Ernest Stoneman

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
The Fate of Talmadge Osborne 00:00 Tools
The Titanic 00:00 Tools
Kenney Wagner's Surrender 00:00 Tools
The Story of the Mighty Mississippi 00:00 Tools
All I Got's Gone 02:37 Tools
Hallelujah Side 00:00 Tools
Stoney's Waltz 00:00 Tools
Sweet Sunny South 00:00 Tools
Wreck Of Number Nine 00:00 Tools
Marching Through Georgia 00:00 Tools
The Wreck Of The '97 00:00 Tools
Lonesome Road Blues 00:00 Tools
Springtime Again Little Annie 00:00 Tools
Great Reaping Day 00:00 Tools
Bile 'em Cabbage Down 00:00 Tools
Broke Down Section Hand 00:00 Tools
Going Down the Valley 00:00 Tools
Wreck Of The Old 97 00:00 Tools
Bully Of The Town (ARC-Bwy 8056, 7225-1) 00:00 Tools
Stoney’s Waltz 00:00 Tools
Dying Girl's Farewell 00:00 Tools
I Remember Calvary 00:00 Tools
The Old Hickory Cane 00:00 Tools
No More Goodbyes 00:00 Tools
Tell Mother I will Meet her 00:00 Tools
The Fate of the Talmadge Osborne 00:00 Tools
I am Resolved 00:00 Tools
Bile ‘em Cabbage Down 00:00 Tools
Sweeping Through the Gates 00:00 Tools
There's a Light Lit Up in Galilee 00:00 Tools
The Poor Tramp Has To Live 00:00 Tools
I Know My Name is There 00:00 Tools
The Sinless Summerland 00:00 Tools
The Great Reaping Day 00:00 Tools
John Hardy 00:00 Tools
Hop Light Ladies 00:00 Tools
New River Train 00:00 Tools
Careless Love 00:00 Tools
The Fate Of Talmedge Osborn 00:00 Tools
Midnight on the Stormy Deep 00:00 Tools
He Is Coming After Me 00:00 Tools
Down to Jordan and be Saved 00:00 Tools
Kenny Wagner's Surrender 00:00 Tools
Remember The Poor Tramp Has To Live 00:00 Tools
All I Got’s Gone 00:00 Tools
The Boat Of Doom 00:00 Tools
Down On The Banks Of The Ohio 00:00 Tools
Long Eared Mule 00:00 Tools
All I've Got's Gone 00:00 Tools
Sinking of the Titanic 00:00 Tools
The Story of the Fire Blues 00:00 Tools
The Story of the Mighty Mississippi (Recorded 1927) 00:00 Tools
Sally Goodin 00:00 Tools
Pass Around The Bottle 00:00 Tools
The Prisoner's Lament 00:00 Tools
Mountaineer's Courtship 00:00 Tools
He is Coming with Me 00:00 Tools
Sweet Bunch Of Violets 00:00 Tools
The Spanish Merchant's Daughter 00:00 Tools
Raging Sea, How It Roars 00:00 Tools
The Eastbound Train 00:00 Tools
Round Town Gals 00:00 Tools
Goodbye, Dear Old Stepstone 00:00 Tools
Uncle Sam And The Kaiser 00:00 Tools
I'm Alone, All Alone 00:00 Tools
Stoney's Waltz (Folk) 00:00 Tools
It's Sinful To Flirt 00:00 Tools
There'll Come A Time 00:00 Tools
The Unlucky Road To Washington 00:00 Tools
Goodbye Dear Old Stepstone 00:00 Tools
Sally Goodwin 00:00 Tools
Bile Them Cabbage Down 00:00 Tools
In the Shadow of the Pines 00:00 Tools
When the Work's All Done This Fall 00:00 Tools
When the Springtime Comes Again 00:00 Tools
The Old Maid And The Burglar 00:00 Tools
When The Redeemed Are Gathering In 00:00 Tools
We Parted At The River 00:00 Tools
He Was Nailed To The Cross For Me 00:00 Tools
The Mountaineer's Courtship 00:00 Tools
Bile 'em Cabbage Down (Folk) 00:00 Tools
Watchman Ring That Bell 00:00 Tools
Sourwood Mountain 00:00 Tools
All I Got's Gone (Folk) 00:00 Tools
All Go Hungry Hash House 00:00 Tools
Springtime Again Little Annie (Folk) 00:00 Tools
Bully of the Town 00:00 Tools
Down to Jordan & Be Saved 00:00 Tools
The Pretty Mohea 00:00 Tools
Unlucky Road to Washington 00:00 Tools
Ernest Stoneman - The Old Hickory Cane 00:00 Tools
My Mother and My Sweetheart 00:00 Tools
The Lightning Express 00:00 Tools
Marching Through Georgia (Folk) 00:00 Tools
Ramblin' Reckless Hobo 00:00 Tools
Great Reaping Day (Folk) 00:00 Tools
The Old Hickory Cane (Recorded 1927) 00:00 Tools
Say, Darling, Say 00:00 Tools
Hallelujah Side (Folk) 00:00 Tools
Wreck of Number Nine (Folk) 00:00 Tools
Stoneyes Waltz 00:00 Tools
All Go Hungry Has House 00:00 Tools
The Orphan Girl 00:00 Tools
Wild Bill Jones 00:00 Tools
Bad Companions 00:00 Tools
Wreck of the C & O 00:00 Tools
John Henry 00:00 Tools
The Raging Sea, How It Roars 00:00 Tools
West Virginia Highway 00:00 Tools
Fallen by the Wayside 00:00 Tools
Ernest Stoneman - No More Goodbyes 00:00 Tools
The Hallelujah Side 00:00 Tools
The Resurrection 00:00 Tools
Are You Angry with Me, Darling 00:00 Tools
My Pretty Snow Dear 00:00 Tools
The Burial Of Wild Bill 00:00 Tools
Hang John Brown 00:00 Tools
The Titanic - Ernest Stoneman 00:00 Tools
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Ernest Van "Pop" Stoneman (May 25, 1893 – June 14, 1968) ranked among the prominent recording artists of country music's first commercial decade. Born in a log cabin in Monarat (Iron Ridge), Carroll County, Virginia, near what would later become Galax, Stoneman was left motherless at age three and was raised by his father and three musically inclined cousins, who taught him the instrumental and vocal traditions of Blue Ridge mountain culture. He became a singer and songwriter, and proficient musician on the guitar, autoharp, harmonica, clawhammer banjo, and jaw harp. When he married Hattie Frost in November 1918, he entered another musically involved family. He and Hattie had 23 children, 13 of whom survived to adulthood: Eddie L. (deceased), I. Grace (deceased), John C.(deceased), Patsy I., J. William (Billy) (deceased), Gene A. (deceased), Dean C. (deceased), C. Scott (deceased), Donna L., O. James (deceased), Veronica L. (Roni), Van H. (deceased). Stoneman worked at a variety of jobs, in mines, mills, but mostly carpentry, and played music for his own enjoyment and that of his neighbors, but when he heard a Henry Whitter record in 1924, he determined to better it and changed his life as well. Stoneman went to New York in September 1924 and cut two songs for the Okeh Records label. The record was shelved and he had to return for another recording session in January 1925. Ralph Peer directed him through several sessions for Okeh and Victor, and he freelanced on other labels such as Edison, Gennett and Paramount Records. In 1926, he added family musicians to his group for a full string band sound. In July and August 1927, Stoneman helped Peer conduct the legendary Bristol sessions that led to the discovery of the Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers. He continued to be active in recording through 1929. Between 1925 and 1929 Stoneman recorded more than 200 songs. Falling on hard times during the Depression, the Stonemans and their nine surviving children moved to the Washington, D.C. area in 1932 after losing their home and most of their possessions. There they had four more children and struggled through dire poverty, with Stoneman taking whatever work he could find and trying to revive his musical career. In 1941, Stoneman bought a lot in Carmody Hills, Maryland, where he built a shack for the family and eventually obtained a more or less regular job at the Naval Gun Factory. In 1947, the Stoneman Family won a talent contest at Constitution Hall that gave them six months' exposure on local television. In 1956, Pop won $10,000 on the NBC-TV quiz show The Big Surprise and sang on the show as well. That same year, the Blue Grass Champs, a group composed largely of his children, were winners on the CBS-TV program Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts, and Mike Seeger recorded Pop and Hattie for Folkways. Stoneman retired from labor and the Champs went full-time to become the Stonemans. They did albums for Starday in 1962 and 1963 and in 1964, went to Texas and California, cutting an album for World Pacific, playing at Disneyland, on some network shows and at several folk festivals. In 1965, they went to Nashville, where they signed a contract with MGM Records and started a syndicated TV show. They received CMA's "Vocal Group of the Year" in 1967. Pop Stoneman died in 1968 at age 75. He is interred in the Mount Olivet Cemetery in Nashville. On February 12, 2008, Ernest "Pop" Stoneman was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame and in 2009 he and his wife Hattie Frost Stoneman were enshrined in the Gennett Records Walk of Fame. The first major retrospective of his musical career "Ernest Stoneman: The Unsung Father of Country Music 1925-1934" (5 String Productions) was issued in 2008 by the Grammy award winning reissue team of Christopher C. King and Henry Sapoznik and was nominated for a 2009 Grammy award for "Best Album Notes." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.