Folk Songs of the Hills (Back Home/Songs of the Coal Miners)

RELEASE
1947
LABEL
Bear Family Records

Album Review

In 1946, Capitol approached Travis with the idea of cutting a folk album, and although he wasn't an especially folk-oriented artist, he agreed to give it a go. Although the resulting 1947 record (released as a 78 rpm album) didn't sell well, it was a respectable effort performed by Travis on solo acoustic guitar. Folksy introductions embellish the songs, which include standbys like "John Henry" and "Nine Pound Hammer." Travis added a few songs of his own penned in the folk style, and one of these, "Sixteen Tons," would prove to be his most famous composition, reaching number one when it was covered by Tennessee Ernie Ford in the 1950s. The CD reissue combines the eight songs from the 1947 release with four songs from the Capitol Electrical Transciption series that were added to the batch when the album was reissued as Back Home in 1957; it also adds a song from the 1946 sessions that was previously unreleased in the U.S., "This World Is Not My Home."
Richie Unterberger, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Nine Pound Hammer
  2. That's All
  3. John Bolin
  4. Muskrat
  5. Dark as a Dungeon
  6. John Henry
  7. Sixteen Tons
  8. Possum Up a Simmon Tree
  9. I Am a Pilgrim
  10. Over by Number Nine
  11. Barbara Allen
  12. Lost John
  13. Black Gold
  14. The Harlan County Boys
  15. Pay Day Comes Too Slow
  16. The Browder Explosion
  17. Bloody Brethitt County
  18. Here's to the Operator, Boys
  19. The Miner's Wife
  20. The Courtship of Second Cousin Claude
  21. Miner's Strawberries
  22. Paw Walked Behind Us with a Carbide Lamp
  23. Preacher Lane
  24. Dear Old Halifax