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Appalachian Folk
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Spencer Moore
Spencer Moore
Spencer Moore / CD / 2007
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Artist
Spencer Moore
Format
CD
Genre
Folk
Label Name
Tompkins Square
Producer
Josh Rosenthal
Release Date
2007 07 31
Song List
1: Don't Let Your Deal Go Down (2:47)
2: Renfro Valley Home (3:14)
3: May I Sleep in Your Barn Tonight, Mister (3:35)
4: Our Baby Boy Is Gone (3:10)
5: In the Year of '41 (1:38)
6: Three Little Babes (2:51)
7: Cumberland Gap (3:20)
8: Great Speckled Bird (1:44)
9: Wildwood Flower (2:37)
10: Burglar Man (3:09)
11: The Lawson Family Murders (2:45)
12: Little Betty Waltz (2:28)
13: Little Rosewood Casket (3:16)
14: Jimmy Sutton (4:02)
Style.Categories
Appalachian Folk, Folksongs, Traditional Folk, Old-Timey
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Spencer Moore
's debut album was a long time coming. Seventy-plus years coming, to be exact, and it might not have happened at all if
Josh Rosenthal
, who runs
Tompkins Square Records
, hadn't attended a retrospective exhibition of photographs taken by the legendary
Alan Lomax
.
Rosenthal
was particularly struck by a photo of a man shown singing and playing guitar against a tobacco field backdrop, a photo, it turned out, that was taken by
Lomax
in 1959 at a
field recording
session he was doing of a young tobacco farmer named
Spencer Moore
(several of the tracks recorded that day ended up as part of
Lomax
's
Southern Journey
project).
Rosenthal
proceeded to track down
Moore
, who by this time was 87-years-old and retired, at his home in Chilhowie, VA, and on June 2006, ran tape on the elderly singer. The resulting spare and acoustic
Spencer Moore
album is startlingly refreshing for its complete lack of pretense.
Moore
isn't a great guitar player, and his singing is frequently pitch challenged, and none of the 14 tracks presented on the album have a snowball's chance in hell of being played on a commercial radio station, but the utter simplicity and honesty of the whole record makes it seem almost radically conceived in a world full of loops, drum samples, heavy compression, and quick edit market campaigns. Truthfully, with songs like
"Three Little Babes"
(a children's ballad more often known as
"The Wife of Usher's Well"
) and the old minstrel show staple
"Jimmy Sutton,"
Moore
's album hardly seems to belong to this century at all. That's the charm of it.
Rosenthal
recorded
Moore
in the spring of 2006, but the session could have taken place at almost any time in the last 100 years, so insular is the song selection, although not every song here has an ancient lineage. One of the most poignant tracks is
"Our Baby Boy Is Gone,"
a song
Moore
's wife wrote after the death of the couple's only child, and
Moore
's own
"In the Year of '41"
recounts what it was like to leave his rural home and join the U.S. military during World War II. Both of these, though, take their form from standard mountain melodies, and show no traces whatsoever of
Tin Pan Alley
contrivances. Another striking track is
Moore
's version of
Walter "Kid" Smith
's
"The Lawson Family Murders,"
a song
Smith
wrote shortly after
Charlie Lawson
murdered his wife and six children on Christmas Day in 1929 in Stokes County, NC. Delivered by
Moore
with the same cadence and approach that he uses for older fare like
"Three Little Babes,"
Smith
's brutal cautionary tale thus slides seamlessly into the realm of ancient murder
ballads
. Rumored to know hundreds, if not thousands, of old songs by heart,
Moore
is among the last of his kind, a true
folk
singer whose knowledge of the songs he sings makes him a true national treasure. ~ Steve Leggett, All Music Guide
$11.79
List Price:
$13.98
Save: $2.19 (16%)
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© 2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Content provided by
All Music Guide ®
, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC.
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