
Rate it!
Avg: 4.0 (30 ratings)
- Date Released: March 25, 2003
- Genre: Country/Folk
- Style: Traditional Country
- Label: Smithsonian Folkways
One of the great finds of the folk revival.
-
We Say...
One of the great finds of the folk revival, Holcomb recorded for the first time in 1959; Bob Dylan’s apt description of his style provides this set’s title. The east Kentucky banjo man performed traditional country songs in a tradition-plus manner that played his tense, bristly high tenor off against an irregularly percussive, two-finger banjo style. (He also adapted blues and poppish material, and played slide guitar, harmonica and fiddle.) Burry, reedy performances like “Little Maggie,” “I’m a Man of Constant Sorrow” and “Milk Cow Blues” are both piercing and ghostly, with a bigger sound than you’ve likely ever heard coming from one voice and/or instrument.
-
They Say...
As documented by the Smithsonian Folkways reissue The High Lonesome Sound, Roscoe Holcomb, like contemporaries Dock Boggs and Bascom Lamar Lunsford, was the real thing, a raw, solitary musician who expressed the inexpressible, a yearning out of time and place, a sense of the wild, the unseen, the unknowable, perhaps even the unspeakable. The title of this second volume of Holcomb's recordings comes from Bob Dylan, who was describing what he heard in Holcomb's music. And he's right, he knew how to get that sound, how to seek and find the mercurial ghost inside whatever instrument he was playing, the banjo, a guitar with a jackknife, or from that graveyard, sorrowful voice of his. His was able to channel the wisdom and tragedy of the ages and allow for both possibility and despair, even in his a cappella numbers. His is the sound of Appalachian midnight, somewhere past bluegrass, folk, and country. These recordings were made not in 1959 like the material on the other volume, but later, between 1961-1973, when Holcomb was touring, though in declining health and spirits. And, while some the material is duplicated on this set, the versions are very different, and, if anything, this material is somehow spookier, deeper in the trenches of both sorrow and resignation. Some of these tunes were recorded in New York City and in concert in Cambridge, MA, and others on Holcomb's front porch in Daisy, KY. The settings hardly matter; this includes his versions of "Little Maggie," "Frankie and Johnny," the knife-guitar take of "Foggy Mountain Top" that is only rivaled by Maybelle Carter's, his 1961 version of Carter Stanley's "Man of Constant Sorrow" (which is the definitive version of the song done a cappella), and his read of "I Ain't Got No Sugar Baby Now" (which rivals Dock Boggs' earlier version). The truth in all of these songs is the way the blues, bluegrass, ancient folk traditions, and Holcomb's uncompromising and truly unusual sense of rhythm and phrasing collide and, rather than cancel each other out, bring one another to life. His blues songs, such as "Milk Cow Blues" and "Sitting on Top of This World," are fraught with edges and trail-offs that unsettle the listener, seeking a kind of completion that could only come from a singer who didn't hold the song as a living, breathing presence that haunts him. The bravado in the latter is offset by the irony that Holcomb's life had been an image in direct opposition to what the braggadocio in its lyrics offers. There is no grain in Holcomb's voice and banjo style; his voice is the grain, the American Grain in all its rough-hewn glory and grace and desolation. It is majestic in its reediness and singular in its power. This is an essential collection for anyone interested in American traditional music -- be it folk, blues, country, or bluegrass -- and is a primer for those who seek to discover what it was that all of those musics sought to express.
“ The indie iTunes — Hardcore music fans are migrating to eMusic, the iTunes Music Store's cheaper, cooler cousin.”
Rolling Stone
Sorry but one or more tracks from this album are unavailable for download at this time.
eMusic Tip
Paid downloads are counted towards an album discount but free downloads are not.
COMPLETE FOR FREE!
You can download the rest of the tracks from this album for free! Just click the Complete Album button.
We’re sorry this album can only be downloaded using paid subscription download credits.
We recommend you Save it for Later by clicking the Save for Later button shown just above this message. For a list of related albums you can download right now, check out these recommendations.
We'll give you 25 additional free credits to download this album and start your paid subscription.
Get 25 bonus credits on us if you download this album. Sweet!
26 Total Tracks, 73:21 Total Length
Loading...

![]()
Playlists If you like Roscoe Holcomb, check out these member playlists
Credits
- Roscoe Holcomb - Banjo // Roscoe Holcomb - Fiddle // Roscoe Holcomb - Guitar // Roscoe Holcomb - Harmonica // Roscoe Holcomb - Vocals // John Cohen - Guitar // John Cohen - Producer // John Cohen - Engineer // John Cohen - Liner Notes // John Cohen - Compilation // John Cohen - Photography // John Cohen - Annotation // Dan Sheehy - Production Supervisor // Pete Reiniger - Mastering // Pete Reiniger - Sound Supervision // Mary Monseur - Production Coordination // Carla Borden - Editorial Assistant // Blanton Owen - Engineer // Peter Bartok - Engineer // Stephanie Smith - Archivist // Jon Pankake - ? // Judy Barlas - Coordination // Phil Williams - Engineer // Margot Nassau - Licensing // Norman van der Sluys - Audio Engineer
-
Other Details
- Instrument:
- Banjo
Choose from over 7 million
music downloadseMusic features legendary and emerging artists in every genre: classic rock to classical,indie to international, soundtracks to spiritual, jazz to country and many more.
MP3 downloads work on any digital media player
With eMusic, you OWN your music without any restrictions. Burn music to a CD, play it on your computer, mobile phone or any digital media player - including iPod®, Zune® and Walkman®.
Songs available for 50¢ or less
eMusic subscriptions start at just $11.99 a month for 24 downloads - that's just 50¢ per song! And it gets better from there - our plans go as low as 42¢ per song!
Music Discovery
eMusic is about discovery. We make finding new music fun again with music recommendations from our award-winning team of music experts, member playlists and new music features.
Cancel anytime
With all the great music and site features we're pretty sure you will love eMusic. If not, no problem. You can cancel at any time and keep the music you have downloaded.


Post Album to Facebook
