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Recapturing the Banjo
 
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Recapturing the Banjo

Otis TaylorMP3 Download
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

Price: $8.99
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  • Original Release Date: February 5, 2008
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
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  Song Title Time Price  
Play   1. Ran So Hard the Sun Went Down 3:52 $0.99 Buy Track  - Ran So Hard the Sun Went Down
Play   2. Prophets' Mission 3:34 $0.99 Buy Track  - Prophets' Mission
Play   3. Absinthe 4:22 $0.99 Buy Track  - Absinthe
Play   4. Live Your Life 3:38 $0.99 Buy Track  - Live Your Life
Play   5. Walk Right In 4:01 $0.99 Buy Track  - Walk Right In
Play   6. Bow-Legged Charlie 4:25 $0.99 Buy Track  - Bow-Legged Charlie
Play   7. Hey Joe 4:33 $0.99 Buy Track  - Hey Joe
Play   8. Hey Liza Jane 2:44 $0.99 Buy Track  - Hey Liza Jane
Play   9. Five Hundred Roses 4:14 $0.99 Buy Track  - Five Hundred Roses
Play 10. Les Oignons 3:26 $0.99 Buy Track  - Les Oignons
Play 11. Deep Blue Sea 2:21 $0.99 Buy Track  - Deep Blue Sea
Play 12. Simple Mind 4:23 $0.99 Buy Track  - Simple Mind
Play 13. Ten Million Slaves 4:10 $0.99 Buy Track  - Ten Million Slaves
Play 14. The Way It Goes 2:56 $0.99 Buy Track  - The Way It Goes
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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
5 star:
 (12)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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43 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Black Banjo alive and living in the present and the future!, March 25, 2008
By 
Tony Thomas (SUNNY ISLES BEACH, FL USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Recapturing the Banjo (Audio CD)
The rest of this review really speaks to the musicians other than the Great Don Vappie. Vappie's music reflects the tradition of four and six-string banjo and guitar playing that remained among Creoles in New Orleans as well as on the musics shared between African American Creoles in New Orleans with Afro-Caribbean Creoles on islands like Haiti, Martinique, and Guadaloupe. Vappie who was once one of the leading Jazz and R & B recording session guitarists and Bassists returned to the four and six string banjos played by the great banjoist of Jazz. In doing so Vappie is playing very authentic roots music in fact rooted in the very neighborhood in New Orleans he grew up in, yet he has become a world-class music.

Recapturing the Banjo is not chiefly about repeating or even elaborating on the traditional banjo styles created by Black traditional five-string banjoists or the great Jazz banjoists of the 20s and 1930s. Rather, it is about using the banjo for new styles and new music of African Americans today. Very few of the recordings here follow the traditional finger or frailing styles used by the last generations of Black banjoists who can be found on field recordings like Black Banjo Songsters or Black Appalachia. This terrain has been explored by traditionally oriented Black string bands like the Carolina Chocolate Drops or the Ebony Hillbillies or individual players like Sparkey Rucker,
Sule Greg Wilson, Rex Ellis, or my humble self.

Rather, the artists here use the banjo for the mostly blues related music that they have all been creating for years. All of these musicians are not new to the banjo. Otis has told me that the banjo was his first instrument and he plays his other instruments, the guitar and the mandolin, the way he plays the banjo, not the standard ways. There is a famous picture printed in the Denver Post in the early 1960s on his web site. A younger slimmer Otis Taylor is seen riding a unicycle and playing the banjo on his way to high school! You can find some great traditional banjo playing on older CDs by Corey Harris and Alvin Youngblood Hart.

What we have hear is blues and trance music and ballads influenced by this. What we have here is the creative use of amplification both in recording the banjo and in use of electric banjo and banjos with electric pickups. We have new rhythms for new times.

The importance of this is that in African American popular and folk culture, the arrival of Blues and the forms of pop and folk Ragtime and Jazz that were associated with the Blues was what led to the demise of the five-string banjo among Black folk. For reasons I will elaborate in a book forthcoming from Duke UP called _Lost in the Mix__ (I am just writing one chapter) the actual five string banjos available at the time the Blues rolled in at the turn of the century were not as suitable for Blues playing as the inexpesnive steel-stringed guitar that had become available to southern folk just as the blues spread at the turn of the 19th to the 20th Century.

The contemporary experience of Blues as a kind of caberet or concert music obscures the fact that Blues was a dance music. Blues singers like Robert Johnson, Charlie Patton, or Lightnin' Hopkins, may have played in the street at times, but they made their money playing for dancers in juke joints and at house parties. Rather than the two or three minute Blues performances we get from recordings and reproductions of recordings, these actual Blues performances were often fifteen, twenty, or even thirty minute dance numbers.

The five-string banjo was not condusive to playing the rhythm that Black folks danced these blues to. So, it retreated to smaller enclaves where the older music persisted, especially in the Piedmont and Appalachians of the Upper South. Even there, Black five string banjoists played the Blues, but blues that moved to the rhythm of the old dance movements. Very much of the revival of traditional Black banjo playing has been playing these old dance tunes and rhythms.

Yet, we live in a world whose musical culture has been transformed by the Blues and the musics it has spawned. In its Africanness, the five-string banjo provides a great platform for playing blues. The dance demands of a 1900 juke joint and the limitation of gut stringed banjos are gone. Steel stringed tone ringed banjos and modern amplication create different possibilities for the banjo. Blues rhythm has become more complex. These musicians expert in the Blues and in the Black banjo tradition, reverse history and bring back the Blues to the Banjo and the Banjo to the Blues.

The result is powerful music that returns the banjo to the arsnel of comtemporary African American music. It lives, not as a recreation of a lost past, but as a living expression of the present
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Authentic-sounding roots music, February 21, 2008
This review is from: Recapturing the Banjo (Audio CD)
As I listened to this, I thought of one of Steve Martin's old routines, back when he was a silly, unknown, stand-up comedian ca. 1976. He used to pull out a banjo and get "happy feet." No matter how glum the subject at hand, the banjo would give him ... "happy feet."

Yes, when you think of "Duelling Banjos" from "Deliverance," or the Flatt & Scruggs or Doc Watson flat-picking style, such as the theme from "The Beverly Hillbillies," or a zillion versions of "Orange Blossom Special," you get Martin's point.

But this c.d. isn't about that. This is Otis Taylor (tripling as producer and arranger), with other banjoists Alvin Youngblood Hart, Guy Davis, Corey Harris and Don Vappie, creating (for the most part) the "Negro experience" of the 19th Century. I say "for the most part"; the ubiquitous Keb' Mo' appears, with his set-ender "The Way It Goes." Just a guess here, but I doubt that the "Negro experience of the 19th Century" had anything to do with road rage!

As such, this c.d. is dark. No flashiness here. And songs - a mix of originals, "traditional folk songs," and folks songs such as "Walk Right In" (originally made famous in the early 1960's by The Rooftop Singers, but in fact, written by an African American banjo player, Gus Cannon, in the early 20th century about a kind housewife who invites a peddler in to her house) - which are quite dark. We have songs about a man running from the Ku Klux Klan, about a "scary drunk" on absinthe, about a Black cowboy who shoots in self-defense and knows he will get no justice, about a drowning man, and about a White sheriff who refuses to investigate the disappearance of a Black woman. No "happy feet" in this recording!

But it all sounds authentic. This recording reminds me of the best of John Fahey. Nothing flashy - just real. A stark recapture of times past, and uncomfortable times at that. But times past that always need to be remembered. And if we didn't know that the banjo was part of those times before, we certainly know it now. This c.d. got a 5-star review in "Down Beat," which gives maybe 3 5-star reviews a year. I think the historic and sociological significance of the album is the reason for that. RC
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great adaptation of the banjo to traditional and original music, March 2, 2008
This review is from: Recapturing the Banjo (Audio CD)
This is a really nice adaptation of the banjo to the misic. I especially liked the version of the traditional "Deep Blue Sea,"the timely "That's the Way it Goes," and the bluesy-folky-funky style of some of the songs. Not your traditional banjo recording, but that's said in a good way. The banjo is a very versatile instrument that can blend with all kinds of music and be used with finess, and this album lets that be known.
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