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Home Blues Compilation Good For What Ails You: Music Of The Medicine Shows (1926-1937) [2005]

Good For What Ails You: Music Of The Medicine Shows (1926-1937) [2005]

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Good For What Ails You: Music Of The Medicine Shows (1926-1937) [2005]

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Disc 1

1. Daddy Stovepipe & Mississippi Sarah - The Spasm - 2:52
2. Gid Tanner & Riley Puckett - Tanner's Boarding House - 3:05
3. Lil McClintock - Don't Think I'm Santa Claus - 3:06
4. Dallas String Band with Coley Jones - Hokum Blues - 3:14
5. Shorty Godwin - Jimbo Jambo Land - 2:57
6. Fiddlin' John Carson & His Virginia Reelers - Gonna Swing On The Golden Gate - 2:57
7. Pink Anderson & Simmie Dooley - Papa's 'Bout To Get Mad - 2:59
8. Charlie Parker & Mack Woolbright - The Man Who Wrote Home Sweet Home Never Was A Married Man - 3:14
9. Jim Jackson - Bye, Bye, Policeman - 3:03
10. Walter Smith - The Bald-Headed End Of A Broom - 2:56
11. Allen Brothers - Bow Wow Blues - 3:21
12. Beans Hambone & El Morrow - Beans - 2:53
13. Stovepipe #1 and David Crockett - A Chicken Can Waltz The Gravy Around - 3:08
14. Grant Brothers & Their Music - Tell It To Me - 2:57
15. Carolina Tar Heels - Ain't No Use Working So Hard - 3:08
16. Walter Cole - Mama Keep Your Yes Ma'am Clean - 2:47
17. Kirk McGee & Blythe Poteet - C-H-I-C-K-E-N Spells Chicken - 2:54
18. Banjo Joe - My Money Never Runs Out - 2:53
19. Henry 'Ragtime Texas' Thomas - Railroadin' Some - 3:19
20. Prince Albert Hunt's Texas Ramblers - Traveling Man - 2:55
21. Johnson-Nelson-Porkchop - G. Burns Is Gonna Rise Again - 3:01
22. Blue Ridge Mountain Entertainers - Baby All Night Long - 2:47
23. Chris Bouchillon - Born In Hard Luck - 3:19
24. Memphis Sheiks - He's In The Jailhouse Now - 3:11

Disc 2

1. Pink Anderson & Simmie Dooley - Gonna Tip Out Tonight - 3:09
2. Sam McGee - Chevrolet Car - 3:09
3. Gid Tanner & His Skillet-Lickers - It Ain't Gonna Rain No Mo' - 2:58
4. Cannon's Jug Stompers - Bring It With You When You Come - 2:45
5. Blind Sammie - Atlanta Strut - 3:11
6. Uncle Dave Macon & His Fruit Jar Drinkers - Go Along Mule - 3:07
7. Earl McDonald's Original Louisville Jug Band - Casey Bill - 2:48
8. Frank Stokes - I Got Mine - 3:06
9. Chris Bouchillon - Hannah - 2:57
10. Bogus Ben Covington - Adam & Eve In The Garden - 2:42
11. Alec Johnson & His Band - Mysterious Coon - 3:15
12. Carolina Tar Heels - Her Name Was Hula Lou - 2:59
13. Three Tobacco Tags - Reno Blues - 2:39
14. Papa Charlie Jackson - Scoodle Um Skoo - 3:17
15. Frank Hutchison - Stackalee - 3:05
16. Walter Smith - The Cat's Got The Measles, The Dog's Got The Whooping Cough - 2:59
17. Hezekiah Jenkins - Shout You Cats - 3:08
18. Tommie Bradley - Nobody's Business If I Do - 2:58
19. Charlie Poole & The North Carolina Ramblers - Sweet Sixteen - 2:52
20. Charlie Parker & Mack Woolbright - Ticklish Reuben - 2:40
21. Jim Jackson - I Heard The Voice Of A Porkchop - 2:52
22. Dallas String Band with Coley Jones - Shine - 3:01
23. Emmett Miller & His Georgia Crackers - The Gypsy - 3:21
24. J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers - Kiss Me Cindy - 2:06

James "Beans Hambone" Albert - Guitar, Vocals
Austin Allen - Tenor Banjo, Vocals
Lee Allen - Guitar, Kazoo
Pink Anderson - Guitar, Vocals
Tom Ashley - Guitar, Vocals
Blind Blake - Guitar
Blue Ridge Mountain Entertainers 	
Charley Bouchillon - Fiddle
Chris Bouchillon - Vocals
Uris Bouchillon 	- Guitar
Tommie Bradley - Guitar, Vocals
T.M. Brewer - Vocals
Lucien Brown - Sax (Alto)
Charlie Burse - 	Guitar, Vocals
Benny Calvin -Mandolin
Gus Cannon - Banjo, Vocals
Cannon's Jug Stompers 	
The Carolina Tar Heels 	
Fiddlin' John Carson - Fiddle, Vocals
Fiddlin' John Carson & His Virginia Reelers 	
Gene Cobb - Falsetto
Walter Cole - Vocals
Ben Covington - Banjo, Harmonica, Vocals
David Crockett - Guitar, Harmonica
Dallas String Band 	
Simmie Dooley 	- Guitar, Vocals
Gwen Foster - Guitar, Harmonica, Vocals
Shorty Godwin - Guitar, Vocals
Grant Brothers & Their Music 
Claude Grant - Guitar, Vocals
Jack Grant -Mandolin, Vocals
Clarence Greene - Fiddle
Beans Hambone 	
Sam Harris - Guitar
Roy Harvey - Guitar
Prince Albert Hunt's Texas Ramblers 	
Frank Hutchison - Guitar, Harmonica, Vocals
Jim Jackson - Guitar, Vocals
Papa Charlie Jackson 	
Hezekiah Jenkins - Vocals
Snuffy Jenkins - Banjo
Alec Johnson 	
Earl Johnson & His Dixie Entertainers - Fiddle, Vocals
Johnson-Nelson-Porkchop 	
Coley Jones - Mandolin, Primary Artist, Vocals
Jab Jones - Jug
Sam "Stovepipe No. 1" Jones - Vocals
Noah Lewis - Harmonica
Uncle Dave Macon - Banjo, Vocals
Uncle Macon Dave & His Fruit Jar Guzzlers - Choir
J.E. Mainer - Fiddle
J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers 	
Lil McClintock - 	Guitar, Primary Artist, Vocals
Earl McDonald 	- Jug, Vocals
Earl McDonald's Original Louisville Jug Band 	
Kirk McGee - Fiddle, Vocals
Sam McGee - Banjo, Guitar, Vocals
Clayton McMichen - Fiddle, Vocals
Blind Willie McTell - Guitar, Vocals
Memphis Sheiks 	
Emmett Miller - Vocals
Ralph Miller - Piano
Mississippi Sarah & Daddy Stovepipe 	
George Morris - Guitar, Vocals
Charlie "Bozo" Nickerson - Vocals
Fate Norris - Banjo
North Carolina Ramblers 	
Charlie Parker - Guitar, Primary Artist, Vocals
Jack Pierce - Fiddle, Vocals
Charlie Poole - Banjo, Vocals
Blythe Poteet - Guitar, Vocals
Riley Puckett -Guitar, Vocals
James Robinson - Violin
Posey Rorer - Fiddle
Bayless Rose - Guitar
Mississippi Sarah 	
Claude Slagle - Banjo
Cal Smith - Banjo
Odell Smith - Fiddle
Walter "Kid" Smith - Vocals
Vol Stevens - Mandolin
Frank Stokes - Guitar, Vocals
Lowe Stokes - Fiddle
Stovepipe No. 1 	
Gid Tanner  - Fiddle, Vocals
Gid Tanner & His Skillet Lickers 	
Henry Thomas 	- Guitar, Reed Pipes, Vocals
Three Tobacco Tags 	
Doc Walsh 	Banjo, Vocals
Marco Washington - String Bass
Norman Woodlieff - Guitar
Hosea Woods - Guitar, Vocals
Mack Woolbright - Banjo, Vocals

 

The American medicine show came into its own shortly after the Civil War with the rise of so-called patent medicines and the almost complete lack of regulations concerning the ingredients that went into them, and any number of noxious tonics, elixirs, and nostrums with trumpeted healing powers were hawked by silver-tongued pitch doctors to the audiences who flocked to see the various acrobats, dancers, fire-eaters, snake handlers, comedians and musicians who entertained at these free extravaganzas. As a cost efficient way of merging entertainment with merchandising (and where manufacturing meant mixing ingredients in a bathtub), these medicine shows successfully traveled the so-called "kerosene circuit" of rural and small town America until the dawn of the 20th century, when the rise of radio and movies, and the passage of the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act, combined to render them obsolete. The medicine show blueprint of offering free entertainment to attract audiences and then using intermissions to push products on them has hardly gone away, however, and is still the driving force behind radio and television in the 21st century. The musicians featured in these colorful traveling medicine shows were professionals, at least professional enough to leave their home communities and take to the road, and luckily several of these musicians were still active in the 1920s and early '30s when the fledgling recording industry was just getting off the ground, and numerous commercial 78s by former medicine show entertainers were issued in the prewar era. Two discs' worth of these 78s have been assembled here by Old Hat Records, an independent label out of North Carolina dedicated to the preservation of American vernacular and regional music, and if listening to these tracks isn't exactly like standing out under those kerosene lights, it's the next best thing. Among the gems on Good for What Ails You are the version of "I'll Be Glad When You're Dead, You Rascal, You" by Daddy Stovepipe (Johnny Watson) and Mississippi Sarah (Sarah Watson) called "The Spasm" that opens the set; the bizarre "Beans" by Beans Hambone (James Albert) and El Morrow, a record so odd it is remarkable that it was ever considered for commercial release (a rambling, half-improvised monologue on beans, it rides over a maddening single-string guitar riff that seems always on the edge of breaking down completely); the delightful "Railroadin' Some" by Henry Thomas, which recalls a train trip across Texas and north to Chicago in an impressive litany of towns and train stops, and Jim Jackson's 1928 recording of "I Heard the Voice of a Porkchop," a surreal parody of the Scottish hymn "I Heard the Voice of Jesus Say." Mixed in are an engaging assortment of blues, rags, re-formatted minstrel tunes, jug and string band pieces that continually surprise and delight. Old Hat is to be commended for the obvious care in which this collection is assembled, and fans of Harry Smith's Anthology of American Folk Music may well find that this one is even wilder. --- Steve Leggett, Rovi

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