Thanks for posting that, Forgetful Jones, that is some beautiful and soulful singing, and Bert Hare's guitar had a pretty bright tone. The melody and chord progression of the song remind me a little bit of this song that Bill Monroe's brother, Charlie, recorded--"Rosalee McFall":
Hi John- When posting the Bert Hare song, I tried to also describe his singing. The post was wordy & awkward so I deleted that part. "Beautiful & Soulful" sums it up perfectly. Glad you enjoyed it.
I never realized Bill Monroe had a musician brother.
Hi Forgetful Jones, Yes, Bill and Charlie started out as a duo act, similar to the Blue Sky Boys, the Callahan Brothers or the Armstrong Twins. They were popular doing that, too, but had a falling out and went their separate ways, professionally. Here they are doing "Feast Here Tonight":
That is some fast pickin'! Thanks for sharing that one, John. I haven't really explored Bill Monroe beyond his Folkways album with Doc Watson. I'll dabble a little bit more now.
I have a playlist of 'Female Jazz Vocalists' ... that I keep in regular rotation. It's a broad brush from the classic like Billie, Etta, Ella to more contemporary like Diana Krall or Norah Jones to young unknowns -- love them all. The genre, which is genre bending, can serve as background music or mighty fine listening... the recording quality and studio musicians on modern jazz recordings is incredibly good -- so you need good earphones/headphones or speakers to fully appreciate IMO.
These women are by definition strong and independent, there are so many good songs, or albums, but here is Heather Rigdon, who was raised in the Pentecostal and generally not allowed to listen to secular music as a youth.
I saw both Bria Skonberg and Jen Hodge with their bands live before the shutdown and I suggest checking them out if you haven't done so already. Bria mentioned, "Jazz On A Summer's Day," and then proceeded to channel her inner Anita O'Day. (I see it's back up on YT.)
One thing I find particularly cool about Thelonious Monk is that as he proceeds through a tune, my brain kind of anticipates a certain sound, but Monk always surprises with something unexpected but perfect. I have no idea what he's doing technically, maybe one of you all can explain it. Anyway, he's a great and unique player.
B.B .King, T-Bone Walker, Howlin' Wolf, Otis Rush. Plus some later guys, Jimi, SRV, EC, etc. Learning to improvise on electric guitar at present. No guitar snobbery for me, I just wanna be an all-rounder on the guitar.
David is right, the thread is not one to 'keep going' necessarily - just one to post to if you feel like it, with no judgement calls on what you might be listening to ... we all, I'm pretty sure, listen to a huge variety of stuff. Just another small way to stay connected.