Does anybody remember Koerner, Ray and Glover?
Any comments on them?
Any comments on them?
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Among the blues singers who have gained more or less national recognition, there is scarcely a man's name to be found - Howard Odum and Guy Johnson, 1926
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0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. tejastani
Sure-- I had an old LP "The Return of Koerner, Ray & Glover" that was great, but more a collection of individual pieces than a group effort. Spider John did his original songs on a 9-string, Dave Ray did only Leadbelly tunes on a 12-string, & Tony Glover's harp things. The liner notes were an odd amphetamine-fueled rant by someone like Paul Krassner. I have a great John Koerner CD-- "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Been" where he does folk songs like he wrote 'em. I've never heard anyone as "authentic" 'cept maybe Pete Seeger.
MTJ3
See http://www.wirz.de/music/krgfrm.htm
They were among the first if not the first white blues artists I recall hearing on record. I seem to recall that Koerner played a 7 string guitar (doubling the g string). Ray played a lot more than just Leadbelly. I haven't listened to them in decades, but I thought Ray's "Slapping On My Black Cat Bone" was at least a minor classic. I played Ray's "Honey Bee" for a voice major once, and she went sort of ga ga over the vocal. Koerner seemed to stretch out and improvise much more in concert than his recordings would suggest. "L.A. Woman" by the Doors is based on his "Southbound Train." Pages: [1] Go Up
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