[Harp-L] updated-- George Reneau -- the blind musician of the Smoky Mountains



updated/  Correction 

When I closed the wikipedia page I noticed that it said at the top: "translated from the German to English" which I had not noticed when I opened the page.

It was a mechanical translation. Which explains why it was so rocky. 




-----Original Message-----
From: philharpn <philharpn@xxxxxxx>
To: harp-l <harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Mon, Sep 21, 2015 2:36 pm
Subject: George Reneau -the blind musician of the Smoky Mountains


Came across the mention of George Reneau, the blind musician of the Smoky Mountains. Until I looked him up and played a few youtube videos, I had never heard or heard of the guy. Interesting performance. He is also credited with playing "mouth harp" on the record label. Check him out if you have the time.

George played guitar and harmonica and released about 25 78 rpm records on Vocalion starting in 1924. He also did some cylinder and disk recordings for Edison. I would think this type of first position tongue-blocked early country/folk music would be the type Joe Filisko would be familiar with and might be performing. 

Most people are probably unfamiliar because this guy falls into Since it is Early hillbilly (the official category the record companies used; not a perjorative). 

I tripped over this guy's name while reading a preview of "Folk City: New York and the American Folk Music Revival" published in July. The 320-page book is illustrated with images collected for the accompanying major exhibition at the Museum of the City of New York in 2015.Youtube has a collection of some of the recordings. 

The link for one is below.<https://video.search.yahoo.com/search/video?p=George+Reneau&fr=spigot-chr-gcmac#id=21&vid=5af50100ae39688234e5015b91f16933&action=view>


The wikipedia entry -- when opened in English presents a literal translation of words which are often out of order in English. It's possible to make sense of the meaning, however. <https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Reneau> 

He was born in 1901, recorded in 1924-5? and was dead by 1933.  It's always fun to check out antique harmonica recordings.Phil
 



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