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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Deranged And Delightful - A Classic Resurfaces, September 29, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: 1 & 2 (Audio CD)
I'd been searching for a rumored import CD release of this infamous double album for some time. My worn out vinyl copies had long before disappeared into the closet of some greedy roomate with good taste, but the memory of the infectious hop-head hoedown music of Stampfel and Weber was fresh and my lust to hear "Junko Partner" and "Euphoria" again was undiminished. When tried Amazon one day recently on a lark, my shock at seeing this release nearly cost me my new trousers...

This first incarnation of the Holy Modal Rounders played basic old-time fiddle/guitar/banjo music...a mix of traditionals and originals. Except that they did it loaded on a diverse pharmacopaeia, the lyrics of the traditionals often mutated to reflect their chemical tastes, and they did it in 1962-63!!!

What can I say...hope I haven't scared anyone off. It's great fun, highly musical, and a little profound (all while being very silly). A _Long_ overdue rerelease with a couple of previously unreleased tracks to boot. THANK YOU!!

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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rooster chews tobacco/and the hen uses snuff, January 26, 2000
This review is from: 1 & 2 (Audio CD)
Back in the day (and a good many years ago it was) the Holy Modal Rounders came a-barreling over the chunkity dirt road of 'traditional' music like a shanty Model T rewired to run on heavily-cut street meth and driven by a large-breasted, cigar-smoking beatnik chick who counted off the miles by means of a reg'lar stream of cuss-words the likes of which hain't been heard since the days of Walt Whitman... Stampfel and Weber rode shotgun, plinkety-plunking and cackling their old-timey cackles. Thank god these two albums have FINALLY been given a proper reissue. Irreverent, speedfreek'd to the nines, pulling your "high lonesome" and your "low down dawg" strings at the same time like a pair of demented puppetmasters, this never fails to make me wet my pants with laughter.
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 35+ years laters and still awesome!, June 17, 2000
By 
Jac Polsgrove (Tucson, Arizona) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 1 & 2 (Audio CD)
It's about time some audio wizard had the smarts to combine these two seminal albums. At a time when folk was trying too hard to be taken as "art" and not "folk music," the Holy Modal Rounders put a little psychedelic spin (listen closely to Hesitation Blues, the first time the word "psychedelic" -- sorry Robert Johnson, but you'd probably approve -- was supposedly used in lyrics) and added some fun to folk music. Some songs are still in artists' catalogues. For proof, check out Leftover Salmon, whose third CD was "Euphoria" (album title and song), and this is the source. Anyone into Americana that slams into cajun/folk/hillbilly/Piedmont-style blues/old-timey/Fuzzy Mountain String Band with space music should check this compilation out. The audio quality is sterling! The legacy of the Rounders (whose name graces the Mass. record label, Rounder) cannot be estimated. Roots music wouldn't be the same today without the contributions heard on this. Absolutely, absolutely, essential. Five stars only because I can't give it 10!
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Yes, there is a Santa Claus, May 18, 2000
By 
Paul Galioni "pgalioni" (Susanville/Nevada City, CA, USofA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: 1 & 2 (Audio CD)
And he is Euphoric. Just in case if you are wondering if these guys are still as good as they were when your inside voices were a-squealing and a-squawking -- and you were floating around on a belladonna cloud -- they are. One of the best renditions of Cuckoo I know -- and Reuben's Train: -- I do believe Great God I'ma coming Down -- Oh, me, Oh Lordy my, I do believe Great God that I'ma coming down. -- And in better quality than you even thought you were hearing -- even at those times you thought were really funner than things could ever get. One of my all time favorites. These guys are just about the only thing that remains of the 'old time mountain' music that preceded bluegrass and country. This is one of the best parodies of old time mountain that I have ever heard -- You owe it to yourself and to your kids to get this CD set -- you will rock out and your kids will know one of the many reasons you are so, well, unbalanced.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Like a time capsule, April 11, 2008
By 
Elliot Knapp (Seattle, Washington United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: 1 & 2 (Audio CD)
This excellently-priced 2-albums-on-1-CD compilation is like a dream come true; it combines the first two albums of folk-reimaginers the Holy Modal Rounders, with the tracks resequenced according to the Rounders' preference and adding two bonus tracks. These guys are great--if you're a fan of old folk like the kind found on the landmark collection Anthology Of American Folk Music (Edited By Harry Smith), you're the kind of person who will absolutely love this.

In general, the type of music on these two albums is acoustic folk played and sung by two vocalists, a fiddle and a guitar or banjo. True, the vocals are TOTALLY unorthodox--both singers affect old-timey, goofy, and nasally voices (that could be a bit grating to casual listeners) but are really unique and a load of fun, if you're willing to accept a bit of weirdness in the mix. The Rounders play traditional folk songs (usual suspects like "The Cuckoo," "Mole In the Ground," "Same Old Man," and "Sail Away, Ladies" are present, though re-arranged and tweaked by the Rounders in the spirit of folk music), but they also play originals and contemporary folk songs, and great ones at that.

"Blues In the Bottle" introduces them both quite well, with zany harmonies and a classic guitar/fiddle combo, the song could have been 100 years old, but was written by the Rounders. Some other great newer songs include the hilarious "Hesitating Blues," the sly satire of "Mr. Spaceman," and the broke-down spirit of "Junko Partner." It's impossible to listen to this music without picking up some of the spirit of fun, recklessness, and crazy smart-aleck antics that the Rounders conjure up in spades.

In many ways, I think of these guys as sort of an American Incredible String Band, twisting and reshaping the folk music traditions of their country to produce songs that equally recall folk music that could well be hundreds of years old, but are also urgently current and fresh. Of course, it's not a perfect comparison, since the Incredible String Band had a more mystical bent and were more interested in breaking down the barriers of songwriting structure and expectations, while the Rounders seem more content to keep the ball rolling--but a similar spirit and eccentricity is certainly shared. This is partly why I'm not so sure I agree with the band members' claims in the liner notes, which basically say the Holy Modal Rounders play music in a way that no one else in the world ever has. It's true that nobody else in the 60's folk revival took quite as anarchic or willfully crazy approach to the old songs (most were earnestly reverent), but the Rounders weren't the first or only group or songwriters to revive old folk songs or write similar new songs in the same idiom. Rather, it's more like they were two of the few 60's musicians to truly participate in the folk tradition by not only playing, but also altering, tweaking, and "telephoning" the songs into versions of their own design, which is what the ever-shifting folk tradition is all about. Bob Dylan's wholesale appropriation of classic folk melodies and chord progressions as the basis for his own songs is another example of true folk tradition participation that comes to mind. Anyway, folk music theory and history discussion aside, this is great, eccentric folk that never broke beyond cult status--if you're here reading this, you'll probably enjoy the delightfully heady brew that the Rounders concocted in the 60's for us to continue enjoying today.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Music, May 19, 2007
By 
Stephen Fry (Averill Park, NY) - See all my reviews
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The previous reviews of these recordings properly give them, in the aggregate, a 5-star rating. However, these reviews do not emphasize sufficiently that the Rounders' renditions of songs, although often wacky, speed-fueled and surrealistic, demonstrate a deep underlying love for, mastery of and creative expansion upon the traditional music and musical styles upon which they were based. The amount of time and energy they spent learning this older music from old recordings is apparent. I don't think they were really "making fun" of this music as much as they were "carrying it to a new place". They were a part of the traditional "folk music process" - taking music that came before, changing it some and making it more "current", and using older musical styles to make new creations. Many of the performances on these recordings were, in this respect, electrifyingly brilliant. No matter how you describe it, this CD contains great music and is at the top of my "must hear" list. By the way, for you bluegrass lovers, the material on this CD is not, by any stretch of the imagination, bluegrass (as some of the earlier reviews stated), but you should buy it anyhow.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The spirit behind "The Fug's First Album", January 26, 2000
By A Customer
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This review is from: 1 & 2 (Audio CD)
Worth every penny and then some. Bent enlivening music for lovers of oldtime acoustic styles. Eccentric vocals.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Something touched me in this music, May 29, 2009
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This review is from: 1 & 2 (Audio CD)
About a year ago I reviewed this product here, and gave it a 2-star review, saying it was entertaining, but the music was thin, and I didn't like what I thought the intention was.

Since then this has become one of my favorite records, and I completely forgot I made that review until I saw it today. And I have to say I have seen something in their music I have completely missed before.

Their music, while really silly and freakish (a word I use with the best intention), it has a side to it that is incredibly deep and very pure. These two musicians have created a sound that comes from the heart of America, and they have completely put there heart and souls into it. The songs tell stories that are happy, sad, thoughtful, fun, and captivating--and basically cover the whole range of what American life was about--and is about.

This isn't a very well written review, I know, but I felt I had to state how I felt about this album, especially since I didn't see how good it was before.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My idea of fun music, August 28, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: 1 & 2 (Audio CD)
The music will get your toes to tapping and smiles will abound as one listens to the words. I enjoyed it so much in just one day that I ordered another selection the same day as I received this one.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars At last! At last!, January 22, 2000
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This review is from: 1 & 2 (Audio CD)
I've been hitting the music sites for years hoping the Holy Modal Rounders would finally surface on cd. I was first infected with their music in college, where they quickly took over my dorm. It's foot-tapping, squeaky and whimsical and soon you'll know all the words (I had 'Euphoria' played at my wedding). My cd classics collection is now complete.
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1 & 2
1 & 2 by The Holy Modal Rounders (Audio CD - 1999)
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