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Alan Lomax

The Ballad Operas: The Martins & The Coys

The Ballad Operas: The Martins & The Coys Tracks
1. Martins and the Coys - Pete Seeger
2. Introduction - Alan Lomax
3. Cumberland Mountain Bear Chase - Will Geer
4. Martins and the Coys - Jimmy Dobson
5. Run, Boys, Run - Pete Seeger
6. Back to the Cabin - Jimmy Dobson
7. Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair - Burl Ives
8. Alec Coy at the Induction Center - Woody Guthrie
9. You Better Get Ready - Woody Guthrie
10. At the Deer Forks Railway Depot - Jimmy Dobson
11. Nine Hundred Miles - Woody Guthrie
12. Train Departs - Burl Ives
13. On Top of Old Smoky - Pete Seeger
14. Agricultural Agent Visits the Coys - Carson Robison
15. Deliver the Goods - Bella Allen
16. Alec and Ben in the Army Camp - Woody Guthrie
17. When We All Go Marching In - Pete Seeger
18. Deer Forks Victory Garden - Burl Ives
19. Red Rocking Chair - Alan Lomax
20. Uncle Boone Visits the Coys - Will Geer
21. How Many Biscuits Can You Eat? - Bella Allen
22. Ben and Alec Call off the Feud - Woody Guthrie
23. All of You Fascists Bound to Lose - Woody Guthrie
24. Ben and Sary Meet Again
25. Turtle Dove - Burl Ives
26. Ben Proposes to Sary
27. Smoky Mountain Gals - Bella Allen
28. Dance All Night With a Bottle in Your Hand - Woody Guthrie
29. Round and Round Hitler's Grave - Woody Guthrie
30. Closing - Burl Ives
31. New Martins and the Coys - Woody Guthrie
32. Martins and the Coys [*] - Ted Weems
33. New Martins and the Coys [*] - Burl Ives
34. East Virginia Blues [*] - Lily May Ledford
35. Sugar Babe [*] - Lily May Ledford
36. Gypsy Davy [*] - Bella Allen
37. Girls in the Neighborhood [*] - Bella Allen
Alan Lomax - The Ballad Operas: The Martins & The Coys
The Ballad Operas: The Martins & The Coys Review
This "ballad opera" is perhaps the most unlikely of all Alan Lomax projects. Recorded in 1944 for the BBC and reissued as part of the Lomax Collection's Concert and Radio Series, The Martins and the Coys was based on a 1936 "imitation hillbilly" novelty hit by bandleader Ted Weems about feuding families similar to the Hatfields and the McCoys. The two families are eventually united by their love for America and mountain life, and by their hatred of fascism. Lomax blended together narration, instrumentals, and traditional and topical songs, performed by urban and rural folk artists such as Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger (both then unknown outside Manhattan folk circles), Burl Ives, and Grand Ole Opry great, Fiddlin' Arthur Smith. "Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair" (Ives) and "Nine Hundred Miles" (Guthrie) are stunning. For collectors only, but it's that rarest of period pieces, one with style and substance. Listening to the unabashed patriotism of these performers, it's incomprehensible that within a decade, many would be blacklisted as un-American. --John Morthland


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