthawk.
The Complete recorded works of Tommy Johnson is essential to all lovers of blues and American roots music.
Sadly Johnson only recorded 17 classic sided and they are all present on this collection. The sound qualitiy is also superior to previous releases of these tracks. If you only have a few Tommy Johnson tracks on various compilations, it is worth the price to have them all in chronological order as they are presented on this disc. You get to hear what a dynamic artist Johnson was and how he took the influence of Delta greats Charlie Patton and Ishmon Bracey, and even the falseto vocal stlylings of Jimmy Rodgers, and turned them into something totally unique and timeless.
A must have.
-Devon Wendell

5 out of 5 stars As good as it gets........2006-05-12

I have been a blues fan for forty years, and have listened to just about everybody, from Ma Rainey to Susan Tedeschi, with Muddy Waters and Lightning Hopkins on the way. Nobody is better than Tommy Johnson. Nobody at all. Johnson's great reputation is based on a pitifully small collection of recordings, over half of which were put out on the dreaded Paramount label (Paramount is the despair of blues fans -- on the plus side, without the label we might never have had recordings from Charley Patton, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Blind Blake, early Skip James and early Son House, to name only a few: on the other hand, we are constantly tantalized and frustrated by what we might have had if the company's recording standards had been of even average quality for the time {i.e., late 1920s-mid 1930s} instead of awful beyond description). In any case, the eight Victor sides Tommy Johnson made in 1928, and in particular Big Road Blues, Maggie Campbell Blues, Cool Drink of Water Blues and Canned Heat Blues are at the absolute acme of blues recordings. In terms of emotional power, intensity and sheer brilliance, I have never heard anybody in the blues genre I have thought to be Johnson's equal. I believe that you have to go to some of the great American jazz masters such as Louis Armstrong or Charlie Parker to find adequate comparisons.

This Document Records compilation is an absolute necessity for any serious collector of the blues, and particularly of early blues. There were many great bluesmen named Johnson: Robert, Blind Willie and Lonnie to name the best known. However, if you can only take one "Johnson" record down that Big Road, Tommy's is the one to take.

5 out of 5 stars Essential!.......2004-04-12

Before Robert Johnson came along, and long before Son House started spreading the rumour that he (Johnson) had sold his soul to the devil in exchange for his abilities on the guitar, a man fifteen years Robert Johnson's senior ever so often implied that his immense talent came as the result of a midnight deal with Old Scracth.

Thomas Johnson was born in 1896 down in the Mississippi Delta, and though his name is not as well known as those of Charlie Patton, Son House, and Robert Johnson (no relation), he was one of the most important prewar bluesmen, and certainly one of the most talented.
He was also an uncontrolled alcoholic, and the fact that he lived to see sixty is something of a miracle. His "Canned Heat Blues" is certainly autobiographical, and his contemporaries have told about Johnson straining shoe polish through a slice of white bread in order to extract the alcohol.

But his music is something to behold. Johnson sounds totally immersed in it, his voice possessing an eerie quality enhanched by his occational falsetto moans, and this disc includes the original versions of "Maggie Campbell Blues", "Big Road Blues", and "Cool Drink Of Water Blues" (later recorded by Howlin' Wolf as "I Asked For Water (she gave me gasoline)").

Johnson plays alone on a few songs, but on most of these seventeen sides (which comprise his entire recorded legacy) he is backed by one or more additional musicians, most often a second guitarist. The first eight sides, Tommy Johnson's Victor sides from 1928, boast amazing sound quality...much (much!) better than Charlie Patton's or Son House's contemporary recordings, they're clean and crisp with just a little static, and every phrase and every instrument is clearly heard. Johnson was a talented and quite original guitar player, and it is a delight to be able to hear him so well.

The Paramount sides, on the other hand, are...well, Paramount sides. Much inferior in sound quality to the Victor sides, they are nevertheless well worth a listen, particularly "Alcohol And Jake Blues" and the battered "Lonesome House Blues".
On the best of these songs, Johnson's voice is positively frightening, and his "Cool Drink Of Water" is the sound of pure despair. This is some of the starkest, most powerful music you'll ever hear.

5 out of 5 stars One of the Most Unique of the Early Blues Players.......2004-02-10

Tommy Johnson and Charlie Patton are perhaps two of the most unique and innovative rural blues players to have ever lived. As where Patton's style is coarse and rough, Johnson's style (at least when he is at his best) is incredibly smooth. Also Johnson's unique falsetto (which is yodel like at times) is amazing. These recordings bare witness to his talent even after nearly a century. It is a shame that these recordings are all that there is.

4 out of 5 stars The Victor tracks are worth the price of the CD.......2003-06-18

I agree with the other reviewers, this is a must for any serious fan of the blues, but be prepared for the songs recorded by Paramount, which I found, at first listen, to border on inaudible (which is why I am docking this CD a star). This morning, however, I was listening to them again, and got into them more. That being said, the Victor tracks are unforgettable and worth the price of the CD all by themselves. ... I suspect that when Tommy sold his soul to the devil at the crossroads, the Devil said, "Fine. I'll make you a great guitarplayer BUT half of the music you lay down is going to sound like you were playing outside in a hailstorm." Tommy probably smiled and said, "That's OK because I won't be around long. Just keep me stocked in 'canned heat,' brother." All joking aside, I urge you to check it this seminal music.
Complete Recorded Works (1931)
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Essential Listening for Blues Lovers
Complete Recorded Works (1931)
Skip James
Manufacturer: Document
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B000000J29
Release Date: 1994-05-27

Tracks:

  1. Devil Got My Woman
  2. Cypress Grove Blues
  3. Cherry Ball Blues
  4. Illinois Blues
  5. Four O'Clock Blues
  6. Hard-Luck Child
  7. Hard Time Killin' Floor Blues
  8. Yola My Blues Away
  9. Jesus Is A Mighty Good Leader
  10. Be Ready When He Comes
  11. Drunken Spree
  12. I'm So Glad
  13. Special Rider Blues
  14. How Long 'Buck'
  15. Little Cow And Calf Is Gonna Die Blues
  16. What Am I To Do Blues
  17. 22-20 Blues
  18. If You Haven't Any Hay Get On Down The Road

Album Details

Skip James Complete 1931 Recordings in Chronological Order (18 Tracks).

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Essential Listening for Blues Lovers.......2007-02-08

Early Skip James music is paradigmatic: it was made by a unique artist with his own unique character who was not playing by the numbers or emulating someone else. He is one of the cornerstones of the blues. Listen to it carefully and you'll hear colors that no other blues musician used. Essential.
Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2, 1924-1925
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2, 1924-1925
    Fiddlin' John Carson
    Manufacturer: Document
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

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    ASIN: B000000JJV
    Release Date: 1998-01-02

    Tracks:

    1. Dixie Division
    2. Sugar In The Gourd
    3. The Lightning Express
    4. I'm Glad My Wife's In Europe
    5. Turkey In The Straw
    6. Jimmie On The Railroad
    7. Run, Nigger, Run
    8. I'm Nine Hundred Miles From Home
    9. It Ain't Gonna Gain No Mo'
    10. Alabama Gal (Won't You Come Out Tonight?)
    11. The Baggage Coach Ahead
    12. The Orphan Child
    13. The Letter Edged In Black
    14. Steamboat Bill
    15. It Takes A Little Rain With The Sunshine
    16. Old Dan Tucker
    17. Boil Dem Cabbage Down
    18. Old Uncle Ned
    19. My North Georgia Home
    20. The Death Of Floyd Collins
    21. Charming Betsy
    22. Sally Ann
    Skillet Lickers, Vol. 1: 1926-1927
    Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    • Fine musicians, but racism runs rampant.
    • Bald Mountain Caruso!
    Skillet Lickers, Vol. 1: 1926-1927
    The Skillet Lickers
    Manufacturer: Document
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

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    5. Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 1, 1923-1924

    ASIN: B00004ZEJX
    Release Date: 2000-11-14

    Tracks:

    1. Hand Me Down My Walking Cane
    2. Bully Of The Town
    3. Pass Around The Bottle And We'll All Take A Drink
    4. Alabama Jubilee
    5. Watermelon On The Vine
    6. Don't You Hear Jerusalem Moan
    7. Ya Gotta Quit Kickin' My Dog Aroun'
    8. Turkey In The Straw
    9. Polly Woddle Doo
    10. Uncle Bud
    11. Dance All Night With A Bottle In Your Hand
    12. She'll Be Coming 'Round The Mountain
    13. I Don't Love Nobody
    14. I Got Mine
    15. Shortening Bread
    16. Old Joe Clark
    17. Casey Jones
    18. The Wreck Of The Southern Old '97
    19. Dixie
    20. Run Nigger Run
    21. The Girl I Left Behind Me
    22. The Old Gray Mare
    23. John Henry (The Steel Drivin' Man)

    Customer Reviews:

    3 out of 5 stars Fine musicians, but racism runs rampant........2006-02-04

    Probably half the songs use the "n" word. It is so jarring I found it hard to enjoy the musicianship.

    5 out of 5 stars Bald Mountain Caruso!.......2005-03-09

    "Gid Tanner was one of the most widely recognized names among country music enthusiasts of the 1920s and 1930s. The group that he headed, Gid Tanner and His Skillet Lickers, was one of the most influential string bands that recorded during the formative years of the country music industry. The innovative approach, craftsmanship, and professionalism of this widely imitated ensemble was due in large part to the talents of such competent band members as Clayton McMichen on fiddle and Riley Puckett on guitar.

    James Gideon "Gid" Tanner was born at Thomas Bridge, near Monroe, in 1885 and spent most of his adult life in Gwinnett County, where he made a living as a farmer. He learned to play the fiddle as a teenager and became known in local circles for his prowess with the instrument. As a young man he was a regular participant at the Georgia Old-Time Fiddlers' Conventions, held annually in Atlanta between 1913 and 1935. He won the state fiddling championship in 1928. Tanner was known among musicians and convention audiences as a crowd pleaser. He was not only a fiddler but also a comedian noted for his stereotypical imitations and a singer with legendary range. Tanner allegedly knew the words and music to more than 2,000 songs. The favorite among his audiences was "I'm Satisfied," which he sang in alternating falsetto and bass registers. When Tanner sang the song at the fiddlers' conventions, newspapers reported that he "brought down the house" and was forced to repeat the song several times "before the audience would let him go."

    On April 17, 1926, the Skillet Lickers recorded eight songs for the Columbia record label in an Atlanta studio. During the next eight years various combinations of Atlanta-area musicians joined Tanner to record more than 100 songs under the Skillet Lickers name. Besides McMichen and Puckett, the Skillet Lickers at one time or another included Ted Hawkins (mandolin, fiddle), Bert Layne (fiddle), Fate Norris (banjo, harmonica), Hoke Rice (guitar), Lowe Stokes (fiddle), Arthur Tanner (banjo, guitar), and Mike Whitten (guitar). With such songs as "Bully of the Town," "Pass Around the Bottle and We'll All Take a Drink," and "Soldier's Joy," these records were well received by fans of old-time string band music, and they sold well. The band's biggest-selling record was "Down Yonder," recorded at its last session in 1934, with Tanner's son, Gordon, playing the lead fiddle.

    In addition to traditional folk music, fiddle tunes, and novelty songs, the Skillet Lickers recorded a series of skits in which humorous dialogue, interspersed with snatches of familiar songs and tunes, was the main feature. Called "rural drama records," these skits, as their titles indicate, recounted stories about such topics as "A Corn Licker Still in Georgia," "The Medicine Show," and "Kickapoo Joy Juice."

    Although Tanner's recording career ended in 1934, he remained active as an entertainer until shortly before his death. During his last years he performed on stage and radio and entered fiddlers' contests. He won his last first-place trophy at the age of seventy-one.

    At his death in 1960, just three weeks shy of his seventy-fifth birthday, Tanner left behind a living legacy of his work as a musician. His grandson Phil Tanner and Phil's son, Russell, both fiddlers, are still actively performing in an old-time string band that retains the name Skillet Lickers. Four generations of Tanners have kept Georgia's old-time music alive for more than a hundred years. Tanner was inducted into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame in 1988."

    The Skillet Lickers, Vol. 2: 1927-1928
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Bald Mountain Caruso!
    • simply amazing
    The Skillet Lickers, Vol. 2: 1927-1928
    Skillet Lickers
    Manufacturer: Document
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Country | Styles | Music
    Old-Time CountryOld-Time Country | Traditional Country | Country | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Traditional Country | Country | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Folk | Styles | Music
    Traditional FolkTraditional Folk | Folk | Styles | Music
    AppalachianAppalachian | North America | International | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Strings | Instruments | Classical | Styles | Music
    Similar Items:
    1. Skillet Lickers, Vol. 1: 1926-1927
    2. Skillet Lickers, Vol. 5: 1930-1934
    3. The Skillet-Lickers, Vol. 3: 1925-1929

    ASIN: B00005898J
    Release Date: 2001-02-06

    Tracks:

    1. Drink 'Er Down
    2. The Darktown Strutters' Ball
    3. A Fiddlers' Convention In Georgia - Part 1
    4. A Fiddlers' Convention In Georgia - Part 2
    5. Old McDonald Had A Farm
    6. Bile Them Cabbage Down
    7. Big Ball In Town
    8. It's A Long Way To Tipperary
    9. Buckin' Mule
    10. Uncle Bud
    11. Johnson's Old Grey Mule
    12. Hen Cackle
    13. Cumberland Gap
    14. Cotton-Eyed Joe
    15. Black-Eyed Susie
    16. Prettiest Little Girl In The County
    17. Slow Buck
    18. Settin' In The Chimney Jamb
    19. Sal Let Me Chaw Your Rosin
    20. Possum Hunt On Stump House Mountain - Part 1
    21. Possum Hunt On Stump House Mountain - Part 2
    22. Hog Killing Day - Part 1
    23. Hog Killing Day - Part 2

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Bald Mountain Caruso!.......2005-04-08

    "Gid Tanner was one of the most widely recognized names among country music enthusiasts of the 1920s and 1930s. The group that he headed, Gid Tanner and His Skillet Lickers, was one of the most influential string bands that recorded during the formative years of the country music industry. The innovative approach, craftsmanship, and professionalism of this widely imitated ensemble was due in large part to the talents of such competent band members as Clayton McMichen on fiddle and Riley Puckett on guitar.

    James Gideon "Gid" Tanner was born at Thomas Bridge, near Monroe, in 1885 and spent most of his adult life in Gwinnett County, where he made a living as a farmer. He learned to play the fiddle as a teenager and became known in local circles for his prowess with the instrument. As a young man he was a regular participant at the Georgia Old-Time Fiddlers' Conventions, held annually in Atlanta between 1913 and 1935. He won the state fiddling championship in 1928. Tanner was known among musicians and convention audiences as a crowd pleaser. He was not only a fiddler but also a comedian noted for his stereotypical imitations and a singer with legendary range. Tanner allegedly knew the words and music to more than 2,000 songs. The favorite among his audiences was "I'm Satisfied," which he sang in alternating falsetto and bass registers. When Tanner sang the song at the fiddlers' conventions, newspapers reported that he "brought down the house" and was forced to repeat the song several times "before the audience would let him go."

    On April 17, 1926, the Skillet Lickers recorded eight songs for the Columbia record label in an Atlanta studio. During the next eight years various combinations of Atlanta-area musicians joined Tanner to record more than 100 songs under the Skillet Lickers name. Besides McMichen and Puckett, the Skillet Lickers at one time or another included Ted Hawkins (mandolin, fiddle), Bert Layne (fiddle), Fate Norris (banjo, harmonica), Hoke Rice (guitar), Lowe Stokes (fiddle), Arthur Tanner (banjo, guitar), and Mike Whitten (guitar). With such songs as "Bully of the Town," "Pass Around the Bottle and We'll All Take a Drink," and "Soldier's Joy," these records were well received by fans of old-time string band music, and they sold well. The band's biggest-selling record was "Down Yonder," recorded at its last session in 1934, with Tanner's son, Gordon, playing the lead fiddle.

    In addition to traditional folk music, fiddle tunes, and novelty songs, the Skillet Lickers recorded a series of skits in which humorous dialogue, interspersed with snatches of familiar songs and tunes, was the main feature. Called "rural drama records," these skits, as their titles indicate, recounted stories about such topics as "A Corn Licker Still in Georgia," "The Medicine Show," and "Kickapoo Joy Juice."

    Although Tanner's recording career ended in 1934, he remained active as an entertainer until shortly before his death. During his last years he performed on stage and radio and entered fiddlers' contests. He won his last first-place trophy at the age of seventy-one.

    At his death in 1960, just three weeks shy of his seventy-fifth birthday, Tanner left behind a living legacy of his work as a musician. His grandson Phil Tanner and Phil's son, Russell, both fiddlers, are still actively performing in an old-time string band that retains the name Skillet Lickers. Four generations of Tanners have kept Georgia's old-time music alive for more than a hundred years. Tanner was inducted into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame in 1988."

    5 out of 5 stars simply amazing.......2002-11-29

    This is one amazing colaboration of talent. The music is a refreshing and honest approach to folk and country. My hat's off to these men.
    Skillet Lickers, Vol. 6: 1934
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Bald Mountain Caruso!
    Skillet Lickers, Vol. 6: 1934
    The Skillet Lickers
    Manufacturer: Document
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Country | Styles | Music
    Old-Time CountryOld-Time Country | Traditional Country | Country | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Traditional Country | Country | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Bluegrass | Country | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Folk | Styles | Music
    Traditional FolkTraditional Folk | Folk | Styles | Music
    AppalachianAppalachian | North America | International | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Strings | Instruments | Classical | Styles | Music
    CountryCountry | Imports | Stores | Music
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    1. The Skillet-Lickers, Vol. 3: 1925-1929
    2. Skillet Lickers, Vol. 5: 1930-1934
    3. Old-Time Fiddle Tunes And Songs From North Georgia
    4. Skillet Lickers, Vol. 1: 1926-1927
    5. Ernest Stoneman: 1928 Edison Recordings

    ASIN: B000056BC3
    Release Date: 2001-01-30

    Tracks:

    1. Back Up And Push
    2. Rufus
    3. Cumberland Gap On A Buckin' Mule
    4. Hawkins' Rag
    5. Skillet Licker Breakdown
    6. Cotton Patch
    7. Ida Red
    8. Down Yonder
    9. Git Along
    10. Whoa, Mule, Whoa
    11. Tra-Le-La-La
    12. Keep Your Gal At Home
    13. Hinkey-Dinkey-Dee
    14. I Ain't No Better Now
    15. Tanner's Rag
    16. Tanner's Hornpipe
    17. Soldier's Joy
    18. Flop-Eared Mule
    19. Prosperity And Politics - Part 1
    20. Prosperity And Politics - Part 2
    21. Practice Night With The Skillet Lickers - Part 1
    22. Practice Night With The Skillet Lickers - Part 2

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Bald Mountain Caruso!.......2005-03-20

    "Gid Tanner was one of the most widely recognized names among country music enthusiasts of the 1920s and 1930s. The group that he headed, Gid Tanner and His Skillet Lickers, was one of the most influential string bands that recorded during the formative years of the country music industry. The innovative approach, craftsmanship, and professionalism of this widely imitated ensemble was due in large part to the talents of such competent band members as Clayton McMichen on fiddle and Riley Puckett on guitar.

    James Gideon "Gid" Tanner was born at Thomas Bridge, near Monroe, in 1885 and spent most of his adult life in Gwinnett County, where he made a living as a farmer. He learned to play the fiddle as a teenager and became known in local circles for his prowess with the instrument. As a young man he was a regular participant at the Georgia Old-Time Fiddlers' Conventions, held annually in Atlanta between 1913 and 1935. He won the state fiddling championship in 1928. Tanner was known among musicians and convention audiences as a crowd pleaser. He was not only a fiddler but also a comedian noted for his stereotypical imitations and a singer with legendary range. Tanner allegedly knew the words and music to more than 2,000 songs. The favorite among his audiences was "I'm Satisfied," which he sang in alternating falsetto and bass registers. When Tanner sang the song at the fiddlers' conventions, newspapers reported that he "brought down the house" and was forced to repeat the song several times "before the audience would let him go."

    On April 17, 1926, the Skillet Lickers recorded eight songs for the Columbia record label in an Atlanta studio. During the next eight years various combinations of Atlanta-area musicians joined Tanner to record more than 100 songs under the Skillet Lickers name. Besides McMichen and Puckett, the Skillet Lickers at one time or another included Ted Hawkins (mandolin, fiddle), Bert Layne (fiddle), Fate Norris (banjo, harmonica), Hoke Rice (guitar), Lowe Stokes (fiddle), Arthur Tanner (banjo, guitar), and Mike Whitten (guitar). With such songs as "Bully of the Town," "Pass Around the Bottle and We'll All Take a Drink," and "Soldier's Joy," these records were well received by fans of old-time string band music, and they sold well. The band's biggest-selling record was "Down Yonder," recorded at its last session in 1934, with Tanner's son, Gordon, playing the lead fiddle.

    In addition to traditional folk music, fiddle tunes, and novelty songs, the Skillet Lickers recorded a series of skits in which humorous dialogue, interspersed with snatches of familiar songs and tunes, was the main feature. Called "rural drama records," these skits, as their titles indicate, recounted stories about such topics as "A Corn Licker Still in Georgia," "The Medicine Show," and "Kickapoo Joy Juice."

    Although Tanner's recording career ended in 1934, he remained active as an entertainer until shortly before his death. During his last years he performed on stage and radio and entered fiddlers' contests. He won his last first-place trophy at the age of seventy-one.

    At his death in 1960, just three weeks shy of his seventy-fifth birthday, Tanner left behind a living legacy of his work as a musician. His grandson Phil Tanner and Phil's son, Russell, both fiddlers, are still actively performing in an old-time string band that retains the name Skillet Lickers. Four generations of Tanners have kept Georgia's old-time music alive for more than a hundred years. Tanner was inducted into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame in 1988."
    Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 1 (1927-1928)
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 1 (1927-1928)
      Jim Jackson
      Manufacturer: Document
      ProductGroup: Music
      Binding: Audio CD

      GeneralGeneral | Blues | Styles | Music
      Memphis BluesMemphis Blues | Regional Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
      Traditional BluesTraditional Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
      Acoustic BluesAcoustic Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
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      1. Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2 (1928-1930)

      ASIN: B000000J5A
      Release Date: 1996-07-02

      Tracks:

      1. Jim Jackson's Kansas City Blues-Pt.1
      2. Jim Jackson's Kansas City Blues-Pt.2
      3. He's In The Jailhouse Now
      4. Old Dog Blue
      5. My Monday Blues
      6. Mobile-Central Blues
      7. Jim Jackson's Kansas City Blues-Pt.3
      8. Jim Jackson's Kansas City Blues-Pt.4
      9. My Monday Blues
      10. I'm A Bad Bad Man
      11. I'm Gonna Start Me A Graveyard Of My Own
      12. My Monday Woman Blues (Take 1)
      13. I Heard The Voice Of A Pork Chop (Take 1)
      14. I Heard The Voice Of A Pork Chop (Take 2)
      15. My Monday Woman Blues (Take 3)
      16. My Mobile Central Blues
      17. Old Dog Blue (41827)
      18. Bootlegging Blues
      19. Policy Blues (Take 1)
      20. Policy Blues (Take 2)
      21. I'm Wild About My Lovin' (Take 2)
      22. This Morning She Was Gone (Take 1)
      23. This Morning She Was Gone (Take 2)
      Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2 (1938-1941)
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2 (1938-1941)
        Jazz Gillum
        Manufacturer: Document
        ProductGroup: Music
        Binding: Audio CD

        Chicago BluesChicago Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
        GeneralGeneral | Blues | Styles | Music
        Traditional BluesTraditional Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
        Acoustic BluesAcoustic Blues | Blues | Styles | Music
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        ASIN: B00005YO0B
        Release Date: 1994-06-02

        Tracks:

        1. Let Her Go
        2. Get Away Old Woman
        3. Stavin' Chain
        4. She Won't Treat Me Kind
        5. I'll Get Along Somehow
        6. Got to Reap What You Sow
        7. Big Katy Adams
        8. Against My Will
        9. Keyhole Blues
        10. Talking to Myself
        11. Hard Drivin' Woman
        12. Somebody Been Talking to You
        13. One Time Blues
        14. It Sure Had a Kick
        15. She Belongs to Me
        16. Longest Train Blues
        17. Key to the Highway
        18. I'm Still Walking the Hi-Way
        19. Get Your Business Straight
        20. Muddy Pond Blues
        21. Little Woman
        22. Poor Boy Blues
        23. Is That a Monkey You Got?
        24. Riley Springs Blues
        25. That's What Worries Me

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