[Harp-L] Earliest Country Harmonica
- To: harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx, christer.molkom@xxxxxxxxx
- Subject: [Harp-L] Earliest Country Harmonica
- From: captron100@xxxxxxx
- Date: Sat, 21 Sep 2013 20:34:55 -0400 (EDT)
- Cc:
- Dkim-signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=mx.aol.com; s=20121107; t=1379810096; bh=2XpO4yUpILPs8LZWuDDjO0Ct5zVjFivdHo0sQwJk5PA=; h=From:To:Subject:Message-Id:Date:MIME-Version:Content-Type; b=EstyvYz9pzHmS0F8i2Oc4UhhuB41Od1n4MSKu4EE8944tbQiJF9zRU6XHxUgV+D1f UT195FS5OF/pE0lweAXpyC9JMwBKtvOpZBrWzdRvTV7HNQBLCDtkM+yeWGvra9K1wu QRdJtsuqQjT+tGu7h80OBWXFwgXK8ky1Q3V/I0kA=
Christer Svensson wrote: Thanks for that post, Lil Rev!I was especially happy to see Woody Guthrie's harp-playing appreciated................Bill Cox. He sounds like a highly possible inspiration for Woody's style. There may be others, and I would be glad to get some info.For those who haven't heard Bill Cox, here's an example: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rh1KnEi3Yqs
Christer, in the future pls. provide the quote that u are referring to when u reply. When u forget to do this we can't access the audio u are referring to (Lil Rev's post). But i went to *your* link and heard Bill Cox, who i don't think i've ever heard before. But I have most certainly heard this song played by Sonny Terry on one of the old vinyl albums I used to own. Could it be that the harp playing on the Woodie recording was actually played by Sonny Terry?
ron
This archive was generated by a fusion of
Pipermail 0.09 (Mailman edition) and
MHonArc 2.6.8.