I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Cotten. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Cotten. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 23, 2024

We love Libba! Elizabeth Cotten LIVE in 1975 | FLOPPY BOOT STOMP

 

Elizabeth Cotten LIVE in Portland OR 1975

Elizabeth Cotten
Euphoria Tavern
Portland OR
1975-02-19



1st Set

01. Intro
02. Oh Babe, It Ain't No Lie
03. When I Lay My Burdens Down
04. Washington Blues
05. Gaslight Blues
06. Seeger Story
07. Vastopol
08. Turkey Story
09. Traveler Story
10. Spanish Flang Dang
11. Wreck of the '97
12. Radio Announcements
13. Honey Babe Your Papa Cares for You
14. Jesus Lifted Me (Cut)


2nd Set

15. Oh How I Love Jesus (Cuts In)
16. Unknown Title
17. Banter
18. Freight Train
19. Happy New Year story
20. New Year's Eve
21. Guitar Story
22. Wilson Rag
23. Going Down the Road Feelin' Bad
24. Blues/Church Story
25. Ball the Jack
26. Banjo Intro 
27. Banjo Story
28. Here Old Rattler Here
29. Nearer My God to Thee
30. What a Friend We Have in Jesus (Instrumental)
31. What a Friend We Have in Jesus (Vocals)
32. Shake Sugaree

a special live recording from the base HQ and we love Elizabeth ‘Libba’ Cotten don’t we? Radio quality recording and love this . . . . . 

Saturday, April 27, 2024

Muireann Bradley - "Shake Sugaree" - McNally Guitars Session |

 So I will bid you Good Night with this . . . I know we have posted two version of Elizabeth ‘Libba’ Cotton's Shake Sugaree and noted it has been covered by loads of folk (including the last version shared with her very own granddaughter, Brenda Evans) to Bob Dylan and The Grateful Dead but here’s an absolute cracker of a version by this youngster which restores my faith in humanity  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . enjoy and Night all!


and yes I know its an advert for the guitars but hey . . . . . . let’s all go buy one would be my best advice!

"Shake Sugaree" by Muireann Bradley
playing her new custom McNally Guitars S model

Tuesday, April 02, 2024

Singing with Grandma! | SHAKE SUGAREE : Elizabeth Cotton & Brenda Evans | O MY SOUL



O My Soul

1965

“Shake Sugaree”

Elizabeth Cotten (& Brenda Evans)


Songwriter, Musician & Singer Elizabeth Cotten made her glorified mark in the world, (most commonly with 'Freight Train’ that everyone seems to know if not who wrote it!) with her special unique guitar style of playing [playing the guitar upside down for those in the know!]. She inspired and influenced generations of musicians & artists during her time, as well as generations after. Bob Dylan and the Grateful Dead both covered this song!

"Shake Sugaree", is the epitome of such a beautiful endearing song ... vocals sung with such pure innocence by Brenda Evans, here with musical accompaniment from her Grandmother Elizabeth "Libba” Cotten. 

Tuesday, August 29, 2023

Elizabeth Cotten ‎- Freight Train And Other North Carolina Folk Songs And Tunes (1958) | ZERO G SOUNDS

Mo’ Libba

Elizabeth "Libba" Cotten (1895-1987), best known for her timeless song "Freight Train," built her musical legacy on a firm foundation of late 19th- and early 20th-century African-American instrumental traditions. Through her songwriting, her quietly commanding personality, and her unique left-handed guitar and banjo styles, she inspired and influenced generations of younger artists. In 1984 Cotten was declared a National Heritage Fellow by the National Endowment for the Arts and was later recognized by the Smithsonian Institution as a "living treasure." She received a Grammy Award in 1985 when she was ninety, almost eighty years after she first began composing her own works.

Recorded in 1957 and early 1958 by Mike Seeger, "Freight Train and Other North Carolina Folk Songs and Tunes" collects the influential debut sides cut by a then-62-year-old Elizabeth Cotten; even decades after their first release, they remain a veritable primer in the art of finger-picked style guitar playing. The quaint, homespun quality of the material - much of it recorded at Cotten's home with her grandchildren looking on in silence - adds immensely to its intimacy and warmth; the sound quality varies wildly from track to track, but the amazing instrumental work shines through regardless on tracks like the opening "Wilson Rag" and the now-standard "Freight Train.”                

Freight train, freight train . . . here


Tracklist:

1Wilson Rag1:35
2Freight Train2:42
3Going Down The Road Feeling Bad2:09
4I Don't Love Nobody1:10
5Ain't Got No Honey Baby Now0:53
6Graduation March2:29
7Honey Babe Your Papa Cares For You2:11
8Vastopol2:08
9Here Old Rattler Here / Sent For My Fiddle Sent For My Bow / George Buck3:45
10Run…Run / Mama Your Son Done Gone2:15
11Sweet Bye And Bye / What A Friend We Have In Jesus3:00
12Oh Babe It Ain't No Lie4:40
13Spanish Flang Dang2:49
14When I Get Home2:21

This is nice and great quality always enjoy more Elizabeth Cotten

Indelibly etched in the collective memory she does this wonderful old song proud . . that’s because she wrote it!

Aw heck, just checked and this is still commercially available so go get it

if you wish me to remove it please get in touch before setting any web sherrifs on me. . . . . it should be in the public domain by now and heaven knows Libba won’t make anything from it!




Saturday, July 01, 2023

Elizabeth ‘Libba’ Cotten - Shake Sugaree | ZEROSOUNDS

 ‘LIBBA' COTTEN

Elizabeth Cotten - Shake Sugaree | Zero Sounds



ZeroG says:

Elizabeth Cotten was a national treasure. She didn't begin recording until she was 66 years old (in 1958), but a simple song she had written when she was 11, "Freight Train," became a staple of the folk revival in the 1960s, and her frequent concerts and appearances on the folk circuit were legendary for their unassuming grace and wisdom, not to mention her unique guitar skills. 

Left-handed, Cotten played her guitars and banjos upside down and backward, and her picking style gave the bass strings a clear sound while working muted harmonics on the treble strings, all of which resulted in an idiosyncratic guitar style that, coupled with her frequent open tunings, gave her playing a special singularity. Her vocals were often fragile-sounding and shaky, but so full of a natural clarity and joy that it's hard to imagine her singing any other way, and what might have been a weakness only added to her ability to connect with audiences. 

This collection from Smithsonian Folkways is a revised reissue of her second LP, which originally appeared in 1965, with ten previously unreleased tracks added. The title cut, "Shake Sugaree," has had almost as long a life as "Freight Train," and has been covered by the likes of the Grateful Dead and Bob Dylan in concert. Cotten's version is sung in a lovely, seemingly effortless fashion by her great grandchild, Brenda Evans (then only 12 years old), with Cotten providing the guitar lines, and the song itself is a whimsical set of half-riddles intended as a lullaby. Many of these tracks are brief guitar instrumentals, what Mike Seeger calls "parlor ragtime" in his liner notes, and the pair of instrumental church pieces that close the disc, "Till We Meet Again" and "When the Train Comes Along," are particularly striking. Other highlights include "Untitled/Georgie Buck," which begins with an improvised bit of banjo-style guitar picking before morphing into "Georgie Buck," a well-known Appalachian banjo and fiddle tune. The goofy "Shoot That Buffalo," which Cotten plays on banjo, accelerates as it unwinds, and it is easy to imagine children being delighted by its kinetic energy and playful lyrics. The haunting banjo song "Reuben," here played on guitar in open D tuning, is another highlight. Libba Cotten's fans are loyal and enduring and will be delighted with this expanded edition of "Shake Sugaree". Listeners new to Cotten may want to start with her first Smithsonian Folkways album, "Freight Train and Other North Carolina Folk Songs and Tunes", or even 1984's "Live!" (which earned Cotten a Grammy Award in 1985, when she was 90 years old), or better yet, pick up all three, making a sort of collected works. She's that special.   



This is lovely . . . the woman who wrote ‘Freight Train’ aged 11! I reckon a few more trad arr too!