Thursday, December 10, 2009

*In Folklorist Harry Smith’s House-"Ommie Wise" — G. B. Grayson (1929)

Click on the title to link to a presentation of the song listed in the headline.

The year 2009 has turned into something a year of review of the folk revival of the 1960s. In November I featured a posting of many of the episodes (via “YouTube”) of Pete Seeger’s classic folk television show from the 1960s, “Rainbow Quest”. I propose to do the same here to end out the year with as many of the selections from Harry Smith’s seminal “Anthology Of American Folk Music,” in one place, as I was able to find material for, either lyrics or "YouTube" performances (not necessarily by the original performer). This is down at the roots, for sure.


THE OLD, WEIRD AMERICA

My exploration of Harry Smith’s Anthology “Ommie Wise” by G.B. Grayson

Grayson & Whitter’s World


“Ommie Wise” is a solo performance by Gillian Banmon Grayson (1888-1930), a blind fiddler from East Tennessee who sang this murder ballad along with his fiddle and gaves us one of the most haunting song on the Anthology. This is the only track that Grayson recorded alone during his recording career as a duet with Henry Whitter, a guitar player who was one of the first “hillbilly” to record. Together, they recorded many songs that would became “standards” of folk and bluegrass: Handsome Molly, Train 45 (Ruben), Little Maggie, Tom Dooley, Lee Highway, etc…

-On this page, you’ll read the full biography of Grayson & Whitter -I’ve selected 20 sides of the duo, with all their famous songs.

TRACK LIST:

1.Nobody’s darling

2.I’ll never be yours (Banks of the Ohio)

3.Handsome Molly

4.Train 45

5.He’s coming to us dead

6.Rose Conley

7.Sally Gooden

8.My mind is to marry

9.Cluck old hen

10.Old Jimmy Sutton

11.Joking Henry

12.The nine-pound hammer

13.Short life of trouble

14.I’ve always been a rambler

15.Where are you going Alice?

16.Little Maggie

17.On the banks of old Tennessee

18.Tom Dooley

19.Going down the Lee highway

20.I saw a man at the close of day


The Ommie Wise Variations
This american murder ballad was based on true events that happened two centuries ago in North Carolina. A certain Jonathan Lewis was arrested for the murder of Naomi Wise but was acquitted soon after. But everybody was conviced that he did murder her and a folk ballad carried the memory of the event until today. There’s of course a lot of variants from one performer to another in the text of the ballad, from the names of the protagonists to the little details that makes the story.

-Go and read this article, which gives also the lyrics of the song

-There’s also a wikipedia page on the subject

-I’ve compiled 20 performances of the song, some old, some new, as usual. Sometimes the melody is sung in a minor mode, sometimes in a major mode, many sang it unaccompanied and many used the 5-string banjo … “Tragic romance” is a bluegrass variant that takes the story and melody of “Omie Wise” and made a new song out of it.

Hope you enjoy…

TRACK LIST:

1.Ommie Wise, G.B. Grayson, from the Anthology Of American Folk Music

2.Naomi Wise, Clarence “Tom” Ashley, from “Greenback Dollar 1929-1933″

3.Little Norma, Mrs Ben Daugherty, from “Ozark Folksongs”

4.Little Omie, Harrison Burnett, from the Max Hunter Folksong Collection

5.Omie Wise, Paul Clayton, from “Folk Ballads of the English-Speaking World”

6.Little Omie Wise (Live), Doc Watson, from “The Essential Doc Watson”

7.Omie Wise, Doug and Jack Wallin, from “Family Songs and Stories from the North Carolina Mountains”

8.Omie Wise, Pentangle, from “A Maid That’s Deep In Love”

9.Little Lonie, Almeda Riddle, from Ozark Folksongs

10.Omie Wise, Tim Eriksen, from “Every Sound Below”

11.Tragic Romance, Kilby Snow with Hazel Dickens & Mike Seeger , from “Masters of Old-Time Country Autoharp”


12.Tragic Romance, The Lilly Brothers, from “Early Recordings”

13.Omie Wise, Mason Brown, from “When Humans Walked the Earth”

14.Naomia Wise, Bill Baker, from the Max Hunter Folksong Collection

15.Omie Wise, Okkervile River, from “Julie Doiron & Okerville River”

16.Little Omie Wise, Dock Boggs, from “His Folkways Years 1963-1968 “

17.Little Omie Wise, Addie Graham, from the Digital Library of Appalachia

18.Omie Wise, Roscoe Holcomb, from “The High Lonesome Sound”

19.Omie Wise, Dolly Greer, from “The Doc Watson Family Tradition”

20.Omie Wise, Mountain Home, from “Mountain Home”

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