American Epic: The Collection | ||||
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Compilation album by Various artists | ||||
Released | May 12, 2017 | |||
Recorded | 1916-1936 | |||
Genre | Cajun, country, blues, folk, Hawaiian, Hispanic, Mexican, Native American, Puerto Rican, Tex-Mex | |||
Length | 315:57 | |||
Label | Sony Legacy, Lo-Max | |||
American Epic chronology | ||||
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American Epic: The Collection is a 100-track, 5-CD box set of American roots music performances from the 1920s and 1930s. It was compiled by film director Bernard MacMahon to accompany the release of his American Epic documentary film series. [1] The box features 100 songs by 100 different artists [2] and has been acclaimed by many critics as a worthy successor to the Anthology of American Folk Music and one of the best box sets to ever be released. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] The box set won particular acclaim for the song selection and the sound quality of the transfers of vintage 78rpm records. [3] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10]
The American Epic collection was conceived by director Bernard MacMahon during the ten years of research preparing the American Epic documentary series. [11] “When we set out to make this set”, MacMahon explained “the first task was culling a representative sample of 100 tracks from that vast body of [1920s and 1930s] recordings. We wanted to display the phenomenal breadth of styles that were preserved and touch on the most influential artists—but, most of all, we wanted to convey the excitement and power of the music, to provide an experience that would capture the attention of other modern listeners as it did ours.” [2] The box set was intended to be a definitive portrait of the roots recording boom of the late 20s and early 30s. [4] It was seen by the production as an important supplementary feature to the documentary films for appreciating the breadth of the music recorded at the time and drawing attention to important artists who could not be featured in the films. [2]
The compilation spans from 1926 to 1936 with two pre-electric recordings – the 1922 Eck Robertson recording of “Sallie Gooden” and 1916 Don Richardson recording of “Arkansas Traveler” – which the liner notes posit as being the first commercial country recording. [2] MacMahon commented that his intention was to “to display the phenomenal breadth of styles that were preserved and touch on the most influential artists” adding that “when conflicts arose between our passion and our mission, we chose to follow our passion. We wanted to present music that was beyond time or classification, that sounded as if it could have been recorded last week, and that would startle and excite both unfamiliar and expert listeners.” [2] The album covers a very broad range of rural and vernacular American styles; Cajun, country, blues, folk, Hawaiian, Hispanic, Mexican, Native American, Puerto Rican, Tex-Mex. [4] MacMahon spent years listening to the catalogues of hundreds of artists from the era to whittle down the 100 songs. He made many trips to the homes of record collectors like Michael Kieffer, John Tefteller and Richard Nevins to hear very rare records that had never been reissued. [1]
The box set was organized by the location of the recording sessions with each of the five discs documenting a different region; [12] The Southeast, Atlanta, New York, The Midwest, and The Deep South & The West. [2] The album liner notes explained that the methodology “mirrors the process by which this music came to us: Robert Johnson was from Mississippi, but he traveled over much of the United States and made his recordings in Dallas and San Antonio.” [2] The notes added that “historians often emphasize the travels of the record scouts who fanned out across the South in search of unique artists, but while recognizing and documenting those efforts, we wanted to recall that it was most often the artists themselves who traveled, sometimes thousands of miles—and that is why we know them today.” [2]
New sound restoration techniques developed for the American Epic film production were utilized to restore the 100 songs on the album. [13] The 78rpm disc transfers were made by sound engineer Nicholas Bergh using ‘reverse engineering’ techniques garnered from working with the original 1920s recording equipment on The American Epic Sessions [14] along with meticulous sound restoration undertaken by Peter Henderson and Joel Tefteller to reveal greater fidelity, presence and clarity to these early Western Electric recordings than had been heard before. [3] [8] [9] [14] [15] Nicholas Bergh commented “the recordings in this set are special since they utilize the earliest and simplest type of electric recording equipment used for commercial studio work. As a result, they have an unrivaled immediacy to the sound.” [16]
Some of the recordings were repressed from the original metal parts, which the production located whilst researching the films. [17] Peter Henderson explained “in some cases we were lucky enough to get some metal parts – that’s the originals where they were cut to wax and the metal was put into the grooves and the discs were printed from those back in the ‘20s. Some of those still exist – Sony had some of them in their vaults – [but it only amounted to] 15-20 discs out of the whole.” [15]
The album was housed in a black leatherette 100-page book embossed with seven red stripes representing the seven red stripes of the American flag and embossed with the image of a small wind-up Victor gramophone representing the workingman's record player. The book opened with an essay outlining the new historical information about the American Epic recordings unearthed in the film production. The book was split into five chapters with each chapter opening with a photograph of the site of a recording studio from the region the disc was profiling. [2] Each of the 100 songs were accompanied by a portrait of the artist or promotional artwork, lyrics and a quote from either the artist or someone who knew them personally. The album featured many previously unpublished photos and images of performers who had not been seen before. It was the first time many of the lyrics had been transcribed and some of the quotes unearthed commented on performers about whom nothing had been previously known. [4]
The album was released on May 12, 2017, a month prior to the broadcast of the American Epic documentary films. [1]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Country Music | [18] |
Rolling Stone | Reissue of the year [19] |
PopMatters | [20] |
Vice (Expert Witness) | A [21] |
Tom Hull | A [22] |
The album received widespread critical acclaim for the song selection, the breadth of musical styles covered, and the sound restoration. [3] [4] [5] [8] [7] David Fricke in Rolling Stone voted the album as a “Reissue of the Year” and wrote that it was a “must-hear story of aspiring native, immigrant and underclass voices given permanence for the first time. This soundtrack expands the film to a truly national chorale: Appalachian singers, Cajun dance bands, blues genies and Native American chanters and more. Want to hear America be great again? Drop the needle.” [23] Greil Marcus in The Village Voice described it as “a magnificent 100-track compendium, paralleling Harry Smith’s 1952 Anthology of American Folk Music but expanding on it, with a remastering I can only call profound. Performances you might think you knew sound as if you’ve never heard them before.” [3] Robert Christgau in Noisey gave the album an A grade [5] and in his annual Dean's List named it his #16 album of 2017 calling it “important and indeed brilliant.” [24] Ian Anderson in fRoots commented “you haven’t really heard these tracks at all. Not like this. The ‘reverse engineering’ transfers by Nicholas Bergh and subsequent restorations are so startlingly better, practically everything you will ever have experienced from this era can be discounted. The clarity will have you on the edge of your seat. Suddenly, legendary artists are in the room with you.” [9] Randy Lewis in the Los Angeles Times observed that the album had achieved an “unprecedented audio fidelity.” [8] Robert Baird in Stereophile described the album as “spectacular” and added that “what's most interesting for audiophiles is the huge improvement in the quality of the sound coming from these 78 transfers, both in the film and especially in the 5-CD boxed set of the same name.” [16] Ed Whitelock in PopMatters wrote “album compiler and editor Bernard MacMahon has done a superb job of curating a collection that truly captures the breadth of American rural music of the 1920s (more so, even, than Smith did with his famous Anthology). American Epic: The Collection claims a comprehensiveness of representation unmatched by any other anthology of this music. For those interested in a one-stop experience of the wonder and variety that is American rural music from the 1920s, American Epic: The Collection provides an adventurous, satisfying, and ultimately definitive collection.” [7] Blair Jackson in Acoustic Guitar summarized “this comprehensive five-disc, 100-song treasury is one of the most important compilations of its kind ever released—perhaps since Harry Smith’s seminal Anthology of American Folk Music in 1952. It’s a marvelous history lesson, but even more, it’s a glimpse into the very heart of America, as emotionally relevant today as it was nearly a century ago.” [4]
No. | Track | Original artist | Year | Time |
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1 | "The Coo Coo Bird" | Clarence Ashley | 1929 | 2:58 |
2 | “On The Road Again” | Memphis Jug Band | 1928 | 2:51 |
3 | “The Panama Limited” | Washington White | 1930 | 3:12 |
4 | “Indian War Whoop" | Hoyt Ming and His Pep Steppers | 1928 | 3:11 |
5 | “'Tain't Nobody's Business If I Do” (Pt. 1) | Frank Stokes | 1928 | 3:17 |
6 | "K. C. Railroad Blues” | Andrew and Jim Baxter | 1927 | 3:30 |
7 | “I Am Bound for the Promised Land” | Alfred G. Karnes | 1927 | 3:11 |
8 | “Cottonfield Blues (Pt. 2)” | Garfield Akers | 1929 | 3:21 |
9 | “I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground” | Bascom Lamar Lunsford | 1928 | 3:20 |
10 | “Down On Penny's Farm” | The Bentley Boys | 1929 | 2:48 |
11 | “Foldin' Bed” | Whistler's Jug Band | 1931 | 2:57 |
12 | “Greenback Dollar” | Weems String Band | 1927 | 3:10 |
13 | “Tallahatchie River Blues” | Mattie Delaney | 1930 | 2:48 |
14 | "Walk Right In” | Cannon's Jug Stompers | 1929 | 2:57 |
15 | “Bury Me Under the Weeping Willow” | The Carter Family | 1927 | 2:59 |
16 | “Old Dog Blue” | Jim Jackson | 1928 | 3:03 |
17 | “Bayou Teche” | Columbus Fruge | 1929 | 2:55 |
18 | “Cool Drink of Water Blues” | Tommy Johnson | 1928 | 3:34 |
19 | “Train On the Island” | J. P. Nester | 1927 | 3:01 |
No. | Track | Original artist | Year | Time |
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1 | “My Heart Keeps Singing” | Elder J.E. Burch | 1927 | 3:11 |
2 | “Ninety-Nine Year Blues” | Julius Daniels | 1927 | 3:06 |
3 | “I Get My Whiskey From Rockingham” | Earl Johnson and His Clodhoppers | 1927 | 3:03 |
4 | “Death's Black Train Is Coming” | Rev. J. M. Gates | 1926 | 3:13 |
5 | “Waiting for a Train” | Jimmie Rodgers | 1928 | 2:47 |
6 | “Darling, Where Have You Been So Long?” | The Tenneva Ramblers | 1928 | 3:24 |
7 | “Rocky Road” | Alabama Sacred Harp Singers | 1928 | 2:46 |
8 | “Ma Blond Est Partie” | Amedée Breaux, Ophy Breaux & Cleoma Breaux | 1929 | 2:51 |
9 | “Peg and Awl” | Carolina Tar Heels | 1928 | 2:57 |
10 | “Chocolate to the Bone” | Barbecue Bob | 1928 | 2:54 |
11 | “Down on Me” | Eddie Head and Family | 1930 | 3:09 |
12 | “Prenez Courage” | Cléoma Breaux with Joseph Falcon and Ophy Breaux | 1929 | 2:57 |
13 | “Pickin' Off Peanuts” | Dilly and His Dill Pickles | 1930 | 3:29 |
14 | “Just Because” | Nelstone's Hawaiians | 1929 | 2:54 |
15 | “Dupree Blues” | Willie Walker | 1930 | 3:30 |
16 | “Ladies On the Steamboat” | Burnett and Rutherford | 1927 | 3:16 |
17 | “Mamma, 'Tain't Long Fo' Day” | Blind Willie McTell | 1927 | 3:13 |
No. | Track | Original artist | Year | Time |
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1 | “Cecilia” | Cuarteto Flores | 1931 | 3:12 |
2 | “La Cocquetera” | Los Borinquenos | 1929 | 3:03 |
3 | “Coconito” | Guty Cárdenas Y Lencho | 1928 | 3:01 |
4 | “Lovesick Blues” | Emmett Miller | 1928 | 2:52 |
5 | “Long Tall Mama” | Big Bill Broonzy | 1932 | 2:51 |
6 | “John Henry Blues” | Two Poor Boys | 1931 | 2:49 |
7 | “Mr. Tom Hughes' Town” | Lead Belly | 1935 | 3:08 |
8 | “Louis Collins” | Mississippi John Hurt | 1928 | 3:01 |
9 | “I Am The Light of the World” | Blind Gary Davis | 1935 | 3:04 |
10 | “Fifty Miles of Elbow Room” | Rev. F.W. McGee | 1930 | 2:42 |
11 | “Chant of the Eagle Dance” | Hopi Indian Chanters | 1926 | 2:29 |
12 | “Hilo Hula (Hilo Hanakahi)” | Mike Hanapi & The Ilima Islanders | 1932 | 3:20 |
13 | “If the River was Whiskey” | Charlie Poole and the North Carolina Ramblers | 1930 | 3:11 |
14 | “Stackalee” | Frank Hutchison | 1927 | 3:07 |
15 | “The Wreck of the '97” | Ernest Stoneman | 1927 | 2:50 |
16 | “Faded Coat of Blue” | Buell Kazee | 1928 | 3:11 |
17 | “Country Blues” | Dock Boggs | 1927 | 3:02 |
18 | “Sail Away Ladies” | Uncle Dave Macon and His Fruit Jar Drinkers | 1927 | 3:00 |
19 | “Sail Away Lady” | Uncle Bunt Stephens | 1926 | 3:00 |
20 | “Sallie Gooden” | A.C. (Eck) Robertson | 1922 | 3:10 |
21 | “Arkansas Traveller” | Don Richardson | 1916 | 3:07 |
No. | Track | Original artist | Year | Time |
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1 | “Hard Time Blues” | Lane Hardin | 1935 | 3:20 |
2 | “Down the Dirt Road Blues” | Charley Patton | 1929 | 2:56 |
3 | “Poor Boy, Long Ways from Home” | Gus Cannon | 1927 | 3:11 |
4 | “Hastings Street” | Blind Blake and Charlie Spand | 1929 | 3:15 |
5 | “See That My Grave’s Kept Clean” | Blind Lemon Jefferson | 1927 | 2:54 |
6 | “Gonna Have 'Lasses In the Morning” | Golden Melody Boys | 1928 | 2:43 |
7 | “New Orleans Stop Time” | Bumble Bee Slim and Memphis Minnie | 1936 | 2:58 |
8 | “Prove It On Me Blues” | Ma Rainey | 1928 | 2:42 |
9 | “I’m Gonne Die with My Hammer in My Hand” | Williamson Brothers and Curry | 1927 | 3:26 |
10 | “Last Kind Words Blues” | Geeshie Wiley | 1930 | 3:04 |
11 | “Banjoreno” | Dixieland Jug Blowers | 1926 | 3:15 |
12 | “It's a Good Thing” | Beale Street Sheiks | 1927 | 3:00 |
13 | “Trust in God and Do the Right” | Blind Willie Davis | 1929 | 2:49 |
14 | “Someday Baby Blues” | Sleepy John Estes | 1935 | 3:02 |
15 | “Lonesome Road Blues” | Sam Collins | 1931 | 3:06 |
16 | “Future Blues” | Willie Brown | 1930 | 2:57 |
17 | “Bull Doze Blues” | Henry Thomas “Ragtime Texas” | 1928 | 3:29 |
18 | “Brown Skin Gal (Down the Lane)” | Massey Family | 1934 | 2:47 |
19 | “Henry Lee” | Dick Justice | 1929 | 3:26 |
20 | “Old Country Rock” | William Moore | 1928 | 3:02 |
21 | “La Danseuse (The Dancer)” | Delma Lachney and Blind Uncle Gaspard | 1929 | 2:55 |
22 | “My Black Mama (Parts 1 & 2)” | Son House | 1930 | 6:24 |
23 | “Cypress Grove Blues” | Skip James | 1931 | 3:16 |
No. | Track | Original artist | Year | Time |
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1 | “Cross Road Blues” | Robert Johnson | 1936 | 2:32 |
2 | “Mal Hombre” | Lydia Mendoza | 1934 | 3:32 |
3 | “Sunshine Special” | Frenchy's String Band | 1928 | 3:11 |
4 | “Old Jim Kinnane's” | Robert Wilkins | 1935 | 2:54 |
5 | “Les Blues De Voyage (Travel Blues)” | Amédé Ardoin and Dennis McGee | 1934 | 2:57 |
6 | “The Lost Child” | Stripling Brothers | 1928 | 3:06 |
7 | “I'm Gonna Cross the River Jordan Some of These Days” | Jaybird Coleman | 1927 | 3:06 |
8 | “Tomi Tomi” | The Aloha Serenaders Featuring Sol K. Bright | 1931 | 2:43 |
9 | “Sittin’ on Top of the World” | Mississippi Sheiks | 1930 | 3:16 |
10 | “James Alley Blues” | Richard ‘Rabbit’ Brown | 1927 | 3:09 |
11 | “The Indian Tom Tom” | Big Chief Henry's Indian String Band | 1929 | 2:36 |
12 | “Blues in a Bottle” | Prince Albert Hunt's Texas Ramblers | 1928 | 3:25 |
13 | “Je Me Suis En Alle” | Berthmost Montet & Joswell Dupuis | 1929 | 2:53 |
14 | “Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground” | Blind Willie Johnson | 1927 | 3:27 |
15 | “E, Mama Ea” | Sol Hoʻopiʻi and His Novelty Trio | 1928 | 3:12 |
16 | “Ghost Dance” | Truett And George | 1927 | 3:02 |
17 | “Woke Up This Morning (With My Mind On Jesus)” | Roosevelt Graves and Brother | 1936 | 2:51 |
18 | “Allons à Lafayette” | Joseph Falcon | 1928 | 2:57 |
19 | “Corrido De Joaquin Murrieta (Parts 1 & 2)” | Los Madrugadores | 1934 | 5:55 |
20 | “Denomination Blues (Parts 1 & 2)” | Washington Phillips | 1927 | 5:39 |
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Charlie Patton, more often spelled Charley Patton, was an American Delta blues musician and songwriter. Considered by many to be the "Father of the Delta Blues", he created an enduring body of American music and inspired most Delta blues musicians. The musicologist Robert Palmer considered him one of the most important American musicians of the twentieth century.
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Lost Bayou Ramblers is a Cajun music band from Broussard, Arnaudville and New Orleans, Louisiana.
Allison McGourty is a British film producer and screenwriter.
Bernard MacMahon is an Irish-British filmmaker. His American Epic films are widely considered as the definitive portrait of a musical era, and one of the best music documentaries ever made.
American Epic is a documentary media franchise based upon the first recordings of roots music in the United States during the 1920s and their cultural, social and technological impact on North America and the world. The franchise comprises a three-part award-winning documentary film series directed by Bernard MacMahon, a feature-length musical documentary film, a book, ten album releases and an educational program. American Epic is widely considered as the definitive portrait of the musical era, and one of the best music documentaries ever made.
A compilation album comprises tracks, which may be previously released or unreleased, usually from several separate recordings by either one performer or by several performers. If the recordings are from one artist, then generally the tracks were not originally intended for release together as a single work, but may be collected together as a greatest hits album or box set. If the recordings are from several artists, there may be a theme, topic, time period, or genre which links the tracks, or they may have been intended for release as a single work—such as a tribute album. When the tracks are by the same recording artist, the album may be referred to as a retrospective album or an anthology.
American Epic: The First Time America Heard Itself is a collaborative memoir written by film director Bernard MacMahon, producer Allison McGourty, and music historian Elijah Wald. The book chronicles the 10-year odyssey researching and making the American Epic documentary series and The American Epic Sessions. It features interviews with subjects of the films and contains large amounts of supplementary information not featured in the documentary films or the music releases. The book and an audiobook was released on May 2, 2017.
The American Epic Sessions is a documentary film in which an engineer restores the fabled long-lost first electrical sound recording system from 1925, and twenty contemporary artists pay tribute to the momentous machine by attempting to record songs on it for the first time in 80 years. The film was directed and co-written by Bernard MacMahon and stars Nas, Alabama Shakes, Elton John, Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard, Jack White, Taj Mahal, Ana Gabriel, Pokey LaFarge, Beck, Ashley Monroe, Los Lobos, The Avett Brothers, Bettye LaVette, Rhiannon Giddens, Raphael Saadiq, Edie Brickell, Steve Martin, and others.
American Epic: The Best of Blues is a compilation of early blues songs recorded between 1927 and 1936 and released to accompany the American Epic films in 2017. The album was released as a 17-track download and a 13-track vinyl LP. The album was praised by critics as the definitive pre-war blues compilation.
American Epic is a documentary film series about the first recordings of roots music in the United States during the 1920s and their cultural, social and technological impact on North America and the world. Directed and co-written by Bernard MacMahon, the story is told through twelve ethnically and musically diverse musicians who auditioned for and participated in these pioneering recording sessions: The Carter Family, the Memphis Jug Band, Elder J.E. Burch, The Williamson Brothers, Dick Justice, Charley Patton, The Hopi Indian Chanters, Joseph Kekuku, Lydia Mendoza, the Breaux Family, Mississippi John Hurt and Blind Willie Johnson. The film series is the core of the American Epic media franchise, which includes several related works.
Music from The American Epic Sessions: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the official 2017 soundtrack album of the award-winning film The American Epic Sessions. The album features twenty-three music acts recording songs live on the restored first electrical sound recording system from the 1920s. The artists participating include Nas, Alabama Shakes, Elton John, Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard, Jack White, Taj Mahal, Ana Gabriel, Pokey LaFarge, Beck, Ashley Monroe, and Steve Martin. The album won a Grammy Award for Best American Roots Performance for the Alabama Shakes' performance of "Killer Diller".
American Epic: The Soundtrack is the soundtrack of the 2017 documentary film American Epic. The album features the 15 musical highlights from the documentary series recorded between 1927 and 2014.
American Epic: The Best of Country is a compilation of early country and folk songs recorded between 1922 and 1934 and released in 2017 to accompany the award-winning American Epic documentary film series. The album was released as a 16-track download and a 12-track vinyl LP.
American Epic: The Best of Mississippi John Hurt is a compilation album released to accompany the American Epic documentary films in 2017. It collects all the surviving performances from Mississippi John Hurt's first two recording sessions for OKeh Records in Memphis and New York City in 1928. The performances are cited as some of the greatest recordings of the 1920s.
American Epic: The Best of The Carter Family is a compilation of Carter Family songs recorded between 1927 and 1933 and released in 2017 to accompany the award-winning American Epic documentary film series. The album was released as a 15-track download and a vinyl LP.
American Epic: The Best of Lead Belly is a compilation of Lead Belly's first commercial recordings made in 1935 and released in 2017 to accompany the award-winning American Epic documentary film series. The album was released as a 14-track download and a vinyl LP.
American Epic: The Best of Blind Willie Johnson is a compilation album released to accompany the award-winning American Epic documentary film series. It collects performances from Blind Willie Johnson's five recording sessions for Columbia Records in Dallas, Atlanta, and New Orleans between 1927 and 1930. The album was released as a 16-track download and a vinyl LP.
American Epic: The Best of the Memphis Jug Band is a compilation album released to accompany the award-winning American Epic documentary film series. It collects performances from the Memphis Jug Band's career-spanning recording sessions for Victor Records and OKeh Records between 1927 and 1934. The album was released as a 15-track download and a vinyl LP.