Roscoe Holcomb pt 2

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 56

  • @unclejoe7373
    @unclejoe7373 Год назад +3

    These videos need to be preserved in any way possible. This mans voice and the voices of all the people on folkseattle's channel are the history and voices of music in America.

  • @DonMegaphone
    @DonMegaphone 10 лет назад +35

    What people have got to realize is that up til the 70s, poor people didn't have televisions. Hell where I grew up, we didn't have a private phone line for a long time (party line). To entertain themselves, people performed music for each other. That's how a coal miner like Mr. Holcomb became a virtuoso.
    Natural talent + lots of practice on the front porch on countless muggy Kentucky evenings after supper.

    • @DaWizard11
      @DaWizard11 4 года назад +2

      lance uppercut Shut the fuck up, there’s plenty of white culture

    • @Appalachian_trail_mix
      @Appalachian_trail_mix 4 года назад +1

      He worked construction mang said it in part 1. Built bridges

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 4 года назад +1

      @@lanceuppercut2013 What the heck do you think you just listened to? Some of those hill songs are still very close to the ones in Scotland that they are derived from.

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 4 года назад +3

      This is true. And the folks I hung around with in rural East Tennessee in 1976 still had no TV.

    • @bluegrassman3040
      @bluegrassman3040 2 месяца назад

      @@Appalachian_trail_mixin the beginning of part 1, it said he worked in the coal mines, and construction later on.

  • @writerrad
    @writerrad 2 года назад +7

    Eric Claption in the 60s and early 70s used to say he felt Roscoe was his favorite singer or sometimes his favorite country singer. Roscoe was an accomplished musicians on both the banjo and the guitar which he often played in banjo tunings as in this video. He could also play the fiddle and harmonica. While he received invitations from folk music and country audiences to do paid performances, he shyed away from the urging of his friend Ralph Stanley who thought Roscoe should become a professional performer. He had injuries that prevented him from working in the coal mines he had once worked, and did handy work and received public assistance. Relatively limited payments he received from folk music performances like these ones filmed in Seattle often meant the "public assistance" he received from the state of Kentucky was sometimes stopped. Sad that this great artist had such a difficult life and even though he has inspired many musicians and singers, and regular people he had such a difficult live and was in fact punished financially for the small fees he could earn from folk clubs.

    • @garyhighley9022
      @garyhighley9022 2 года назад +3

      My whole family came from.the same area as Roscoe..and back in his day, a lot of folks probably thought he was a sinner for singing on camera.. especially if it were songs not in the church ...making it easier on their conceienc to take his money relief. Things have changed...but not that much.

    • @MENFUSSMIKE
      @MENFUSSMIKE 3 месяца назад

      ​@@garyhighley9022good observation.

  • @MrThehearn
    @MrThehearn 11 лет назад +6

    mr holcomb is simply too soulful for words. what a voice.

  • @Philobeddoe12
    @Philobeddoe12 11 лет назад +9

    He comes from the Scots-Irish tradition. This sound is straight out of the Highlands of Scotland. He mentions the Old Regular Baptist Church is the church from which the hymn comes, My Grandfather was a preacher in that church. I didn't go to that church but did here them sing occasionally. I grew up about 40 miles South of where this gentleman is from..

    • @ProfesserLuigi
      @ProfesserLuigi 4 года назад +1

      I dare you to find a native Scottish song that sounds this bluesy.

  • @pogolswood
    @pogolswood 11 лет назад +2

    Just a privilege to hear real music, with such pure simplicity, yet conveying so much.

  • @nickdunne364
    @nickdunne364 6 лет назад +3

    Thesis Sean Nos singing like in West of Ireland spine chilling. LOVE!!!

    • @dankealey8141
      @dankealey8141 3 года назад

      i was just thinking the same thing, my nana used to sing me a lullaby when i was a kid 'Caoineadh na dTrí Mhuire', doesn't sound too far off

  • @marli288
    @marli288 4 года назад +1

    RESPECT, TOTAL CREDIT WHEN CREDIT IS DUE.!! PARTY LINE OUR HOUSE HAD ONE FOR YEARS, 3or4 channels on the TV, the 5th channel was listening to my dad play GEE-TA, always loved to watch an listen to channel 5 the best.. R.I.P dad, say hello to Mr, Roscoe Holcomb for me,

  • @floydyopz
    @floydyopz 12 лет назад +3

    Amazing to hear him keeping the ancient songs alive. What a voice! Incidentally, 'Bull of the Woods' is an album by The 13th Floor Elevators and Red Man is a rapper...

  • @ayahuascayage
    @ayahuascayage 13 лет назад +4

    Like lots of old-time Southerners, he often had a plug of Bull of the Woods or Red Man carefully placed just below the gum line, something you used to see all the time in The South. On second thought, it looks more like he's dippin' snuff, maybe Beech Nut. Probably helped him hit those soulful notes.

    • @dangerousideas5356
      @dangerousideas5356 7 месяцев назад

      he doesn't spit once in the video, he just has a weird jaw. either that or an iron stomach.

  • @stephensevenpounder5447
    @stephensevenpounder5447 11 лет назад +1

    I could listen to the roots of Rock N Roll everynight,,, what an inspiration,,, my music has new direction,,, I am Amazed

  • @Garcin
    @Garcin 12 лет назад +4

    The baptist hymn he sings really moves me. It has the ancient touch of world religion, the call to prayer and the weighty potency of history, culture, tradition and heritage bleeds through with a very raw emotion, religious or no, speaking as an atheist.

  • @joshuathomson8925
    @joshuathomson8925 8 лет назад +13

    Better than most pop singers today...

  • @dandegenhardt6366
    @dandegenhardt6366 5 лет назад +2

    And he was only performing once a month! Amazing natural talent.

  • @zyruemusic
    @zyruemusic 11 лет назад +13

    THAT'S SOME STRAIGHT UP GOSPEL BLUES!!!! I KNOW THE BLUES WHEN I HEAR IT....EXCELLENT...EXCELLENT...EXCELLENT!!!!! THIS WAS A BAD BOY!!!! RIP

  • @TheSkurzy9ball
    @TheSkurzy9ball 12 лет назад +2

    Man ol Rosco was Doc Watson b4 Doc was Doc!!!! Awesome!!! itd take a lifetime to play that easy!!!

  • @guitarHero1885
    @guitarHero1885 8 лет назад

    this guy is superb. just brilliant.

  • @friendofbeaver6636
    @friendofbeaver6636 3 года назад +2

    It's a shame that '60''s TV presented only mockeries of this rich culture.

  • @SirCoughsalot
    @SirCoughsalot 12 лет назад +1

    Pretty sure it's open D. Try DADF#AD. If that doesn't work the tunings he used are usually in the liner notes of his albums, which you can download free on the Folkways records website.

  • @MsMickeyness
    @MsMickeyness 13 лет назад

    genius :-) love this man. thanks for posting, i dont have this one

  • @kamrade1
    @kamrade1 12 лет назад +1

    TUVA THROAT SINGERS CAN KEEP a note long too, Enrico Caruse didn't travel in the Rockefeller/Keith circuit. Too tall!

  • @TheBopShop1
    @TheBopShop1 Год назад

    Beautiful

  • @wesleyfransen317
    @wesleyfransen317 11 лет назад +2

    Open G, with the low E string all the way up to G. GGDGBD

  • @lydiajohnson8244
    @lydiajohnson8244 7 лет назад +1

    Which hymn book is Mr. Holcomb using on this video? When he says the old Regular Baptist Faith (or church) generally, that means the Primitive Baptist faith. But I have their hymn book from 1887, and 'Village Churchyard' isn't in it. Ralph Stanley also got it from the hymn book, and I can't seem to identify the right manuscript. If anyone could identify it, I'd be so grateful.

    • @simonvarney5261
      @simonvarney5261 4 года назад +3

      No old regular baptist are different than primitive baptist, these little hymn books are privately made by church or association.

    • @thatmckenzie
      @thatmckenzie 3 года назад +1

      The New Baptist Song Book: A Collection of Good Hymns, Songs and Ballads
      Collected by Foster Ratliff, published by J.H. Ratliff, Jr.

  • @spacemanswan2162
    @spacemanswan2162 Год назад +1

    somebody know which song Is the second one? I can t find the lyrics

  • @stephensevenpounder5447
    @stephensevenpounder5447 11 лет назад

    sounds a bit like Led Zep at the beginning , Black Country Woman , a bit?

  • @Garcin
    @Garcin 12 лет назад

    Thank you!

  • @jocsant.r.7277
    @jocsant.r.7277 8 лет назад +1

    le pone el tata

  • @dengie75
    @dengie75 12 лет назад

    wow

  • @TheRussianPhenom
    @TheRussianPhenom 12 лет назад

    What's the song he sings at the beginning?

  • @TheRussianPhenom
    @TheRussianPhenom 12 лет назад

    Can anyone name the song at 5:29 please??? Really interested in it!

    • @simonvarney5261
      @simonvarney5261 4 года назад +1

      The village churchyard, and old regular baptist hymm

  • @georgejones1189
    @georgejones1189 10 лет назад

    Does anyone know the name of the hymn he sings?