Recorded by Alan Lomax, with assistance from Shirley Collins
and Anna Lomax
Includes original notes by Alan Lomax
Series Editors: Matthew Barton and Andrew L. Kaye
Pioneering the use of stereo recording in the field, Alan Lomax made
his “Southern Journey” in 1959–60, returning to the rural
South (after 10 years abroad) and rediscovering its still-vital traditions.
He traveled from the Appalachians to the Georgia Sea Islands,
from the Ozarks to the Mississippi Delta, recording blues,
ballads, breakdowns, hymns, shouts, chanteys, and work songs. When they
were released by Atlantic Records (1960) and Prestige Records (1962),
these recordings served as inspiration and guide to a new generation of
musicians passionately interested in the heritage this music represents.
These remasterings of the originals, including previously unissued tracks,
offer us a new opportunity to appreciate and learn from these vibrant performances
recorded in their home settings.
“Over-estimating the importance of this collection is impossible.” —The
Economist
“Superb, beautifully recorded, evidently heartfelt, richly contextualized
here as treasures of an American culture not yet in thrall to mass mediation.” —The
Wire
“Raw, honest soulful, and spiritually and emotionally moving… Be
warned, though: once you start digging into stuff as authentic and visceral
as this, it’s hard to go back.” —Ray Gun
“This collection shows how vital musical history can be.” —Wired
“Mind-boggling and beautiful.” —The Louisville Eccentric
Observer
“These recordings are all in stereo and they are absolutely STUNNING!” —The
Tracking Angle
Southern Journey, Vol. 1
Voices from the American South
Additional notes by Matthew Barton
This 24-track sampler anthology provides a comprehensive introduction to
the thirteen-CD Southern Journey series.
Southern Journey, Vol. 2
Ballads and Breakdowns
Additional notes by Andrew L. Kaye
Recordings of old-time Blue Ridge Mountain music — fiddle tunes,
banjo breakdowns, ballads, and lullabies. On this disc we find songs inherited
from Britain belonging to the famous Child ballad canon along with newer
blues lyrics, songs recounting local history, lyrics of lost love, remorse,
revenge, and comedy; and instrumentals for parlor and porch. “Old Joe
Clark,” “Single Girl,” “Pretty Polly,” “Single
Girl,” “The Willow Garden,” and “Bonaparte’s
Retreat” are among the many selections.
Southern Journey, Vol. 3
61 Highway Mississippi
Notes by Matthew Barton, adapted from the writings of Alan Lomax
Work songs, spirituals, lullabies, fife and drum and old-time Black string
bands from the Mississippi Hill Country; and, of course, Delta blues, including
the historic first recordings of country blues artist ‘Mississippi’ Fred
McDowell. Includes “I’m Going Home” recorded by Ervin Webb
with prisoners at the notorious Parchman Farm; an interview with Webb; and “Clarksdale
Mill Blues” by John Dudley.
Southern Journey, Vol. 4
Brethren, We Meet Again
Additional notes by Matthew Barton
Folk hymnody of the Southern White Protestant tradition from Kentucky, Virginia,
Arkansas, and Alabama — includes Old Regular Baptist lining hymns,
testimony, shape-note singing, and country gospel, sung by Preston and Hobart
Smith, Almeda Riddle, the Alabama Sacred Harp Singers, and many others.
Southern Journey, Vol. 5
Bad Man Ballads: Songs of Outlaws and Desperadoes
Additional notes by Andrew L. Kaye
Defiant, larger than life rebels Railroad Bill, Brennan on the Moor, Jessie
James, and the tragic hero John Henry are among those celebrated in folk
songs performed by Virginia coast quartets, Mississippi mountain balladeers
(such as Spencer Moore and Neal Morris), and Mississippi prisoners. Includes
the original version of “Po’ Lazarus” by
James Carter and fellow prisoners featured in the film and soundtrack O
Brother Where Art Thou?
“My favorite disc of the first 6 is Volume 5.” —The
Tracking Angle
Southern Journey, Vol. 6
Sheep, Sheep, Don’t You Know the Road
Additional notes by Andrew L. Kaye
The clash between stark dichotomies of sin and salvation that characterized
the grass-roots religious movements of the rural South engaged and inspired
generations of folk artists and performers, African American and white. Both
sides of the coin are represented here — from the title track by Bessie
Jones and the Sea Island Singers, and “Straighten ’Em,” by
the Bright Light Quartet, to Hobart Smith’s “Drunken Hiccups.”
“A lot of music and sociology to love, study and comprehend....While
much of this music is already gone from everyday life — forever — Alan
Lomax ensured that it will never die. The oral tradition, even on CD, is
still alive and well.”—David Fricke, Rolling Stone
Southern Journey, Vol. 7
Ozark Frontier
Original notes by Alan Lomax adapted and expanded by Anna Lomax Wood
Ballads and old-time music from Missouri and Arkansas, the territory that
gave us Jesse James, Jimmie Driftwood, Mark Twain, and Bill Clinton, and
that saw the birth of ragtime. It was a meeting place for several cultural
strains — the Northern topical ballad and the banjo-picking, high
lonesome musical style of the South, resulting in a freewheeling and distinctively
creative American folk idiom. Includes Neal Morris’s “Sing Anything.”
“We should have more recordings from the free and easy Ozarks.” —Alan
Lomax
Southern Journey, Vol. 8
Velvet Voices: Eastern Shores Choirs, Quartets, and Colonial Era
Music
Additional notes by Matthew Barton
African-American music from the Eastern Shores. The Bright Light Quartet,
Bessie Jones and the Sea Island Singers, and others perform menhaden fishermen’s
chanteys, jubilee and gospel singing; and Ed Young’s and Hobart Smith’s
reconstruction of a pre-revolutionary-style fife and four-string-banjo duet
made during the filming of a documentary about Colonial Williamsburg.
“Travelers through plantation country of the Eastern Shore often described
the thrilling rowing chants of the Negro slaves. Here, too, Colonel Higginson
listened with rapture to the spirituals of his Negro regiment in the Civil
War and wrote the first account of this already mature religious music. This
primordial spiritual tradition still exists in the most isolated of the Sea
Islands in Georgia, and I have heard replicas of these songs sung as far
west as Louisiana and Texas by ex-slaves. There can be little doubt that
the East Coast tradition moved west with the expanding frontier and formed
the basis for new folk song everywhere in the South.” —Alan
Lomax, 1961
“Another fine example of Alan Lomax’s profound desire to preserve
Southern roots music.” —Folk & Acoustic Music Exchange
Southern Journey, Vol. 9
Harp of a Thousand Strings
Southern Journey, Vol. 10
And Glory Shone Around

Original notes by Alan Lomax adapted and expanded by Matthew Barton
Old-time Southern shape note singing from the Sacred Harp hymnal — vibrant,
cascading folk polyphony captured in full swing and in stereo at the 1959
United Sacred Harp Musical Convention in Fyffe, Alabama — truly a “joyful
noise.”
Southern Journey, Vol. 11
Honor the Lamb: The Belleville A
Cappella Choir
African-American spirituals sung in the richly textured and tightly harmonized
style of the Belleville A Cappella Choir of the Church of God and Saints
in Christ, a Virginia-based church tracing its lineage to the lost tribes
of Israel. At the wish of their founder Prophet Crowdy, the choir assimilated
elements of university-trained black choirs such as the Fisk Jubilee Singers,
as well as aspects of later jubilee and modern gospel styles. Although their
singing conforms to conventional art-music harmony, all songs and their parts
have always been transmitted orally and sung without written text or notation,
creating a spontaneous “folk” feeling even in their most complex
pieces.
“I myself have heard no group which combines in such an engaging way
a repertoire of fresh and thoroughly inspired songs, a conventional choral
technique, and which at the same time has not lost the rhapsodic, swinging
style which ennobles and enlivens American Negro folk music.” —Alan
Lomax, 1961
Southern Journey, Vol. 12
Georgia Sea Islands:
Biblical Songs and Spirituals
Southern Journey, Vol. 13
Georgia Sea Islands:
Earliest Times

John Davis, Bessie Jones, and the legendary Georgia Sea Island Singers (including
some performers whom Alan Lomax first recorded in 1935 with Zora Neale Hurston
and Mary Elizabeth Barnicle) perform spirituals, work songs, and ring dances
in the constantly overlapping, part-crossing polyrhythmic African style of
their forefathers, whose way of life as independent fishermen and farmers
on the offshore islands of the Georgia coast continued long into the present.
“When you finish this album, you will feel like you've been there — both
to St. Simons Island and to heaven.” —Folk & Acoustic
Music Exchange
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