Dock Boggs: Pretty Polly (1966)

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
  • Preceded by Dock's recollections of making his first phonograph records in New York City in 1927. Shot by Alan Lomax and crew at the Protective Club, 596 Thames St., in Newport, Rhode Island, during the 1966 Newport Folk Festival. For more information about Lomax and his collections, visit culturalequity.org. [N8R06]

Комментарии • 120

  • @markmorey9581
    @markmorey9581 7 месяцев назад +19

    I can't even believe I'm watching Dock Boggs sing and play.Thank you.

  • @evansgate
    @evansgate 5 лет назад +120

    love his humble "some people don't like the way I play but you can't expect everyone to like it". if only every musician had this perspective, Dock Boggs played in that style because he liked it, simple as that

    • @Conbonicle
      @Conbonicle Год назад +7

      I like his style the best

    • @Skinnyorangemusic
      @Skinnyorangemusic 8 месяцев назад +7

      I relate. I love playing guitar and I love strumming. Some people think it's too basic but I like how it sounds and I'm having fun!

    • @mitchgann1469
      @mitchgann1469 6 месяцев назад +1

      Clifton Hicks

    • @__Tazzzo
      @__Tazzzo 3 дня назад

      Man is a legend. Plenty of folk love it and will for centuries to come.

  • @justforever96
    @justforever96 Год назад +9

    I live how he considers himself a coal miner who also plays music. You just don't see that anymore. And the way he says "i never lost a finger" like he had unusual good fortune in that way says volumes about the work he was doing. Of course he may not be thinking specifically of amputation, just injuries that left the finger unusable for playing with, but it still speaks to the hard and dangerous nature of the work they were doing.

  • @jackwardrop4994
    @jackwardrop4994 Год назад +20

    “Some people likes the way I play and some doesn’t” oh what gorgeous way to talk

  • @davidthedustyhampton690
    @davidthedustyhampton690 3 года назад +43

    I'm so glad we live in a time we can see video of people who made records in the 20s such as Doc Boggs and Clarence Ashley, even though it wasn't until the folk revival of the 60s the fact that we have videos such as these is nothing short of a miracle of history

    • @craiglammers7177
      @craiglammers7177 2 года назад +3

      Though there's video of Jimmie Rodgers from 1931

  • @AlanLomaxArchive
    @AlanLomaxArchive  7 лет назад +80

    Apologies to everyone who interacted with the earlier upload; it was removed to make room for this superior version!

    • @mattwhite4960
      @mattwhite4960 6 лет назад +8

      Alan Lomax Archive is one of the best things on this planet. Thank you

  • @artgalleryandcraftsbydeb9135
    @artgalleryandcraftsbydeb9135 27 дней назад

    My Grandmother was born in 1906, and raised in Leatherwood Kentucky. She used to sing Pretty Polly to us. This was in the early 60’s to '70s. I had looked for this song in that version for some time now. This just popped up on my feed. I know you are watching Grandma. Perhaps she knew this gentleman. I hope my grandma knows that I loved it when she sang this. She would strum on the banjo, although she was not a great player, but to us kids, we loved it. Her voice was great. I can still hear her sing this, so close to what he was doing here. God Bless.

  • @emilbecker8970
    @emilbecker8970 Год назад +19

    Doc boggs playing is so haunting and deep. My favourite style of picking there is

  • @TheFolkRevivalProject
    @TheFolkRevivalProject 3 года назад +40

    This song is over 300 years old, and probably describes true events that took place in England.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pretty_Polly_(ballad)

    • @justforever96
      @justforever96 Год назад +1

      Most old ballads are based on real events aren't they?

    • @BryanClark-gk6ie
      @BryanClark-gk6ie 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@justforever96
      Yes, you should listen to the song' stand to the side and let it blow over your shoulder, a real event that happened and the solution to avoid it from happening again.

  • @BlueGrassPeteF
    @BlueGrassPeteF 7 лет назад +55

    After listening to Dock's 78s for years, it is delightful to be able to see him! His music has been a big influence on me. Thanks to Alan Lomax for filming Dock, and to Mike Seeger for all his recording work with him,

  • @marinevet7273
    @marinevet7273 2 года назад +4

    A lot of his Boggs family kinfolk from Wise County VA. “His cousin lines” moved to Washington State to work in the logging industry between 1930s-1960s. The Bogg’s I have known , have similar Boggs family face features and all I have known have been kind and quiet spoken folks

  • @darkmysterytemple
    @darkmysterytemple 5 лет назад +16

    Nice to see his hand positioning. Thanks. In my top three musicians of all time.

  • @jeffmead2935
    @jeffmead2935 3 года назад +12

    there really ought to be a main stream documentary on the Alan Lomax Archive....after all they give us Simon Cowell and lots of other pish too

  • @thomsmith9394
    @thomsmith9394 2 года назад +6

    Absolutely mind blow to actually see him play this. Can’t believe I’ve never seen this footage before.

  • @timthetoolpool
    @timthetoolpool 2 года назад +12

    His voice is hypnotic.

  • @fastheartmartvideos
    @fastheartmartvideos 5 лет назад +33

    God, I love Dock Boggs!

  • @fuchsiasaville
    @fuchsiasaville Год назад +3

    First time I've seen this. Serious song .Good though legendary.

  • @Arze555
    @Arze555 6 лет назад +16

    I been listening to doc boggs since I was 15...... never seen a video of him. Awesome. Thanks for uploading!!!

  • @Skinnyorangemusic
    @Skinnyorangemusic 8 месяцев назад +1

    After a life of hard work he played the most beautiful music

  • @TheGreyGhost_of43rd
    @TheGreyGhost_of43rd Год назад +4

    Absolutely perfect

  • @jerrywilliams5042
    @jerrywilliams5042 2 года назад +4

    I love this so much.

  • @xwillnotbetelevisedx
    @xwillnotbetelevisedx 7 лет назад +12

    Thank you so very much for uploading this and all the other videos in this channel. This world would be very sad without the often overlooked work of Mr. Lomax.

  • @jco1610
    @jco1610 3 месяца назад +1

    His music strikes the soul.

  • @michaelgarrity6090
    @michaelgarrity6090 9 месяцев назад

    I love hearing this old timey mountain sound music. I like his sound. The best ever rendition of Pretty Polly was the one recorded for the PBS special "Down From the Mountain Tour" show thst took place at The Ryman with Patty Lovelace and the late Dr. Raloh Stanley. Patty held that one note till sbe was almost out of breath. Thank goodness that was recoded for both an album and television.

  • @MrDanielHewitt
    @MrDanielHewitt 2 года назад +3

    Priceless.

  • @edmonddsilva7069
    @edmonddsilva7069 Год назад +1

    Excellent. Many Thanks.

  • @smokeymcpot69
    @smokeymcpot69 3 года назад +5

    That's straight moonshine he's drinking lol

  • @wanderingsemantics7266
    @wanderingsemantics7266 7 лет назад +4

    thank you very much alan Dock is one of my favorites rip dock you are a legend thanks

  • @booflaboof
    @booflaboof 5 лет назад +2

    thank you so much for taking the time out of your day for archiving this

  • @n.d.w8504
    @n.d.w8504 2 года назад +3

    Haunting

  • @andreabordoni2665
    @andreabordoni2665 2 года назад +2

    Love his music, I find it being hipnotic

  • @carlosfelipe.rodriguez
    @carlosfelipe.rodriguez 7 лет назад +13

    Well, I must thank Frank Underwood because he made me search for original versions of this track and I found this jewel. And thank you for uploading this video, which is a micro documentary because of the story he shares.

  • @GentlemanLife-Beyotch
    @GentlemanLife-Beyotch 2 года назад +1

    A fellow Virginian. Wish I could have met him.

  • @terrik9510
    @terrik9510 Год назад

    I love and greatly appreciate this mans music.

  • @johnculhane438
    @johnculhane438 4 года назад +6

    high lonesome sound manifested.

  • @famousoriginal7971
    @famousoriginal7971 2 года назад +5

    Every 3 minute banjo song has a 3 minute introduction.

    • @justforever96
      @justforever96 Год назад +2

      Well, they don't. Not sure why would say that. This is the first one I have seen. Every old ballad could probably use one to put it into context and explain its history and significance, and it would be totally worth the time. They don't usually though. In this case they specifically brought him here to archive recordings of his folk songs and his own history, and that's what the audience came to hear. So if you don't like it go find one of the modern recordings. Or use your forward button.

  • @tobieTyler6007
    @tobieTyler6007 3 года назад +2

    Can't understand all the words
    But I remember a song pretty polly
    In grade school along time ago
    Can't remember the words though SUCKS getting old but when my time is done maybe an angel will teach me the words

    • @waylonhurt958
      @waylonhurt958 3 года назад +1

      I doubt they taught you a song about stabbing a women

  • @nadiazahroon6573
    @nadiazahroon6573 5 лет назад +13

    We are related , my mom is a Bogggs.

    • @christopherhelton6999
      @christopherhelton6999 4 года назад

      Whereabouts are your people from? Mine are from the Menifee/Bath/Magoffin/Rowan County area.

    • @nadiazahroon6573
      @nadiazahroon6573 4 года назад +2

      Christopher Helton my mom was born Norton, Wise county. Her dad and his parents came from Kentucky. My great grandparents were farmers on my grandmothers side by the name of Peters.

  • @markosterman419
    @markosterman419 2 месяца назад

    An amazing document. Interesting that he looks like he’s playing an expensive Gibson banjo. I would have expected an old open back banjo.

  • @HEADSUPBERKELEY
    @HEADSUPBERKELEY 7 лет назад +6

    So blessed to hear one of my fa vo rites Thank you

  • @freddrog4689
    @freddrog4689 4 года назад +3

    Lets go back in time and never come back

  • @billbaggins1688
    @billbaggins1688 3 месяца назад

    Gold.

  • @fernandoramos5587
    @fernandoramos5587 2 года назад +3

    Muy bueno!!!

  • @archer1949
    @archer1949 2 года назад +1

    This is one of the original Child Ballads, I believe.

  • @adolfryan1930
    @adolfryan1930 3 года назад +8

    Lyrics: I used to be a rambler, I stayed around this town
    I used to be a rambler, I stayed around in town
    I courted Pretty Polly and the beauty has never been found
    (break)
    Oh where is Pretty Polly, oh yonder she stands
    Oh where is Pretty Polly, oh yonder she stands
    With rings on her fingers and lily-white hands
    Pretty Polly, Pretty Polly come take a walk with me
    Pretty Polly, Pretty Polly come take a walk with me
    When we get married some pleasure to see
    (break)
    He led her over hills and valleys so deep
    He led her over hills and valleys so deep
    At last Pretty Polly, she began to weep
    Oh Willie oh Willie I'm 'fraid of your way
    Willie oh Willie I'm 'fraid of your way
    Inclined to ramble and lead me astray
    (break)
    Pretty Polly, Pretty Polly you guessin' about right
    Pretty Polly, Pretty Polly you guessin' about right
    I dug on your grave two-thirds of last night
    They went on a piece farther and what did they spy?
    Went on up (?) farther and what did they spy?
    A new-dug grave and a spade lying by
    (break)
    She threw her arms around him and began for to weep
    She threw her arms around him and began for to weep
    At last Pretty Polly, she fell asleep
    He threw the dirt over her, and turned away to go
    Threw the dirt over her, and turned away to go
    Down to the river where the deep water flow

    • @gregorybowe9383
      @gregorybowe9383 2 года назад +1

      Thank you for doing this.

    • @ElisonJackson
      @ElisonJackson 2 года назад +2

      'such beauty's never been found' is the correct lyric. changes the context a bit lol

  • @nudge2626
    @nudge2626 7 лет назад +5

    Amazing!

  • @Jm01394
    @Jm01394 7 лет назад +1

    Thank you also!

  • @StephenS-2024
    @StephenS-2024 5 лет назад +4

    This is the way i like banjo best.

  • @blackkoganinja5093
    @blackkoganinja5093 6 лет назад +1

    So great

  • @smitchell2339
    @smitchell2339 7 лет назад +3

    What a treasure

  • @marksgraybeal
    @marksgraybeal 3 года назад +1

    Dad said a recording of his budies inlisted.intertained as Hill/Mountian music. he played mandalin an other guys frum library jam. Burl Ives played he said. but head liner was maybe Jumbilee singers maybe ? wish cud get copy frum us library congress if found date of presidential dinner for soldiers.in dc. durin war. Dad took mandalin on Utah beach for a week. day, till had hands near blown off. Brother plays bluegrass now, i heard Skruggs review in college concert.

  • @neooneart
    @neooneart 5 лет назад +1

    what a LEGEND.

  • @AN-jz3px
    @AN-jz3px 7 лет назад +2

    thank you!!!!!!!!!!

  • @HEADSUPBERKELEY
    @HEADSUPBERKELEY 4 года назад

    THANKS

  • @heladioa.c1390
    @heladioa.c1390 5 лет назад +2

    Brabo alen!😊

  • @dmillk
    @dmillk 3 года назад +1

    Legend

  • @Crumpleshadow
    @Crumpleshadow 7 лет назад +19

    Song starts at 3:09

    • @TheIkaraCult
      @TheIkaraCult 5 лет назад +13

      it does but it's a very interesting introduction!

  • @goodun2974
    @goodun2974 3 года назад +4

    David Lindley plays a version of this with altered lyrics concluding the song, so that Polly gets revenge and escapes. I also heard Lindley and Ry Cooder play Boggs' "Oh Death" at the Newport Folk Festival some years ago.

    • @RedDragon-dm5sz
      @RedDragon-dm5sz 3 года назад +1

      Every word in your comment screams "douchebag". Bugger David Lindley and Ry Cooder...poser crap.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 3 года назад +2

      @@RedDragon-dm5sz , ladies and gents, a folk "purist" has entered the chat. Apparently we must listen only to the original version as it was sung nearly 400 years ago. Modern guitars and other instruments not invented yet are hereby disallowed, as are tweed jackets with elbow patches. How dreary. You must be great fun at parties, especially if somebody plays Mumford & Sons....

    • @RedDragon-dm5sz
      @RedDragon-dm5sz 3 года назад

      @@goodun2974 No, just a guy who hates shallow, phony music, played by hipster losers.

    • @rattyfingers8621
      @rattyfingers8621 2 года назад +1

      @@RedDragon-dm5sz Sonoma co California is full of them. Oof, I live here. Home of guess who else, DL. Good musician, but not the real deal by any stretch.

  • @easypeasy8479
    @easypeasy8479 6 дней назад

    Im a miner. 41 years...god bless this man. Im 10 in and feeling it. #msha not osha

  • @blahblah9260
    @blahblah9260 4 года назад +3

    This would make an amazing metal song it wouldn't be as good as the dock himself but I know some of yall can hear that shit

  • @quintork4100
    @quintork4100 3 года назад

    what a man xxx

  • @kennyguitarallen5662
    @kennyguitarallen5662 4 года назад +2

    loved it,just saying

  • @nicholasspence155
    @nicholasspence155 7 лет назад +1

    YES

  • @robinhood480
    @robinhood480 2 года назад +2

    He sounds just like Clifton Hicks.

    • @fivebrosstopmos
      @fivebrosstopmos Год назад +1

      They definitely have similar styles.

    • @justforever96
      @justforever96 Год назад

      Clifton Hicks sounds like him you mean. And I don't think so. The playing you mean? Because the voices are pretty different. But I guarantee this guy is an influence on Hicks. That's what he does, he is about heritage.

  • @KanedaSyndrome
    @KanedaSyndrome 6 лет назад +5

    3:09

  • @DrVonChilla
    @DrVonChilla Год назад

    DOCK BOGGS LIVES

  • @SwinginPig
    @SwinginPig 6 лет назад +6

    Bobby Dylan ripped off the melody of this song for his 1962 track "The Ballad Of Hollis Brown."

    • @romin5035
      @romin5035 6 лет назад +14

      Swingin’ Pig love Dylan but he ripped off a few traditional artists, Doc and Jean Ritchie for sure. but in all fairness, these traditional ballads floated around for decades, even centuries and musicians would swap out melodies and lyrics and combine them with other songs, etc. So I guess what Dylan does was part of the natural evolution of the music.

    • @SwinginPig
      @SwinginPig 6 лет назад +3

      Yeah, I completely agree. And he did make a lot of songs considerably "better" as well.

    • @gluce
      @gluce 5 лет назад +10

      Pretty hard to "steal" songs like this. They've been floating around in form or another for a couple hundred years at least, sometimes longer.

  • @bonscotto
    @bonscotto 9 месяцев назад

    ❤Moran un mito

  • @ThomasKrutmann
    @ThomasKrutmann 5 лет назад +1

    big!

  • @MrMonkey9911
    @MrMonkey9911 3 года назад +2

    Ho lee cow. The best.

  • @tomb613
    @tomb613 7 лет назад +1

    PrettyPolly!!

  • @MrJuan566
    @MrJuan566 3 года назад +1

    Aguante dock boggs

  • @MrMelodynelson
    @MrMelodynelson 4 года назад +2

    start at 03:09

  • @fuchsiasaville
    @fuchsiasaville Год назад

    👍 😊

  • @heladioa.c1390
    @heladioa.c1390 5 лет назад

    Alan perdon!

  • @gherat
    @gherat 6 месяцев назад

    I’d always imagined him with way less tidy clothes ..and a dusty hat!

  • @asherthenee6107
    @asherthenee6107 3 года назад +4

    TUNING: f#CGAD

  • @AA-69
    @AA-69 Год назад

    Perhaps if you ask nicely they'll let you back in the mines. !?!?🤔

  • @oregontexfyb7757
    @oregontexfyb7757 6 лет назад +2

    Coldblooded man im so thankful to be alive today

    • @justforever96
      @justforever96 Год назад +1

      Why, because no one is ever murdered these days? It happens literally all the time. And the song isn't praising him, it's recording an actual event and is lamenting the tragedy of the murder of a young woman and warning others to be careful of who they let seduce them. That is still a valid warning. Today you can turn on the news and hear about any number of horrible crimes and murders, missing children, women's bodies being found, woman being kept prisoners in secret dungeons. They didn't have news to watch then so they made songs about significant events to spread the word. The fact that this _was_ significant enough to make a song about suggests it was a lot less commonplace back then than it would be today. Man shoots his young girlfriend and tries to hide the body. Oh well, what else is on the news, some mass shootings, some war atrocities, there was 35 shootings in Chicago last week. Yawn. No big deal, glad I Iive in these nice decent times!
      Hell, today you can find any number of rap or metal songs about murder, often based on real enough events, and it's just for entertainment. Where is our moral high ground?

  • @donmcneil8285
    @donmcneil8285 5 месяцев назад

    He looks a little like colonel sanders 😃

  • @Ma_rkw589
    @Ma_rkw589 7 лет назад +3

    reminds me of abner jay

  • @tommybrill9107
    @tommybrill9107 7 месяцев назад

    Look at his old photos. He looks like he’d kill you.

  • @heladioa.c1390
    @heladioa.c1390 5 лет назад +1

    Con todos os respetos: Pode que non sexa quem?
    But no anddestenx
    You no.
    😊😊😊😊🎥🎥📷📷📷📷😊😂😊😊😊😊😊😂😂😂😂😊😊😊😊😊😂😊😊😊

  • @jmf2274
    @jmf2274 Год назад

    the singing is not very good

    • @BryanClark-gk6ie
      @BryanClark-gk6ie 4 месяца назад

      No it's not' it's very very good

    • @runrig97
      @runrig97 4 месяца назад +1

      You are free to record your own version.

    • @LaurenceWhiteLuthery
      @LaurenceWhiteLuthery Месяц назад

      He is not trying to sound like Pavarotti you dumbass! You wouldn't know traditional ethnic styling if it hit you with a truck

  • @PaulEckelman
    @PaulEckelman 5 лет назад +1

    Favorite