Burnett & Rutherford

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Willie Moore 00:00 Tools
All Night Long Blues 00:00 Tools
Ladies On The Steamboat 00:00 Tools
Curley-Headed Woman 00:00 Tools
Pearl Bryan 00:00 Tools
Lost John 00:00 Tools
Billy In The Low Ground 00:00 Tools
Little Stream of Whiskey 00:00 Tools
I'll Be with You When the Roses Bloom Again 00:00 Tools
Rambling Reckless Hobo 00:00 Tools
Ramblin' Reckless Hobo 00:00 Tools
A Short Life of Trouble 00:00 Tools
Weeping Willow Tree 00:00 Tools
Blackberry Blossoms 00:00 Tools
Billy In The Lowground 00:00 Tools
She Is a Flower from the Fields of Alabama 00:00 Tools
Going Around the World 00:00 Tools
Going Across the Sea 00:00 Tools
My Sweetheart In Tennessee 00:00 Tools
Are You Happy Or Lonesome 00:00 Tools
Cumberland Gap 00:00 Tools
Sleeping Lulu 00:00 Tools
Knoxville Rag 00:00 Tools
Under The Pale Moonlight 00:00 Tools
bonnie blue waltz 00:00 Tools
Grandma' Rag 00:00 Tools
I'l lBe With You When The Roses Bloom Again 00:00 Tools
Short Life Of Trouble 00:00 Tools
Ladies On The Steam Boat 00:00 Tools
Grandma'S Rag 00:00 Tools
Flower from the field of Alabama 00:00 Tools
Shes A Flower From The Fields Of Alabama 00:00 Tools
Hesitation Blues (Curley Head Woman) 00:00 Tools
Curly Headed Woman 00:00 Tools
Pearl Bryan (Recorded 1927) 00:00 Tools
Little Stream of Whiskey (Recorded 1926) 00:00 Tools
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“Dick Burnett and Leonard Rutherford travelled throughout the South from 1914 to 1950, spreading their good music, collecting good songs, and building a reputation for musical excitement that still holds today throughout the region. People from widely different geographic areas remember the singing of “Blind Burnett,” the “blind minstrel of Monticello,” and fiddling Leonard Rutherford, “one of the smoothest fiddlers ever to take a bow.” Sure, the old-time music of Burnett & Rutherford makes us travel in time, and it’s tempting to imagine the duo singing and playing in the streets of the mountain towns, while people are buck-dancing in rhythm with the banjo and fiddle. Even after 80 years,even played on a modern computer lap-top, their music sounds so exciting and immediate, joyful and honest all at once. Their version of “Willie Moore” is perhaps one my favorite performance on the Anthology… -On this page, you’ll read the full article that i started to quote in the beginning by the great country music historian Charles Wolfe. -and here, you’ll read more about the life and music of the duet -Dick Burnett claimed that he wrote the famous appallachian song “Man of constant sorrow” in 1913 but never recorded it. The Willie Moore Variations “Willie Moore” is the first real vernacular american folk ballad of the Anthology. The theme and verses of the song are very alike british broadside balladry but versions of the song could only be found in America. This tragic love tale has very mysterious verses: Why Willie Moore was called a “king”, did “sweet Annie” killed herself because she could not marry him, or Willie maybe killed her, why did Willie went away to Montreal and who is the mysterious J.R.D who “composed” the song? See http://oldweirdamerica.wordpress.com/2009/01/21/10-willie-moore-by-burnett-rutherford/ Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.