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Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry 1891-1922 ()

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Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry 1891-1922 - Various Artists
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Track Listing
  1. Mamma's Black Baby Boy
  2. Keep Movin'
  3. Who Broke the Lock
  4. Brother Michael, Won't You Hand Down That Rope
  5. Poor Mourner
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  1. Mamma's Black Baby Boy
  2. Keep Movin'
  3. Who Broke the Lock
  4. Brother Michael, Won't You Hand Down That Rope
  5. Poor Mourner
  6. Who Broke the Lock
  7. Down on the Old Camp Ground
  8. Jerusalem Mornin'
  9. Little Dave, Play on Yo' Harp/Shout All Over God's Heaven
  10. Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
  11. Shout All Over God's Heaven
  12. Good News
  13. The Rain Song
  14. Goodnight Angeline
  15. Experiences in the Show Business
  16. The Whistling Coon
  17. Adam and Eve and de Winter Apple
  18. The Laughing Song
  19. Minstrel First Part, Featuring "The Laughing Song"
  20. Listen to the Mocking Bird
  21. The Laughing Coon
  22. The Whistling Girl
  23. My Little Zulu Babe
  24. Carving the Duck
  25. The Merry Mail Man
  26. Nobody
  27. My Own Story of the Big Fight at Reno, Nevada, July 4, 1910, Pt. 1
  28. Beans, Beans, Beans
  29. Great Camp Meeting
  30. Atlanta Exposition Speech
  31. Old Black Joe
  32. Old Dog Tray
  33. I Surrender All
  34. Swing Along
  35. The Rain Song
  36. Exhortation
  37. Arioso from "Pagliacci" ("Vesti la Guibba")
  38. Go Down Moses]
  39. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child]
  40. Villanelle
  41. Barcarolle
  42. Lament
  43. When de Co'n Pone's Hot/'Possum
  44. Down Home Rag
  45. Bregeiro (Rio Brazilian Maxixe)
  46. On the Shore at Le-Lei-Wei
  47. Down Home Rag
  48. Some Jazz Blues
  49. Sarah from Sahara
  50. The Jazz Dance
  51. Ev'rybody's Crazy 'Bout the Doggone Blues But I'm Happy
  52. Darktown Strutters' Ball
  53. Camp Meeting Blues
  54. St. Louis Blues -- Medley Fox Trot (Intro: Ole Miss Blues)
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Archeophone's two-disc set Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry 1891-1922 has its genesis in a book by author Tim Brooks. Conventional wisdom used to dictate that African-American artists just simply didn't make records until the advent of Mamie Smith's 1920 "Crazy Blues," a view one still may encounter in half-researched puff pieces and on less-informed websites. Brooks' weighty tome takes the date back to 1891, when the commercial recording industry itself was only one year old, and uncovers the ...

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Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry 1891-1922 2006, Archeophone

UPC: 777215109025

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