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Buffalo Skinners: The Asch Recordings, Vol. 4
 
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Buffalo Skinners: The Asch Recordings, Vol. 4

Woody Guthrie
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (3 customer reviews) More about this product

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Buffalo Skinners: The Asch Recordings, Vol. 4 + Muleskinner Blues: The Asch Recordings, Vol. 2 + Hard Travelin': The Asch Recordings, Vol. 3
Price For All Three: $50.94

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (April 20, 1999)
  • Original Release Date: April 20, 1999
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Smithsonian Folkways
  • ASIN: B00000IIS3
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #59,032 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Ranger's Command 2:52$0.99 Buy Track
listen  2. Buffalo Skinners 3:18$0.99 Buy Track
listen  3. Billy the Kid 2:02$0.99 Buy Track
listen  4. Cowboy Waltz 2:05$0.99 Buy Track
listen  5. Pretty Boy Floyd 3:01$0.99 Buy Track
listen  6. Along in the Sun and the Rain 2:30$0.99 Buy Track
listen  7. Whoopie Ti Yi Yo, Get Along Little Dogies 2:50$0.99 Buy Track
listen  8. Froggie Went A-Courtin' 3:29$0.99 Buy Track
listen  9. Buffalo Gals 2:36$0.99 Buy Track
listen10. I Ride an Old Paint 2:58$0.99 Buy Track
listen11. Poor Lazurus (Dead or Alive) 2:54$0.99 Buy Track
listen12. Slip Knot 2:33$0.99 Buy Track
listen13. Bad Lee Brown (Cocaine Blues) 2:15$0.99 Buy Track
listen14. Go Tell Aunt Rhodie 2:51$0.99 Buy Track
listen15. Chisholm Trail 2:26$0.99 Buy Track
listen16. Stewball 3:28$0.99 Buy Track
listen17. Wild Cyclone 3:59$0.99 Buy Track
listen18. Railroad Blues 3:34$0.99 Buy Track
listen19. Red River Valley 2:54$0.99 Buy Track
listen20. Fastest of Ponies 4:18$0.99 Buy Track
listen21. Stewball 2:30$0.99 Buy Track
listen22. Snow Deer 2:33$0.99 Buy Track
listen23. When the Curfew Blows 1:45$0.99 Buy Track
listen24. Little Darling 2:15$0.99 Buy Track
listen25. Blowing Down This Old Dusty Road (Going Down the Road Feeling Bad) 3:05$0.99 Buy Track
listen26. The Return of Desert Rat Shorty and Rocky Mountain Slim 2:34$0.99 Buy Track


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
The fourth and final edition of Smithsonian Folkways' Woody Guthrie Asch Recordings series focuses on the folk icon's Western-themed songs. (The companion volumes are This Land is Your Land, Muleskinner Blues, and Hard Travelin'.) Recorded for producer and label head Moses Asch mostly in 1944 and '45, these songs are a mix of adopted traditionals such as "Buffalo Skinners," "Red River Valley," and Buffalo Gals" along with originals, including "Pretty Boy Floyd" (Guthrie's ode to a "modern" outlaw) and "Blowing Down That Old Dusty Road." The Oklahoman is best known for his Dust Bowl ballads and broadsides, but no less an authority than folklorist John A. Lomax considered Guthrie the finest cowboy singer of his generation, and, indeed, his nothing-fancy phrasing suits these tunes to a T. Splendid liner notes make this handsome package all the more valuable for aficionados of Guthrie and the Wild West alike. --Steven Stolder

Product Description
This is the fourth and final volume of the series, The Asch Recordings, drawn from Woody Guthrie's remarkable 1940's sessions for Folkways founder, Moses Asch. Songs about cowboys, outlaws, and other western themes were carefully remastered from the best available sources. Cisco Houston accompanies Guthrie on 10 tracks. Contains 6 previously unreleased tracks. Running time 74 minutes. 40-page booklet includes historical and biographical notes. Compiled by Jeff Place and Guy Logsdon.

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars great music, good recordings, April 26, 2009
the more of Woody's music I hear the more I understand what a national treasure he is. I reccomend all the Asch recordings very highly.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Those Oklahoma Hills Back Home, March 5, 2009
As I have mentioned on early reviews concerning the music of folklorist Woody Guthrie if any of the older generation, the "Generation of `68" needs an introduction to Woody Guthrie then I ask what planet have you been on. Woody's "This Land Is Your Land" is practically a national anthem (and in some quarters is treated as just that). Not as well known, but which now should be rectified with the production of this fourth volume of Woody's work from his most prolific Asch Recording period of the 1940's, is his rather large compilation of Western cowboy-oriented material. This, as the title of this entry notes, reflects those Oklahoma hills back home from whence he came.

Woody as a folklorist, as well as a singer and songwriter, was not interested in the cowboy as created by the movies, especially the one-dimensional one created in the hey day of the cowboy movie in the 1930's, but the real one. The one who spend many a lonely night out on the trail herding cattle to market; who went hungry and dusty for long periods; and, who was nicked up, kicked up and busted up by man and animal alike. And the one who liked his entertainments short and sweet, a little simple music, a lot of simple liquor and plenty of women on those raucous Saturday nights off the range. Not much room in those tales, either for 1930's Hollywood or Woody's for that matter, for the ones portrayed in literature by Larry McMurtry or Cormac McCarthy or on film by "Brokeback Mountain" or those not recognized until much later like those of the black cowboys of the Oklahoma range, but those are stories for another day.

This compilation covers a wide variety of songs that pay honor, justifiably or not, to the norms of the cowboy profession. "Ranger's Command" and "Buffalo Skinners" give a sense of the hard life on the trail and the pitfalls of ignorant cowboys being taken in by primitive agrarian or industrial capitalists or their agents-and, as in the case, of "Buffalo Skinners" the quick and sure retribution when the rank and file cowboy got his dander up. Songs of the trail and its travails get a workout here, as well, in "Little Dogies" and "Chisholm Trail". The loneliness of the life and the vagaries of love in such a transient profession are reflected in "Cowboy Waltz" and "Red River Valley". The theme of 'rough and ready' justice is revealed in songs like "Slipknot" and "Billy The Kid". Overall these twenty- six tracks, several of which also have Woody's long time traveling friend Cisco Houston accompanying him(a man whose career and place in the folk pantheon deserves more attention separately), bring to life the `real' cowboy experience as it was known in Woody's time.

As always with a Smithsonian/Folkways production the CD includes a booklet of copious liner notes that detail, for the folk historian or the novice alike, the history of each song and its genesis. I am always surprised by the insightful detail provided and as much as I know about this milieu always find something new in them. Moreover, the information here provided inevitably details the rather mundane genesis of some very famous songs like "Pretty Boy Floyd".

Note: I want to address separately the subject of one of Woody's most famous songs, and perhaps one of the first of his songs that I remember hearing back in the days, the above-mentioned "Pretty Boy Floyd". I have reviewed Larry McMurtry's novel of the same title elsewhere in this space. That novel details the actual `exploits of this notorious murderer at the tail end of the Old West period (and maybe, really, the post-Old West period). Woody's version reflects a 1930's romantic notion of this primordial outlaw as a modern day Robin Hood. Thus, even a realist like Woody, who could write with compassion and wit about the real sufferings of his beloved Okies and others, got caught up in the myths of the Old West that have sustained generations of Americans, including this reviewer, eagerly looking for a heroic past. For all its false premises though, Woody's "Pretty Boy" has a line that still has a kernel of folk wisdom that is what drew me to the song in the first place-"some men will rob you with a six gun, and some with a fountain pen". Sounds prophetic, right?

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5.0 out of 5 stars An incredible series ends..., March 24, 2008
Few singer songwriters have such an indisputable lineage of influence as Woody Guthrie. Though he didn't invent the topical or protest song, his wavering leathery voice raised it to new heights. A young Bob Dylan's life was changed forever after a friend put on some Guthrie 78s in the early 1960s. Guthrie's legacy traced right through this gruff young poet and impacted twentieth century music like a sledge. Since then, Guthrie has become solid Americana as indispensable as Francis Scott Key, Stephen Foster, or Lead Belly. His "This Land is Your Land" will forever echo as a kind of alternate national anthem. The hundreds of songs he penned examined the nooks and crannies of America, including the dispossessed and the down and out. His years on the road also exposed him to cowboy culture, which this, the final, volume of the Asch recordings focuses on.

Some famous songs appear here: the moving but highly romanticized "Pretty Boy Floyd" and the eerie "Buffalo Skinners." Both became Guthrie staples. Country western standards bookend these classics, such as "Whoopie Ti Yi Yo, Get Along Little Dogies," "I Ride an Old Paint," "Froggie Went A-Courtin'," and "Chisholm Trail" ("Come a ti yi yippee yippee yea"). Raucous party songs evoke the spirit, and spirits, of the day. "Buffalo Gals" and "Go Tell Aunt Rhody" would get a modern dance floor quaking. They groove. "Along in the Sun and the Rain" provides a haunting musical analogy to Guthrie's own life. He sings about shaking a lot of hands, kissing a lot of lips, and getting the job done. "Slipknot" speaks out against lynching in classic mocking protest music style. Even a few heart tuggers, "Red River Valley," "Little Darling," and "Snow Deer" get thrown in here and there to showcase Guthrie's shocking range. The disc ends with a satirical skit by Guthrie and Cisco Houston as stammering radio peddlers ("business is business you know"). Like previous volumes, everything included was recorded in the mid to late 1940's.

The four volume Asch recordings showcase Guthrie's importance like no other set. Anyone searching for a good sampling of this fascinating and significant American artist should begin with this collection. Not only do the CD booklets contain voluminous song notes and citations, they also tell the story of Guthrie. Add the music and the entire phenomenon unfolds. Guthrie continues to influence American music and attitudes to this day. Each new generation rediscovers the message. This keeps his songs ringing out from concert halls, coffee houses, radio stations, mp3s, and street corners. Wherever one finds America, one finds Woody Guthrie. This remains true.
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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Buffalo Skinners: The Asch Recordings, Vol. 4
41% buy the item featured on this page:
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