National Recording Registry Announces New Worthies - Page 3

Peer’s recordings with the great Rodgers included the various “Blue Yodels,” “The Soldier’s Sweetheart,” “Waiting For a Train,” and the rest of the Singing Brakeman’s classic catalog before his death from tuberculosis in ‘33.

    "Ain’t Misbehavin’." Thomas "Fats" Waller. (1929) "Fats" Waller's solo piano recording of his now-classic composition,"Ain't Misbehavin'," preserves the composer's inventive talents as a one of jazz's greatest pianists. Waller developed the "stride" piano tradition to a new level of musical expression.

    "Gregorio Cortez." Trovadores Regionales. (1929)
    This vocal duet with guitar, by Pedro Rocha and Lupe Martinez, is an outstanding example of the "corridos" style of ballad. Reflecting the cultural conflicts between Mexican-Americans and Anglo-Americans in the American Southwest, it describes the heroics of a vaquero falsely accused of murder. The Vocalion recording of "Gregorio Cortez" is representative of the significant recordings being preserved in the Arhoolie Foundation's Strachwitz Frontera Collection of commercially produced Mexican and Mexican-American Recordings at the University of California, Los Angeles.

    Sergei Rachmaninoff. Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor. Sergei Rachmaninoff, piano; Leopold Stokowski, conductor. Philadelphia Orchestra. (1929)
    Sergei Rachmaninoff's piano performances of his own compositions are considered by many to be unparalleled. Rachmaninoff first recorded the complete 2nd piano concerto in 1929. Two of its three movements were released on acoustically recorded discs in 1924.

    "The Suncook Town tragedy." Mabel Wilson Tatro of Springfield, VT. (July 1930)
    This ballad about a New Hampshire tragedy is one of the earliest recordings made by Helen Hartness Flanders. She recorded many similar vernacular story-songs in her extensive documentation of the vernacular music of Vermont. The recording is held by Middlebury College.

    Rosina Cohen oral narrative from the Lorenzo D. Turner Collection. (1932)
    African American linguist Lorenzo D. Turner recorded numerous Gullah dialect stories, songs, sermons, and accounts of slavery during the summers of 1932 and 1933. In this oral narrative, Rosina Cohen recounts her memories of slaves being freed by Yankees on Edisto Island. The recording is significant as a permanent record of a vanishing American regional dialect and as a document of African American cultural history.

    "Stormy Weather." Ethel Waters. (1933)
    Composer and lyricist Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler intended their 1933 song, "Stormy Weather" to be sung by Cab Calloway in a revue at Harlem's Cotton Club. Instead, Ethel Waters performed the song. The singer began her career as a blues singer but became a pioneer jazz singer, adapting her voice to a conversational style in which the meaning of the song lyrics are conveyed with subtle theatricality. Waters's "Stormy Weather" became a best seller, bringing her tremendous exposure as a jazz singer and incomparable interpreter of the American Songbook.

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  • 1 - Temple Stark

    Apr 08, 2005 at 2:15 pm

    Well we didn't all that list since it is at the link.

    To take this much of the text, in this case, it should be pointed out, is OK because it is a 100-percent government release. As in, no copyright.

    I'll have to get back this but very cool. I was going to commend the poster for the link back to other blogcritic articles - before I saw it was EricO. :-)

  • 2 - Eric Olsen

    Apr 08, 2005 at 2:25 pm

    bolded the titles to make it more readable; yes, government source, ripe for the picking, but I did include my own input as well: that which is not indented

  • 3 - DrPat

    Apr 08, 2005 at 2:34 pm

    Well, I thank you! I would never have thought to check the list without this link and the substance posted here. It makes me feel good to realize I have more than a half-dozen of these in my own collection...

  • 4 - Eric Olsen

    Apr 08, 2005 at 2:36 pm

    glad it was helpful, the '02 and '03 lists are worth perusing as well

  • 5 - Eric Berlin

    Apr 08, 2005 at 6:53 pm

    Man, I'd love to check out those Murrow broadcasts from London circa The Blitz. Now that's some history for you.

    Yesterday, I was walking along when the Ewok celebration from Return of the Jedi popped into my iPod. That song transitions into the Star Wars main theme, and I was thinking about how amazing it is, how striking, how original, how utterly... Star Wars it is. If that's not the greatest movie theme ever, I don't know what is.

  • 6 - Eric Olsen

    Apr 08, 2005 at 7:34 pm

    I love the jaunty faux-jazz of the nightclub scene in the original

  • 7 - Eric Berlin

    Apr 08, 2005 at 7:37 pm

    Are you talking about the Cantina scene? That music is fabulous. And I love the blue dude with like elephant-type hands that plays the keyboard-like instrument.

  • 8 - Eric Olsen

    Apr 08, 2005 at 7:39 pm

    yes, cantina, it's been a while

  • 9 - Al Barger

    Apr 09, 2005 at 1:11 am

    Bad as I hate the idea of guvment as art critic, I gotta say this is a pretty sweet list. Jimmie Rodgers, the Beach Boys and Public Enemy all together. Plus some real pickin' fiends from Flatt & Scruggs and the Allman's. What more could you want?

  • 10 - JR

    Apr 09, 2005 at 11:46 am

    Actually, it's the government as a library, maintaining our intellectual infrastructure. These are just the librarians' picks.

  • 11 - Eric Olsen

    Apr 09, 2005 at 2:45 pm

    with nominations from the public

  • 12 - Dave Nalle

    Apr 09, 2005 at 6:29 pm

    I've got 8 of those on my iPod including 2 of the albums. Not bad. Bet you''d never guess which ones I have tho.

    Dave

  • 13 - Beto Mattos

    Aug 04, 2005 at 3:59 pm

    Friends!!!

    Friends are with a lot of affection and pleasure that me same Beto Mattos singer and Brazilian composer request her/it this recording support, because I have a wonderful work of a lot of more success with the bankruptcy of the big ones recording in Brazil am disabled of selling my work, so much that with the great success of my album don't have cd in the market and I seek a recording one or even dealer that can help myself in this process visits my site hears some of the music hope to count with this considered company.

    www.betomattos.art.br
    011 (97342103

  • 14 - Joe Arnold

    Mar 28, 2007 at 2:10 pm

    Mike Johnson's "YODELING 40 YEARS" 2-disc CD
    is now part of the Library of Congress' Recorded Sound collection!
    What's so special about Mike Johnson's release, you ask, since there have been many, many yodeling albums containing 20 to 30 yodeling songs on them! Quite true, but none of them can boast that ALL of the songs on those releases were written by ONE person! Well we can, because all 50 of the yodeling songs on this 2-disc CD album were written & composed by Mike Johnson.
    These songs will take you on a journey from Mike's raw beginnings and development to becoming Country Music's No.1 Black Yodeler. Also debuting on this release are more of Mike's unique wordless yodeling songs like "Black Yodels No. 2 to 7", "Snuggle-Up Yodel", "Wild Horse Yodel", and "Yodel Round Up." Mike has written over 100 yodeling songs.

    On 15 March 2007 we received a confirmation letter from the Library of Congress informing us that Mike Johnson's "Yodeling 40 Years" and "Black Yodel No.1" CDs, and related yodeling material, are now part of the Recorded Sound Reference Center's permanent collection. This is a part of the Library's Motion Picture, Broadcasting and Recorded Sound Division.

    Mike Johnson is also one of the 18 World Famous Yodelers featured on the "Rough Guide To Yodel" CD, singing his ever-popular "Yeah I'm A Cowboy."

    Wanna hear some of those songs, go to www.indiecharts.com/yodeler
    Wanna see Mike in action, go to www.YouTube.com and type the following titles into the Search Engine bar;
    1. Mike Johnson's Tarzan Did! [Mike is 60 years old on this performance]
    2. Mike Johnson's Wild Horse Yodel [and this one too!]
    3. Mike Johnson - Mama Don't Allow No Music Round Here.

    Radio DJs can download Mike Johnson songs at;
    www.airplaydirect.com/music/bands/12725

    Mike's Mother's Day hit "DID YOU HUG YOUR MOTHER TODAY?" is now part of the CD Baby lineup.
    www.cdbaby.com/all/mikejohnson

    Have a good day.
    Joe Arnold, Roughshod Records
    P.O. Box 100933, Arlington, Va. 22210

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