Montag, 4. Oktober 2010

Leadbelly (Huddie Ledbetter) - Two 1940 Radio Shows (with Woody Guthrie)



UNAIRED RADIO SHOW (AUDITION)
Narrated by WOODY GUTHRIE
LEADBELLY (HUDDIE LEDBETTER), vocal/guitar
New York, NY, June 19, 1940 
(Total Length: 14:04)

01 INTRO
02 Ain't Goin' Down To The Well No More        
03 Went Out On The Mountain
04 Whoa Back, Buck
05 Worried Blues
06 You Can't Lose Me, Cholly (Charlie)
07 Boll Weevil

DOWNLOAD MP3 (11.32MB)










"FOLK SONGS OF AMERICA"
LEADBELLY (HUDDIE LEDBETTER) & WOODY GUTHRIE
Conceived, scripted and produced by HENRIETTA YURCHENKO
WNYC, New York, NY, 1940 (exact date unknown)

(Total Length: 24:51)
 
01 INTRO (over "Goodnight, Irene")
02 You Can't Lose Me, Cholly
(announced as "I Went Rowin' And My Gal Went Too")
03 Frankie And Albert
04 INTRO OF WOODY GUTHRIE
05 John Hardy
06 Jesse James
(END OF TRANSCRIPTION DISC)
07 Jesse James
(CONTINUED ON NEW DISC)
08 WOODY on "Grapes of Wrath" (Motion Picture), John Steinbeck's book, his own song "Tom Joad"
09 Tom Joad
10 Boll Weevil


DOWNLOAD MP3 (22.76 MB)

NOTE:
This is an edited version (some info added to ID3 tags) of an mp3 also downloadable from archive.org -- it was originally "dug up" in 2007 at the WNYC archives by Eli Smith and re-broadcast on his and Henrietta Yurchenko's Down Home Radio Show.

An extended version (total length: 62:58) with detailed comments by Henrietta Yurchenko introducing/closing the original broadcast (highly recommended) is available/downloadable from the Down Home Radio Show website.

Interview with Alan Lomax about Leadbelly (Henrietta Yurchenko)
"From the Yurchenco Archives: On today’s show I air an interview Henrietta Yurchenco did with Alan Lomax about Leadbelly.  I’m not sure when this interview was conducted (there was no date on the tape), but I think it was done in the mid 1960’s for one of her broadcasts on WNYC.  Alan Lomax gives a really excellent talk about Leadbelly, about his music and about when he and his father John Lomax first encountered Leadbelly at the Angola State Penitentiary in Louisiana.  After the interview I play some of the very first field recordings that the Lomax’s made of Leadbelly when they met him that day in 1933, and when they returned to record him again in 1934.  Thanks go to Nathan Salsburg of the Alan Lomax Archive for supplying me with those recordings."
(Eli Smith, Down Home Radio Show)

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