Gospel Ship - The Original Carter Family, Traditional
My Texas Girl
Sinking in the Lonesome Sea
Cannon Ball Blues
I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes
River of Jordan
The Storms Are on the Ocean
On the Rock Where Moses Stood
The Little Black Train
Single Girl, Married Girl
Kissing Is a Crime
Blackie's Gunman
My Home Among the Hills
Black Jack David
Like so many Americans during the Depression, the Carter Family found themselves forced to stay in motion throughout the 1930s. Rural economies, the locales where country music had taken root, were hit unusually hard by th... more »e economic crash. The Carters left their original record label just prior to recording the first 17 of the 20 tunes on Can the Circle Be Unbroken, joining ARC for long enough to prodigiously churn out material they'd previously recorded. The 17 ARC songs here were recorded over 3 days in May 1935, and all reveal a Carter Family growing musically comfortable with their execution on these tunes--especially the slight dronelike quality in Sara's voice, which sounds settled and at times almost languid. Maybelle's voice and guitar emphasize the appropriately unhurried pacing (this was the Depression, after all). As for the closing trio of tracks, they come from a post-Decca session during their short tenure at Columbia, and all bear the mark of greater vocal harmonies between Sara and Maybelle, as well as an increased pitch in the vocals that quickens the pace a tad. These are vitally important recordings, to be sure, a fine, more multihued complement to the band's '20s-era recordings. --Andrew Bartlett« less
Like so many Americans during the Depression, the Carter Family found themselves forced to stay in motion throughout the 1930s. Rural economies, the locales where country music had taken root, were hit unusually hard by the economic crash. The Carters left their original record label just prior to recording the first 17 of the 20 tunes on Can the Circle Be Unbroken, joining ARC for long enough to prodigiously churn out material they'd previously recorded. The 17 ARC songs here were recorded over 3 days in May 1935, and all reveal a Carter Family growing musically comfortable with their execution on these tunes--especially the slight dronelike quality in Sara's voice, which sounds settled and at times almost languid. Maybelle's voice and guitar emphasize the appropriately unhurried pacing (this was the Depression, after all). As for the closing trio of tracks, they come from a post-Decca session during their short tenure at Columbia, and all bear the mark of greater vocal harmonies between Sara and Maybelle, as well as an increased pitch in the vocals that quickens the pace a tad. These are vitally important recordings, to be sure, a fine, more multihued complement to the band's '20s-era recordings. --Andrew Bartlett
"The history of American roots music lies with southwestern Virginia's Carter Family's hymns, white blues, transplanted British folk ballads and sentimental 19th-century parlor songs. Playing melody on her bass strings, Maybelle helped to bring the guitar to the forefront of pop instrumentation.
Even at the peak of their 1920s-30s success, lead singer Sara's deep tones resonated with restrained sorrow (perhaps for a troubled marriage and a career she wanted far less than husband A.P. and sister-in-law Maybelle). With a voice as weathered as her native Clinch Mountains, Sara, though only in her 30s, sounded like "Worried Man Blues" would eat at her until she reached the "River Of Jordan."
These 20 rural tunes come from 1935 and 1940 sessions for ARC and OKeh. None of them were previously recorded for Victor, but Legacy's sound far surpasses Rounder's catalog of their Victor output."
Key to all subsequent country and folk records...
William E. Adams | Midland, Texas USA | 12/04/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"These tracks were laid down in 1935 and 1940, mostly re-recordings of their first hits from 1927-34 with a different record company. So the trio had more confidence in their talents, but perhaps less spirit, as another reviewer noted. Recording quality is a tad better than the earlier stuff, as another reviewer mentioned. And since the group was active until the early '40's, this collection is limited...they preserved about 250 performances, and here you get 20. But if you only want one Carter CD for your collection, it's a fine choice. And if you care about roots music, how can you not have a Carter disc on the shelves? Founder A.P. Carter scoured the hills of Southern Virginia throughout the 20's and 30's, collecting mostly old songs from his neighbors, and copyrighting them with his arrangements. The original writers have mostly been lost to history, but the songs remain. Many of these can be found with different verses on recordings by other artists: "Worried Man Blues" eventually became "It Takes a Worried Man" for the Kingston Trio in the late 1950's. Woody Guthrie put some of his best lyrics to tunes found or written by the Carter Family, such as "Wildwood Flower" which was used for "Ballad of the Reuben James." Woody's song "Hesitating Beauty" on Billy Bragg's "Mermaid Avenue" collection, carries the tune of the Carters' "Lulu Walls". Whether Woody chose that, or Bragg, I don't know. But the Carter Family archive is still important, still enjoyable. There is a five-CD set of the Carters available for only twice the price of this one disc, so look up other offerings if you want an even better bargain. But if one hour of these country pioneers is all you think you need, don't worry about this one...it will serve you well. Maybelle Carter's guitar playing alone would make this a good buy, but add Sara's voice and autoharp and A.P.'s bass vocal accents, and it's a treasure."
Important mid-period recordings from seminal Country artists
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 12/10/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)
"With a career as seminal, vital and prolific as the Carter Family's, it's difficult to pinpoint which, if any, are the "best" recordings of their career. This reissue consists of recordings made for ARC in 1935, just after the Carter's left Victor (with whom they'd recorded the first versions of their most famous songs, beginning in 1928), and just before signing with Decca. These "mid-period" tracks include a number re-recordings of their most famous songs, including "Can the Circle Be Unbroken," "I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes," "Wildwood Flower," and "Keep on the Sunny Side." It also includes British folk songs ("Black Jack David"), gospel traditionals ("Gospel Ship") and blues ("Worried Man Blues").What makes these recordings so interesting is that they are the product of rather different circumstances than the Family's first blaze of glory. By 1935 the Carters were seasoned performers, and the 'family' was something of a professional convenience, given that A.P. and Sara had been separated for a few years, and would divorce in a few more. The depression and its repercussions had also dragged on for six years, and the dislocation that was gripping the country as a whole had physically separated the Carters, as well. Combined with the birth of Sara and Maybelle's children, much of the early 30s saw the group uniting only at recording sessions such as this. The result are hugely professional recordings that display the abundant charms of the Carter Family's invention, but lack the hunger and drive that marked their earliest dates.These are great recordings, and would be an obvious introduction to the roots of Country music, if only the Carter's original Victor recordings weren't so well anthologized. Even still, these mature renderings of Carter classics, plus songs from the ever expanding A.P. Carter collection, are an essential part of the group's canon, and essential listening for anyone with more than a passing interest in the Family's work."
TRUE!
Mcgivern Owen L | NY, NY USA | 05/09/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The Carter Family officially had 3 chart country hits-according to Billboard. Their legend goes far beyond that meaningless statistic. This CD features the original group (A.P., Maybelle and Sara) before their series of breakups and reformations with new family members. This particular album was recorded mostly in 1935 and is an absolute treasure. Others may complain about the quality of the sound-it comes across as old, perhaps even scratchy. To this reviewer, that only adds to the luster. It sounds authentic! One can just imagine the group playing in a roadside inn- on a rainy Saturday night- deep in Virginia just before WW2. The tight harmony and guitar work is timeless. High points here are "Wildwood Flower", "The Storms Are On the Ocean" and especially "Keep on the Sunny Side". It is easy to be subjective on that score. Others may have their own favorites among the 20 tracks. ... The group goes back so far and is so unique, so real, so basic, so early country that "true believers" should expose themselves to the Carters. It is just that simple."
Great Songs, Disappointing Performances
timohuatl | san francisco | 08/01/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)
"The quality of songs on this album is fantastic. The Carter canon of music is worth any trouble you have to go to to hear it. Unfortunately, I don't think that these are the best records of many of these songs. To my ear, they often sound like they have performed the songs once too often and the music sounds tired.
Just for fun, listen to some of the amazon.com samples of the same songs, on different albums, and you'll hear the difference. My advice, try to buy the original recordings.
Nonetheless, this body of work is incredible, and I would recommend that anyone try to acquaint themselves with the music."