<
Back to CMT.com
>
Sign In
Account
|
Order Status
|
Help
Entire Shop
Shows
Artists
Music
DVD
Books
CMT Merch
CMT LOOT
for
CART
: empty
Music
:
String Bands
:
People Take Warning! Murder Ballads & Disaster Songs 1913-1938
People Take Warning! Murder Ballads & Disaster Songs 1913-1938
Various Artists / CD / 2007
Zoom
Send to Friend
Be the first to
review this product
!
Artist
Various Artists
Format
CD
Genre
Folk
Label Name
Tompkins Square
Producer
Henry Sapoznik, Christopher [1] C. King
Release Date
2007 09 25
Song List
1: Titanic Blues (3:14)
2: Wreck of the Old '97 (2:54)
3: Bill Wilson (3:21)
4: The Crash of the Akron (3:31)
5: The Fate of Talmadge Osborne (3:06)
6: El Mole Rachmim (Für Titanik) (3:31)
7: The Wreck of the Virginian (2:59)
8: Fate of Will Rogers & Wiley Post (3:17)
9: Down with the Old Canoe (2:52)
10: Wreck of Number 52 (3:16)
11: Kassie Jones, Pt. 1 (3:07)
12: Kassie Jones, Pt. 2 (3:04)
13: The Brave Engineer (3:16)
14: The Sinking of the Titanic (3:48)
15: Fate of Chris Lively and Wife (3:25)
16: Wreck on the Mountain Road (2:37)
17: The Unfortunate Brakeman (2:26)
18: Altoona Freight Wreck (2:37)
19: The Fatal Wreck of the Bus (2:48)
20: Last Scene of the Titanic (3:29)
21: Casey Jones (2:48)
22: The Wreck of the Westbound Airliner (2:58)
23: The Titanic (3:14)
24: When That Great Ship Went Down (2:57)
25: The Story of the Mighty Mississippi (3:07)
26: Mississippi Heavy Water Blues (3:04)
27: Dixie Boll Weevil (2:59)
28: Mississippi Boweavil (3:06)
29: Ohio Prison Fire (3:27)
30: Memphis Flu (3:03)
31: Explosion in the Fairmount Mine (3:21)
32: Storm That Struck Miami (3:02)
33: When the Levee Breaks (3:13)
34: Alabama Flood (3:18)
35: Burning of the Cleveland School (3:02)
36: High Water Everywhere, Pt. 1 (3:07)
37: High Water Everywhere, Pt. 2 (3:06)
38: Ryecove Cyclone (3:03)
39: McBeth Mine Explosion (2:52)
40: Dry Well Blues (3:20)
41: Baltimore Fire (3:12)
42: Tennessee Tornado (3:14)
43: Dry Spell Blues, Pt. 2 (3:14)
44: The Santa Barbara Earthquake (2:57)
45: The Death of Floyd Collins (3:29)
46: The Porto Rico Storm (2:33)
47: Boll Weavil (2:59)
48: The Flood of 1927 (3:14)
49: Peddler and His Wife (3:24)
50: The Little Grave in Georgia (3:07)
51: Kenny Wagner's Surrender (2:23)
52: Henry Clay Beattie (3:09)
53: The Murder of the Lawson Family (3:27)
54: Naomi Wise (2:53)
55: Railroad Bill (2:59)
56: Frankie (3:02)
57: Trial of Richard Bruno Hauptmann, Pt. 1 (3:00)
58: Trial of Richard Bruno Hauptmann, Pt. 2 (3:04)
59: Lanse des Belaires (2:50)
60: Darling Cora (3:53)
61: Billy Lyons and Stack O' Lee (2:37)
62: Tom Dooley (3:10)
63: The Story of Freda Bolt (3:37)
64: Pretty Polly (3:11)
65: Fingerprints Upon the Windowpane (3:00)
66: The Bluefield Murder (3:08)
67: Frankie Silvers (3:05)
68: Fate of Rhoda Sweeten (3:11)
69: Dupree Blues (3:29)
70: Poor Ellen Smith (3:12)
Style.Categories
Slide Guitar Blues, Appalachian Folk, Jug Band, Prewar Blues, East Coast Blues, Folk-Blues, String Bands, Piedmont Blues, Delta Blues, Prewar Country Blues, Country Blues, Old-Timey, Texas Blues, Piano Blues, Acoustic Blues
This product CANNOT be returned once it has been opened.
click here
for more information on our general return policy.
In-Stock
: Ships within 24 hours
This three-disc, 70-track (30 of them new to the CD era) collection of murder ballads and disaster songs originally released on commercial 78s between 1913 and 1938 is, in spite of the archaic song structures and often crude sonic qualities on display, strangely contemporary in tone and feel, maybe because we've always been drawn to the scene of the accident, and even in this 21st century world of the Internet and all-day, all-night news channels, that's still as true as it ever was. We just don't write songs about such things so much anymore, and since one can just flip on the TV to get up to speed on the latest round of personal, local, and global tragedies, that's probably understandable. A quaint view of why these old songs were so popular back in the day is to say that's how the news traveled back then, but that wouldn't be true. The news media in the early 1900s in America was every bit as dogged and sensational as it is now, and these tragic songs didn't carry the news so much as give it a community focus, good or bad, functioning as street-corner sermons, cautionary tales, or just plain gossip given melody. Some of these songs are straight observational narratives, but some of them have definite agendas. There's a big difference here, for instance, between
Charley Patton
's two-part personal epic
"High Water Everywhere,"
recorded in 1929 and containing
Patton
's chilling appraisal of the Mississippi flood from two years earlier, and
Elder Curry
's sanctified
"Memphis Flu"
from 1930, which determines the influenza epidemic of that same year was God's stern judgment on the moral paucity of the human species. Both songs carry news, and news that is deeply tragic, but to quite different ends and purposes.
There are easily a dozen songs here about the sinking of the Titanic in 1912, an event that could be said to metaphorically carry the Victorian era with it to the bottom of the sea and usher in a world where industrial disasters, whether they be sinking ships, derailing trains, or cars wrecking on the highway, became central symbols in a seemingly endless procession of misfortune. Then there are the murder ballads that make up most of disc three here (the first disc contains songs about the crashing, sinking, and wrecking of various machines and motor vehicles while the second covers floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, droughts, and other natural world-related calamities, and the third, easily the creepiest, deals with violence between people), many of which have to do with the murders of young and unmarried pregnant women and end with no discernible moral position being taken, and one realizes that tragedies like the sinking of the Titanic are full of terror while the very real murders of
Laura Foster
(as chronicled by
Grayson & Whitter
in their 1929
"Tom Dooley"
),
Naomi Wise
(
Clarence Ashley
's
"Naomi Wise,"
also recorded in 1929), and
Ellen Smith
(
"Poor Ellen Smith,"
tracked by
the Dykes Magic City Trio
in 1927) are full of something closer to pure horror and have to be viewed as cautionary tales, or else there is nothing spiritually or emotionally redemptive in them at all.
Is this kind of a morbid collection? Yes, it is, but it is also fascinating for what it reveals about our concepts of mortality, an afterlife, redemption, survival, and abstract looks at things like bravery, heroism, and even a kind of powerful fatalism. In guitarist
Frank Hutchison
's version of the Titanic disaster,
"Last Scene of the Titanic,"
recorded in 1927, he has people below decks dancing to the sound of fiddles as the ship goes down. Life is full of unexpected tragedies, he seems to be saying, but nothing is really lost by dancing because fate will do what fate always does anyway. If there's an overriding moral point to all of these old songs, that might be it.
$45.05
List Price:
$51.98
Save: $6.93 (13%)
USER REVIEWS
write your own review
No Reviews
© 2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Content provided by
All Music Guide ®
, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC.
You May Also Like!
Same Old Man
$16.98
$13.39
Julianne Hough
$13.98
$12.35
Prayer of a Common Man
$11.98
$9.99
Lady Antebellum
$12.98
$10.15
Need Help?
FAQ
Account
Order Status
Contact Us
Sign Up For the CMT Shop Newsletter:
Be the first to know about:
Special offers, discounts and CMT exclusives!
We will not spam you or sell your personal information. We
guarantee
it.
CMT Merch
|
Shows
|
Artists
|
Music
|
DVD
|
Books
|
Cart
Terms of Use
|
Privacy Statement
E-commerce on this website is brought to you by MTVN Direct Inc. powered by Vcommerce
©2005 Country Music Television Inc., a Viacom company A division of MTV Networks All Rights Reserved.