Bascom Lamar Lunsford

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Dry Bones 00:00 Tools
I Wish I Was A Mole In The Ground 00:00 Tools
Swannanoa Tunnel 00:00 Tools
Lost John Dean 00:00 Tools
Kidder Cole 00:00 Tools
Mole in the Ground 00:00 Tools
Death of Queen Jane 00:00 Tools
Little Turtle Dove 00:00 Tools
Lulu Wall 00:00 Tools
Italy 00:00 Tools
The Mermaid Song 00:00 Tools
Old Stepstone 00:00 Tools
To the Pines, To the Pines 00:00 Tools
Ten Steps 00:00 Tools
In the Shadow of the Pines 00:00 Tools
Swing Low 00:00 Tools
Free A Little Bird 00:00 Tools
On a Bright and Summer's Morning 00:00 Tools
Old Mountain Dew 00:00 Tools
Bonny George Campbell 00:00 Tools
Drinking of the Wine 00:00 Tools
The Last Gold Dollar 00:00 Tools
Rye Straw 00:00 Tools
Jennie Jenkins 00:00 Tools
Mr. Garfield 00:00 Tools
Dedication 00:00 Tools
Little Margaret 00:00 Tools
Springfield Mountain 00:00 Tools
Banks of the Ohio 00:00 Tools
Mountain Dew 00:00 Tools
Poor Jesse James 00:00 Tools
Last Gold Dollar 00:00 Tools
Get Along Home Cindy 00:00 Tools
Sherman Valley 00:00 Tools
Go To Italy 00:00 Tools
The Merry Golden Tree 00:00 Tools
The Derby Ram 00:00 Tools
I Shall Not Be Moved 00:00 Tools
Fate Of Santa Barbara 00:00 Tools
Fly Around, My Blue-Eyed Girl 00:00 Tools
Darby's Ram 00:00 Tools
The Miller's Will 00:00 Tools
The Sailor On The Deep Blue Sea 00:00 Tools
Swing Low, Chariot 00:00 Tools
Sundown 00:00 Tools
Weeping Willow Tree 00:00 Tools
Speaking The Truth 00:00 Tools
"Nol Pros" Nellie 00:00 Tools
John Henry 00:00 Tools
The Old Man From The North Country (Child #10) 00:00 Tools
A Stump Speech In The 10th District 00:00 Tools
Jesse James 00:00 Tools
Black Jack Davy (Child #20) 00:00 Tools
Baa, Baa, Black Sheep 00:00 Tools
Zolgotz 00:00 Tools
mermaid song; the 00:00 Tools
Hesitation Blues 00:00 Tools
Booth Killed Lincoln 00:00 Tools
Lord Joshuay 00:00 Tools
Goodbye Dear Old Stepstone 00:00 Tools
Lily of the West 00:00 Tools
Essie Dear 00:00 Tools
Poor Ellen Smith 00:00 Tools
Not A-Gonna Lay My Religion Down 00:00 Tools
Georgia Buck 00:00 Tools
If I Was a Mole in the Ground 00:00 Tools
Charles Guiteau 00:00 Tools
Last Gold Dollar; The 00:00 Tools
Dry Bones (1928) 00:00 Tools
I Wish I Was a Mole in the Gr 00:00 Tools
Old Gray Mare 00:00 Tools
On the Banks of the Ohio 00:00 Tools
Step Stones 00:00 Tools
The Old Man From The North Country 00:00 Tools
Booth Killed Lincoln (fiddle tune) 00:00 Tools
Black Jack Davy 00:00 Tools
I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground - Bascom Lamar Lunsford 00:00 Tools
Dry Bones (Remastered) 00:00 Tools
I Wish I Was a Mole 00:00 Tools
I Wish I Was a Mole in the Grou 00:00 Tools
I Wish I Were a Mole in the Ground 00:00 Tools
11 - Lost John Dean 00:00 Tools
Various 00:00 Tools
The Old Grey Mare 00:00 Tools
The Old Gray Mare 00:00 Tools
Mr Garfield 00:00 Tools
Barbara Allen 00:00 Tools
On a Bright and Summer's Morn 00:00 Tools
Bascom Lamar Lunsford - Mole in the Ground 00:00 Tools
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Bascom Lamar Lunsford (March 21, 1882 - September 4, 1973) was a lawyer, folklorist, and performer of traditional folk and country music from western North Carolina. He was often known by the nickname "Minstrel of the Appalachians." Bascom Lamar Lunsford was born at Mars Hill, Madison County, North Carolina in 1882, into the world of traditional Appalachian folk music. At an early age, his father, a teacher, gave him a fiddle, and his mother sang religious songs and traditional ballads. Lunsford also learned banjo and began to perform at weddings and square dances. After qualifying as a teacher at Rutherford College, Lunsford taught at schools in Madison County. In 1913, Lunsford qualified in law at Trinity College, later to become Duke University. He began to travel and collect material at the start of the 20th century, often meeting singers on isolated farms. Lunsford has been quoted as saying he spent "nights in more homes from Harpers Ferry to Iron Mountain than God". Lunsford gave lectures and performances while dressed in a starched white shirt and black bow tie. This formal dress was part of his campaign against the stereotyping of “hillbillies”. In 1922 Frank C. Brown, a song collector, recorded 32 items on wax cylinders from Bascom. In 1928, Lunsford recorded "Jesse James" and "I Wish I Was a Mole In the Ground" for the Brunswick record label. Harry Smith included "Mole" on his Anthology of American Folk Music in 1952. Lunsford played in a style from Western North Carolina, which had a rhythmic up-stroke brushing the strings. It sounds similar to clawhammer banjo playing, which emphasises the downstroke. He also played a "mandoline", an instrument with mandolin body and a five-string banjo neck. He occasionally played fiddle for dance tunes such as "Rye Straw". He censored himself, avoiding obscene songs or omitting verses. His repertoire included Child Ballads, negro spirituals and parlor songs. A CD collection of Lunsford's recordings, from the Brunswick recordings of the 1920s to the recordings for the Archive of American Folk Song at the Library of Congress in 1949, Ballads, Banjo Tunes and Sacred Songs of Western North Carolina, was released by Smithsonian Folkways Records in 1996. In 1927 the Asheville Chamber of Commerce organized a 'Rhododendron Festival' to encourage tourism. The Chamber asked Lunsford to invite local musicians and dancers. 1928 was the first year of the Mountain Dance and Folk Festival, often claimed as the first event to be described as a "Folk Festival". After a few years the rhododendron element disappeared but the festival continues to this day. He was the organiser and performed there every year until he suffered a stroke in 1965. The supernatural fantasy-fiction book "Who Fears the Devil?" by Manly Wade Wellman, is dedicated to Lunsford. Both men were natives of North Carolina, and Wellman's protagonist Silver John is a folk singer, like Lunsford. Bascom was involved in the politics of the Democratic Party. He managed the campaign for Congressman Zebulon Weaver for North Carolina. From 1931 to 1934 he was a reading clerk of the North Carolina House of Representatives. Charles Seeger employed him in the mid-30s to promote singers in "Skyline Farms", as part of the "New Deal". Lunsford was invited to the White House by President Roosevelt in 1939, when he performed his music for King George VI. Lunsford died on 4 September 1973. In 1964, the North Carolina fantasy and horror writer Manly Wade Wellman dedicated his book "Who Fears the Devil?" to Lunsford. Wellman's fictional protagonist, Silver John, was an Appalachian folk singer, like Lunsford. Bob Dylan, who listened to the Anthology of American Folk Music, echoed a line from "I Wish I Was a Mole In the Ground." Lunsfrd sang, "'Cause a railroad man they'll kill you when he can / And drink up your blood like wine," which is echoed by Dylan's line "Mona tried to tell me / To stay away from the train line / She said that all the railroad men / Just drink up your blood like wine" on his song "Stuck Inside of Mobile With the Memphis Blues Again", recorded in 1966 for the album Blonde on Blonde. Greil Marcus discussed the meaning of "I Wish I Was a Mole In the ground" both in his liner notes to Bob Dylan and The Band's album, The Basement Tapes (1975), and in his book Lipstick Traces. Lunsford's original recording of "Good Old Mountain Dew" was used as the first advertising theme for the newly created Mountain Dew soda. He sold the rights to the song for a train ticket home.[citation needed] Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.