Angola Prison Worksongs

Angola Prison Worksongs

by ANGOLA PRISON WORKSONGS / VARIO
Angola Prison Worksongs

Angola Prison Worksongs

by ANGOLA PRISON WORKSONGS / VARIO

CD

$17.99 
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Overview

Angola Prison Worksongs is a harrowing disc to listen to, not so much for the music as because of the circumstances of the recording. These field recordings from Angola prison, circa 1959, are more valuable as a social-historical document than for purely musical value. These work songs are sung by prisoners to the accompaniment of jackhammers, axes, gravel rakes, shovels, and washboards, while the liner notes give a first-person account of a particularly shameful epoch in American penal history. Not exactly "whistle while you work." The liner notes' attempt to connect these songs with the current crop of prison inmate rap discs seems a bit of a stretch, though, but you do learn the historical context of songs like "John Henry," and "Stewball" (which showed up on a Willie Dixon-Memphis Slim disc). The obvious connection is with blues, and it does fit. There are two adaptations of Eddie Boyd's "Five Long Years" here, with one by Odea Matthews as she scrubs clothes on a washboard, while the other has more local color -- it's not a great leap to hear echoes of Mardi Gras Indian chants in "I Got A Hurtin'," and especially "Let Your Hammer Ring." There are a cappella vocal exchanges, call-and-response group efforts, the moans on "Alberta Let Your Bangs Grow Long," but it's a disc that pretty much renders musical judgments superfluous. You could say Matthews is the best singer, since her "Something Within Me" is also very nice. The most jarring piece is Murray Macon singing "Jesus Cares," in a light, sweet voice with a stamping press metallically clattering behind him like the forerunner of industrial gospel (if that sound exists; and if it doesn't, here's a roots source to invent it from), or the assembly line hammer-down of Captain Beefheart's "Hard Workin' Man" from the Blue Collar soundtrack. But what does saying that mean in this context? The four CD-bonus tracks are anti-climactic, and listening to Prison Worksongs will bring you down in the sense that it makes you reflect on ugly, unpleasant truths about aspects of U.S. history. It'll certainly cure any cavalier attitude towards blues lyrics, or apparently innocent Americana imagery, because you'll start thinking twice about how, and where, and why those phrases may have originated. ~ Don Snowden

Product Details

Release Date: 10/21/1997
Label: Arhoolie
UPC: 0096297044827
Rank: 137458

Tracks

  1. Berta  -  Big Louisiana  -  Traditional
  2. Take This Hammer  -  Traditional  - Guitar Welch
  3. Stewball  -  Traditional  -  Rev. Rogers  -  Big Louisiana  - Jose Smith
  4. Five Long Years for One Man  - Odea Mathews  -  Traditional
  5. Alberta Let Your Bangs Grow Long  -  Traditional  - Guitar Welch
  6. I Had Five Long Years  - James Russell  -  Traditional
  7. Early in the Mornin'  -  Traditional  - Johnny Butler
  8. All Teamed up in Angola's Mule Lot  - Roosevelt Charles  -  Traditional
  9. I Got a Hurtin' in My Right Side  - Willy Rafus  -  Traditional
  10. Let Your Hammer Ring  -  Big Louisiana  - Arthur Davis  - Willy Rafus  -  Traditional  - Willy Rafus  - Arthur Davis
  11. Cleaning This Highway  - Willy Rafus  -  Traditional
  12. John Henry  -  Traditional  - Guitar Welch
  13. Something Within Me  - Odea Mathews  -  Traditional
  14. Jesus Cares  -  Traditional  - Murray Macon
  15. Working on the Levee, Pt. 1  -  Traditional  - Emanuel Dunn
  16. Working on the Levee, Pt. 2  -  Traditional  - Emanuel Dunn
  17. Take This Hammer  -  Big Louisiana  -  Traditional
  18. Pickin' Cotton All Day Long  -  Traditional  - Creola Scott  - Ceola Scott
  19. My Mule "Grey"  - Emanuel Dunn

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Arthur Davis   Primary Artist,Primary Artist
Jose Smith   Primary Artist
Big Louisiana   Primary Artist
Willy Rafus   Primary Artist,Primary Artist
Ceola Scott   Primary Artist
Johnny Butler   Primary Artist
Murray Macon   Primary Artist
Emanuel Dunn   Primary Artist
Rev. Rogers   Primary Artist
Creola Scott   Primary Artist
Guitar Welch   Primary Artist
Odea Mathews   Primary Artist
James Russell   Primary Artist
Roosevelt Charles   Primary Artist

Technical Credits

Guitar Welch   Performer
Harry Oster   Editing,Engineer,Producer,Photography
Chris Strachwitz   Executive Producer
Wayne Pope   Cover Design
Roosevelt Charles   Performer
Traditional   Composer
James Russell   Performer
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