Kathy Kallick (guitar, vocals) with
1. Molly Tuttle (guitar, vocals): Keep my small shoes
2. Tristan Scrogins (mandolin): is at the top of the world
3. Cliff Perry (Guitarra, Vocal) Y Laurel Bliss (Doro, Vocal): Litttle Moses
4. Jim Hurst (guitar, suggested): Jimmy Brown, newspapers of the newspaper
೫.Kathayani Kalik Band: Nave of Pegadas
Annie Staninec: Geige; Tomb: Bandolin; Greg Booth: Banjo Und Double; Cary Black: Bass
6.Kathy Kallick Big Band:The wild side of life was not God who made Honky tonk Ángel
Annie Staninec: Violín;Tombekeny: bandolim;Greg Stand: Dobro;Cary Black: Bass + Paul Shelasky: Violín;Juniper Waller: vocal;Riley Thompson Vocal
7. Annie Staninec (Violin): GOOD MOLLY
8. Mike Compton (mandolin, vocals) and Joe Newberry (Banjo, vocal): Next
9. Laurie Lewis (violi, vocals) and Suzy Thompson (guitar, vocals): What do you do in heaven today?
1. Save my shoes
The song was first published in 1873 by composers Charles E. Pratt (Music) and Samuel N. Mitchell (Texts) .Riley Puckett made the first recording (1926), but Henry Whitter was the first to start it.By Wilf von Wilf.Carter, also known as Montana Slim, "T" Texas Tyler, Bill Monroe and her blue boys, Golden West girls, the Everly Brothers (and Billie Joe Armstrong-Norah Jones Replication of the EB-Album), RoseLee and Joe Mophis, Mac Wiseman, Donna Darlene and Shoot Jackson, Carroll County Ramblers, Woody Guthrie and many others.
2. It is at the top of the world
The most covered song of this collection was written by Walter Vinson, probably with Lonnie Chatmon, and 1930 by the Mississippi Sheikhs (Vinson, Chapmon and Bo Carter). Duas of the most influential versions of Bill Monroe's Fuerdo music (1957) and Howlin 'Wolf (1958) and are the main sources of Dodi and Kathy. Other songs from the song came from BlueGrass (Mac Wiseman, Jack Cooke with Ralph Stanley and The Clinch Mountain Boys, Jerry García and Hart Valley Drifters, Wood & The Smokey Ridge Boys,Country Cooking, Tom Adams and Michael Cleveland), Viejosimpimo (doc (doc, Watson, Clint Howard and Fred Price, Hobart Smith, Jody Stecher and Kate Bris Bays), Western Swing (Milton Brown and his music brownies, Bob Wills andHis Texas Playboys, Willie Nelson and sleeping behind the bike, Jethro Burns), Rock and Rock and Country (Grateful Dead, Cream, Bob Dylan, Sleepy Labeef, Carl Perkins, Chet Atkins, Jerry Reed), Blues (Ray Charles, Johnny Shines, Lowell Fulsom, Sonny, Sonny, Sonny Fulsomterry and BRownie McGhee, Taj Mahal, B.B.B.B.King, Robert Cray Band) and a variety of other versions, including James "Blood" Ulmer with Alison Krauss.
3. Little months
A traditional gospel song that was first collected in 1905 under the title "Moses In The Bullushes" in "Ballades and Songs of the Missouri Folklore Society."He had the first publication (1929) of the song. In the spirit of popular tradition, Kathy wrote some additional texts to tell a little more about the history of music. The song was also published by Mac Wiseman; Joan Baez;
4. Jimmie Brown, the newspaper
The song was published in 1875 by William Shakespeare Hays, who was also a captain and composer of over 350 songs, including "Jimmie Brown, The Paper Boy", such as "You Is A", "I" "Want To" Want ","Want" "" ". Lembre that you love my prayers," "Little Old Cabin On Track" and "No one is loved on Earth."The Carter family made the first commercial recording of the song in 1929, although it was not released for two years.The special function of music.Leslie Riddle Song, as the latest verses are omitted from Hays and, in the Carter family version, a new melody includes some new texts (the verses "Morning Star" and "Gospel News").The song was also published by Mac Wiseman;Bill Monroe and his children in the blue grass;Roger Miller;Clarence White;Skeeter Davis;Bill Cliftton;Bill Grant and Delia Bell and Kiamichi Mountain Boys, Peter Rowan;Merle Haggard;and many others, including Pat Boone.
5. Footprints in the snow
The author of this music Hall in English was probably Harry Wright, who composed it in about 1880 under the title "Hoasts in the Snow". The melody is particularly similar in the beginning, such as the "little whiskey flow."(1886) An alternative composer of Geo.Russell Jackson (texts) and C.W.Bennett (music). Snowmarks "came from Watty Walton, and the first start of Dave Walker, both in 1931. Red Foley registered it in 1934, Cliff Carlisle in 1939 and Bill Monroe, who probably learned in the 30th anniversary at Barn Dance National in Chicago, he first accepted in 1945 with the altered title "Footspints in the Snow" and again claimed in 1952 to claim authorship under one fromIts pseudonyms, Rupert Jones. The KKB version contains additional letters that were inspired by Kathy's brands, and the arrangement is obviously based on the Big Mon.
6. The wild side of life> was not a god who made Honky ton Engel
William Warren and Arlie Carter wrote "The Wild Side of Life" from "The Prisoneers Song" by Guy Massey, first published by Vernon Dalhart in 1924; the same melody was also made from my blue eyes in 1929 to "I"M. M. I thought tonight "and Reverend Guy Smith and later (1937), Roy Acuff to" Great Sparkled Bird. "Success was published in 1952 by Hank Thompson and his Boys Armley.
"It was not God who made Honky Tonk Angels" was later in 1952 by J.D.(Jay) Miller, especially as a "response song" to "The Wild Side of Life") Kitty Wells had a 1952 hit;The Session for DECCA for Deca "was the first country in Poster No. 1, which was hit by a solo artist.
7. Reliable Molly
Perhaps based on a song with the title "The Irish Girl", published in Ireland in the 1820s and shared similarities with other "advertising ballads" such as "Lovely Molly" Darkky Molly "and" Farewell Ballymoney ", Lyric - Transformations for AsTransformations for the transformations for transformations for the transformations of "Goodbye as Cecil Sharp ES in 1918 collected in Virginia.g.b.grayson and Henry Whitter were the first to do so in his first session in 1927; since Grayson presents, supposes -if the first song of this influential duo is Stanley Brothers brought the song to BlueGrass, where the country's knights also made; Hylo Brown; Flatt & Scungs (which added a coral); Alex Campbell, Olabelle Reed and the new new boys of NewRiver; Glen Neaves; Charlie Moore and Bill Napier, Jerry García and the Drifters of Hart Valley; James Alan Shelton; and the experience of David Grisman BlueGrass.Harry and Jeanie West have the versions of the old songs of the song; Carlton;Ikeseger; Wade May began; Norman Blake; and Dirk Powell and was also transmitted by Ian & Sylvia, Peggy Seger, Bob Dylan and under the name "Dublin Blues", Guy Clark, Townes van Zandt and sleeping behind the wheel.
8. Later
The real composer is unknown or at least controversial. The oldest printed edition can be found in the Church of God from 1911 "Choice for Christian worship and the general service of the Gospel", in which only the Himnary editor is attributedto the Himnary.In 1937 in a collection with a musical musical composer (and editor) J. R. Baxter and was recorded by the sisters Burnette.b.Stephens, a preacher of the Church of God, listened to music on the radio and contacted Stampel-Baxter, he claimed to be the author of the song.Stampps-Baxter accredited Stephens as author of the song in subsequent publications and at the same time appreciated the 2008 agreement, James Greer, his grandfather, said a walking preacher named W. A. Fletcher wrote the song in 1911;J.R.Baxtesta sat next to Fletcher on the train and was allegedly recorded with the texts Fletcher received $ 2 and then added the song.
The first documented beginning of the song in 1938 by Carolina Hillbillies by J. H. Howell and was then by Roy Accuff and her boys of Mountain Smoky; Page Rex Allen & Patti; Ernest Tubb; Hank Williams; Sam Cooke and the soul add; George; George;George; George; Jones; Pete Seeger; Reno and Smiley; Bill Monroe and his blue -gram boy; Mississippi John Hurt; the Stanley Brothers; Connie Smith; The Millions of Dollars Quartet (Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis and CarlPerkins); Brothers; Wanda Jackson; Ellen McLiWaine, Ike and Tina Turner (as "father alone");Rose Maddox with the band of Vern Williams;Doc Watson;Ricky skaggs and whites;Foghorn Stringband and yes, many others.
9. What do you do in heaven today?
This song was written by American Methodist Minister Charles Albert Tindley, who was "What do you do in heaven in 1901?" Published? The first known recording was made by Washington Phillips in 1928. The brothers were the first to record the song (1948) In an ancient period of period/BlueGrass, as well as Harry and Jeanie West, Jorma Kaukonen, Riley Baugus, John Reischman and Eljaybirds, Béla Fleck and Abigail Washburn and others.Kallick believes Dodi learned this song from Henry Moore.
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Dodi Kallick (vocal, Dulcimer- -The Special of the Midfielder, WFMT, 1966 or 1969 (except as mentioned)
1. What do you do in heaven today?
2. I travel for a long time
3. Joe with cotton eyes
4. Hundred Miles
5. The Sea Line
6. Red Clay Country
7. Below in Weidengarten
8. My house is on the other side of the Blue Ridge mountains
9. Trap
1. What do you do inThe sky today?
Look above.
2. I travel for a long time
The song is located on the nineteenth -century sacred harp and in the granting gospel collections, which are accredited with John Doll's words to Edmund Dumas (music). As I travel here for a long time "and it is probably the sourceof Dodi.The song was also made by Almeda Riddle, the church of Grandpa Isom Ritchie Church, Jean Ritchie, Addie Graham, The Red Clayrablers, Jody Stecher and Kate Brislin, Anna and Elizabeth, published.Kathy Kallick Band and Annie Staninec.
3. Joe with cotton eyes
The origins of this melody/music are an announcement, although clearly of the American Civil War. The original melody of "Cotton Eyedjoe" was probably the Scottish play called "General Burgoyne March", also known as "Quickstep General Burgoyne", the title,who related to a British officer who resulted in 1777 during the War of American Independence in an edition of the day of day of day's day of day, there is an indication of the song in a fictional play.The melody of dance and music had many variants, with verses that often floated, united and called to the dancers. Black and White Most., departs as a vehicle for the extraordinary Annie Staninec violin.
4. Hundred Miles
This is part of a large family of songs, for which (i) nine hundred miles (distant) removed from my home (first published by John Carson in 1924), Train 45 (for the first time Grayson & Whicter in 1928 in 1928), 500 miles (Hedy West), Rueben (Flatt & Scungs) and others. The first recording of a song under the title "100 Meilen" came from Glen Campbell & The Green River Boys in 1962 and 1962 and came from Glen Campbell andThe Green River Jungs in 1962 and came from Glen Campbell & The Green River Boys in 1962 and 1962 the song Tohedy West.frank Pruffitt, who recorded many songs from Grayson & Whicter in his repertoire, acredited and pointed out that this is "one of the mostOld simple banjo melodies "is the guitar instead of Dulcimer in this case.
5. The Sea Line
It is said that E.C.vis published the song in 1888, the letter can be based on the 1878 yellow fever epidemic, in which at least 20,000 people died, especially through Mississippi., by Kelly Harrell - Henry Norton with Virginia String Band. In 1936, Blue Sky Boys wrote, as Robert B. Waltz emphasized, a preudo -Felz the tragic music.
6. Red Clay Country
The music is a variant of the family of the song "Take this Hammer" and was not widespread. Dodi probably learned from Sandy Paton (who was the first to record Frank Prophet), and Sandy said Art Thieme (as mentioned in Mudcat) that Otta recordedThe music after receiving it from Rogerabrahams.
7. Below in Weidengarten
Also as "Rose Conley" and "known"Rose Connelly "The melody is similar to the Irish American music "Erin's Green Shore" and an Irish song with the title "Rosin The Beau", which also has many of the same texts sung by G.B.Grayson.The 1928 Grayson & Whiter's beginning led him tocountry music in the old days. Iiver, Ralph Stanley, Foghorn String Band and many others.Dodi took it informally, possibly inFlamencoBrowns at home, 1963, with Hobart Smith played violin.
Virginia's Hobart Smith is probably better known in several recordings of the Congress Library in the 1940s through her music with her sister Texas Gladden., He participated in two remarkable 1963 recordings in Chicago. Some of these recordings were published byFolk-Legacy and Smithsonian Folkways, but this song has not yet been broadcast.
8. My house is on the other side of the Blue Ridge mountains
A traditional song that Ernest 'Pop' Stoneman sometimes mentioned for the awareness of yesterday's country music. The first recording/beginning of this song came from Deacarolina Tar Heels in 1929. The brand family and the delmore brothers were Delmore Brothers.30 and then became Flatt & Scungs; Doc Watson and Clarence Ashley; Pete Seeger; Joan Baez; Larry Richardson and The Blue Ridge Boys; Earl Taylor and Jim McCall with the Stoney Mountain Boys; Bob Paisley and the South Grass; The BlueGrass AlbumBand; Doug and Jack Wallin; Mike and Peggy Seeger; Frank Proffitt (as "I will return to North Carolina");And in his first tribute to his mother Kathy Kallick.Dodi's version is the Fraffett Memorial Concert at Old Town School of Folk Music in 1966 and comprises the participation of the audience.
9. Trap
A scottradiciles song that is sung at the end of a friend. From 1959, it was the likely source of Dodi.Any of the letters was in a Scottish Scottish charisma collection between 1615 and 1635, and part of the first point was a 1605 poem that is now known as "Good Night of Armstrong" and 1770 and the first known look of the song was in a1782 violin song collection. The "Glass of Separation", also known as "Steigrup Cup" or "Le Coup de L'Tier", was the hospitality of the final, which was offered to a guest, left.