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Can the Circle Be Unbroken The Carter Family

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Can The Circle Be Unbroken
Columbia/Legacy Records
Originally recorded in 1935 & 1940
Compiled and produced for reissue by Lawrence Cohn
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Track Listing
Can the Circle Be Unbroken (Bye and Bye) (A P Carter)
Lulu Walls (A P Carter)
My Clinch Mountain Home (A P, Maybell, Sara Carter)
Wildwood Flower (A P Carter)
Worried Man Blues (A P, Maybell, Sara Carter)
Keep on the Sunny Side (A P Carter)
Gospel Ship (Traditional)
My Texas Girl (A P, Maybell, Sara Carter)
Sinking in the Lonesome Sea (A P Carter)
Cannon Ball Blues (A P, Maybell, Sara Carter)
I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes (A P Carter)
River of Jordan (A P Carter)
Storms Are on the Ocean (A P Carter)
On the Rock Where Moses Stood (A P, Maybell, Sara Carter)
Little Black Train (A P, Maybell, Sara Carter)
Single Girl, Married Girl (A P Carter)
Kissing Is a Crime (A P Carter)
Blackie's Gunman (A P Carter)
My Home Among the Hills (A P, Maybell, Sara Carter)
Black Jack David (A P Carter)
Seminal music always seems to come at intersections -- the vertices where separate forces
meet and create something original. Sometimes the forces keep it light. Like when jazziness
and hip-hop teamed up on A Tribe Called Quest's Low End Theory. And sometimes the beauty and
essential correctness of the collision creates a revolution. Like Elvis. A little of both was
in the air when New York based A&R man Ralph Peer went to record indigenous music in the
physically remote area of the mountainous mid-South known as Appalachia. The Carter family
was his most important find. Even before they were discovered, the group was already a fusion
of sorts, combining church singing with front porch picking and a new droning harmony sound.
But beyond their regional innovations, they had a commercial appeal they couldn't possibly
have imagined.
From 1927 until 1943, the Carter Family was a national sensation. Roughly concurrent with
the rise of jazz, they brought a new awareness of regional music to an America obsessed with
radio. Before nationalized entertainment their fame would have been unimaginable. As it was,
they became an important cultural reference point to the still embattled South. And when the
group broke up they continued on anyway, with Maybelle Carter and her daughters Helen, Anita,
and June (the future Mrs. Johnny Cash) keeping the group's name and, to a lesser extent,
songs, alive and well.
Can the Circle Be Unbroken is not from Ralph Peer's original recording session, but from
eight years later when the group was an accomplished act, flush with radio success and
professional confidence. The 17 songs they recorded (three more songs from a 1940 session
are tacked onto this re-issue) are all classics that were taken almost entirely from the
public domain and credited to group leader A.P. Carter, as was traditional at the time. Some
aficionados have criticized Can the Circle Be Unbroken as less immediate than earlier Carter
Family recordings. To my ear, these recordings are just as affecting as those first efforts:
slower and more polished, but with no less impact. And the improvement in fidelity, especially
in this virtually hiss-and-pop-free re-mastered version, is striking.
When you listen to the Carter Family you'll hear guitar, autoharp, and singing. That's
about it. But it's the way they sing and play the guitar that's important. Sara Carter's lead
vocal is plain, simple and beautiful in an old-fashioned way. Maybelle Addington (later Carter
when she married A.P. Carter's brother, Ezra) played the guitar with the instrumental
equivalent of Sara's singing: with clarity, subtlety and cocksure time. A.P., as the group's
musical director, was responsible for the song selection and arrangements, which were as much
a part of the group's success as anything else. Sometimes he threw in a low harmony to fine
effect, but mostly he dealt with songs. And judging by the 20 gems on Can the Circle Be
Unbroken, he rarely faltered.
The term is overused, but the Carter Family is truly essential listening for anyone
interested in American music. It's virtually impossible to imagine how Country would have
gone without their influence. They weren't mercurial talents like Louis Armstrong or Elvis
Presley. Their recordings won't shock you with exuberance or unbridled genius. And there is
no guarantee that, had they not been discovered when they were, they would have changed the
world. But nonetheless, through a combination of talent and fortuitousness they did. -- Fred Kovey, Pop Matters
Discography
1960 All Time Favorites • Acme
1960 In Memory of A.P. Carter • Acme
1962 Together Again • RCA Victor
1963 Anita Carter Sings Folk Songs Old & New • Mercury
1963 The Carter Family • Decca
1964 Keep on the Sunny Side • CBS
1965 More Favorites by the Carter Family • Decca
1967 The Country Album • CBS
1973 Mother Maybelle Carter • Columbia
1976 Country's First Family • Columbia
2000 Family Album • Longhorn
2003 Sunshine in the Shadows • Recall
2003 Pickin' & Singin' Together
2003 The Carter Family • ACM
2003 Wildwood Flower • Mercury
Related links:
The Carter Family Fold
Will You Miss Me When I'm Gone? The Carter Family and Their Legacy by Mark Zwonitzer and Charles Hirshberg
The Country Music Hall of Fame
The Carter Family Songs
All Music Guide
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Can the Circle Be Unbroken The Carter Family
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"Since migrating from Cambridge,
Mass to Nashville some three decades ago, Mark Brine has carved out a strong
reputation as an uncompromising traditionalist on the country music scene which
has made him one of the elder statesmen of Americana."
-- Shaun Dale, Cosmik Debris Magazine
"I could listen to him sing
all night long
he does a good job that boy does."
-- Roy Acuff, Ernest Tubb Midnight Jamboree
"A fine young man who I think
has a great future."
-- Hank Snow,
Grand Ole Opry
"Brine could easily have been added to the cast of 'O
Brother, Where Art Thou' without raising an eyebrow. He belongs
to that group of artists whose individuality and quirkiness consign
them to the periphery of what's commercially viable. But God bless
him for not just being another cog in the musical wheel."
-- James McSweeney, Flyin Shoes
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"Brine writes wonderful story songs about ordinary people
and ordinary places. To tell these stories, Mark has a voice that is
as comfortable as a favourite coat."
-- Pete Smith, Country Music Round Up
"I think what makes Mark Brine such
a gifted songwriter/storyteller is the fact that he seems to be such an
obvious fan of many genres of music. He's someone who is like a sponge
when it comes to reintegrating influences into his own work."
-- Gail Worley,
Ink 19
"His career has pursued the path of a truly independent artist -
someone who follows his soul and does things his own way
his ability
to write and produce has made his name synonymous with quality."
-- Doug Floyd, AltCountryTab.com
©2004 Mark Brine Music. All rights reserved.
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