|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Jean Ritchie: Ballads from her Appalachian Family Tradition

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (16 ratings)
Jean Ritchie: Ballads from her Appalachian Family Tradition album cover
01
Gypsy Laddie
2:50 $0.99
02
False Sir John
4:21 $0.99
03
Hangman
2:00 $0.99
04
Lord Bateman
6:05 $0.99
05
The House Carpenter
4:22 $0.99
06
Lord Thomas and Fair Ellender
5:30 $0.99
07
The Merry Golden Tree
2:12 $0.99
08
Old Bangum
1:56 $0.99
09
Barbary Allen
5:04 $0.99
10
The Unquiet Grave
4:00 $0.99
11
Sweet William and Lady Margaret
6:53 $0.99
12
There Lived an Old Lord
5:29 $0.99
13
Cherry Tree Carol
3:48 $0.99
14
Edward
2:35 $0.99
15
Lord Randall
2:54 $0.99
16
Little Musgrave
12:02
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 72:01

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Singsong

calbrait

I can't listen to the entire record in one sitting because the songs all sound alike. Even favorites like Barbary Allen, Little Musgrave, etc. Despite her beautiful voice, the music is too spare without the accompaniment of musical instruments.

user avatar

repackage?

2Fun2Huge

This appears to be a compressed repackage of the two "British Traditional Ballads" LPs. Those together have 21 tracks; this version has 16. Judging by the sound samples and the recording dates, they are the same recordings in two slightly different packages. Great recordings either way... Not clear why Emu plays down the fact (in either package) that these are collections of the "Child Ballads," which as everyone but the AMG commentator reviewing this disc knows are by no means "Children's Ballads" but instead a famous and important collection of traditional British ballads collected and published by Francis James Child in the late 19th century; the ballads turned out to be well preserved in Appalachian culture as Jean Ritchie shows.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

A crystalline-clear voice and a tireless preservation of traditional music are two of the contibutions to folk music that Jean Ritchie is most respected for, and both shine on the Smithsonian/Folkways release Ballads from Her Appalachian Family Tradition. Mostly a cappella, with a few songs accompanied by dulcimer, these children’s ballads are alternately warm and chilling, achingly beautiful and as stark as the bones of the balladeers who wrote the songs hundreds of years ago. The bright melody of “Barbary Allen” could be chanted as a playground rhyme or sung as a funeral hymn, and the brutal love triangle in “Lord Thomas and Fair Ellender” resolves with a higher body count than a Sam Peckinpah film, but with the heartbreaking romance of a Merchant Ivory production. The extensive liner notes stray toward the academic, but certainly drive home the point that these songs are older than the original 1961 release date, older than recorded music, and the sentiments found in all of the songs date back to the dawn of language and beyond. Despite all of the long-carved gravestones and lovelorn bloodshed, these recordings still manage to sound warm and familiar as a mother’s lullaby, and pull off the remarkable feat of being a historically important document and wonderful to listen to. – Zac Johnson

more »