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Dock Boggs - His Folkways Years, 1963-1968 (1998)

Dock Boggs - His Folkways Years, 1963-1968 (1998)

BAND/ARTIST: Dock Boggs

  • Title: His Folkways Years, 1963-1968
  • Year Of Release: 1998
  • Label: Smithsonian Folkways
  • Genre: Folk, Old-Time, Country Blues
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
  • Total Time: 02:23:33
  • Total Size: 358/534 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Down South Blues 2:11
2. Country Blues 3:53
3. Pretty Polly 2:56
4. Coal Creek March 1:57
5. My Old Horse Died 1:48
6. Wild Bill Jones 2:12
7. Rowan County Crew 6:10
8. New Prisoner's Song 2:55
9. Oh, Death 3:20
10. Prodigal Son 3:55
11. Mother's Advice 3:42
12. Drunkard's Lone Child 4:08
13. Bright Sunny South 3:40
14. Mistreated Mama Blues 1:54
15. Harvey Logan 3:28
16. Mixed Blues 3:53
17. Old Joe's Barroom 2:50
18. Danville Girl 2:38
19. Cole Younger 1:52
20. Schottische Time 1:15
21. Papa, Build Me a Boat 2:44
22. Little Black Train 2:55
23. No Disappointment in Heaven 2:32
24. Glory Land 4:01
25. Banjo Clog 1:51
26. Wise County Jail 1:52
27. Sugar Baby 2:54
28. The Death of Jerry Damron 4:18
29. Railroad Tramp 3:14
30. Poor Boy in Jail 2:59
31. Brother Jim Got Shot 2:00
32. John Henry 3:32
33. Davenport 1:46
34. Dying Ranger 3:29
35. Little Omie Wise 3:28
36. Sugar Blues 1:26
37. Loving Nancy 2:31
38. Cuba 1:30
39. John Hardy 2:06
40. Peggy Walker 2:57
41. I Hope I Live a Few More Days 4:11
42. Turkey in the Straw 0:51
43. Calvary 3:35
44. Roses While I'm Living 3:25
45. Leave it There 3:24
46. Prayer of a Miner's Child 3:21
47. Coke Oven March 1:05
48. Ruben's Train 2:23
49. Cumberland Gap 2:30
50. Careless Love 4:06

Moran Lee "Dock" Boggs (February 7, 1898 – February 7, 1971) was an American old-time singer, songwriter and banjo player. His style of banjo playing, as well as his singing, is considered a unique combination of Appalachian folk music and African-American blues. Contemporary folk musicians and performers consider him a seminal figure, at least in part because of the appearance of two of his recordings from the 1920s, "Sugar Baby" and "Country Blues", on Harry Smith's 1952 collection Anthology of American Folk Music. Boggs was first recorded in 1927 and again in 1929, although he worked primarily as a coal miner for most of his life.

He was rediscovered during the folk music revival of the 1960s and spent much of his later life playing at folk music festivals and recording for Folkways Records.



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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 19:46
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