DVD Review: Ballads, Blues and Bluegrass

History, including musical history, has so much power to enhance our present. Often, people imagine what it would be like to have a time machine and be able to travel back to certain times or events and experience them. We do not have time machines, but we are blessed to be able to experience history through audio, film and photographs, even if sometimes that history is in black and white.

Ballads, Blues and Bluegrass gives music lovers and those interested in musical history a wonderful opportunity to travel back in time to 1961, to the home of famed folk song collector Alan Lomax for a party with great blues, bluegrass and folk musicians. Even though the film is only 25 minutes long, it is packed with important performers, great music,and interesting bits of conversation. The bonus feature about the making of the film provides even more fascinating information from producer John Cohen (of the Lost City Ramblers) and cinematographer George Pickow, in interviews from 2010.

In the film, we are treated to beautiful black and white images and surprisingly fine sound quality. Performers include Clarence Ashley accompanied by Doc Watson, Memphis Slim, Willie Dixon, Jean Ritchie, Ramblin' Jack Elliot, Ernie Marrs, Roscoe Holcombe, and Peter LaFarge. What a wide range of musical styles!

Jean Ritchie sings in a pure, clear voice that reflects the Celtic heritage of Kentucky mountain music. Roscoe Holcombe performs in the classic high, lonesome bluegrass style. Willie Dixon and Memphis Slim provide authentic blues. Peter LaFarge tears at the heart with his song "Ira Hayes," which opened my eyes to Native American issues as a child when I heard Johnny Cash perform it. All of the other performers reflect the burgeoning folk music boom and the genuine diversity of the folk music movement.

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Article Author: Rhetta Akamatsu

Rhetta Akamatsu is an author and online journalist who writes about music, books, movies, and more. She is the author of The Irish Slaves: Slavery, Indentured Servitude and Contract Labor Among Irish Immigrants, Haunted Marietta, T'ain't Nobody's …

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