anon-C247 Bill Monroe 1963 / Joe Val 1971

Bill Monroe & His Blue Grass Boys Brown County Jamboree
Bean Blossom, IN
10/13/1963

Joe Val & The New England Bluegrass Boys Club Passim
Cambridge, MA
6/23/1971

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Source:
Maxell LN-120:Nakamichi ZX7>Nickspicks Silver Hydra’s>Lunatec V3 @ 24/48>M-Audio Firewire 410 Transfer by Keith Kreider 04/17/07 – updates, comments, etc. to info@thespps.org

Disc One – Bill Monroe & His Blue Grass Boys. Disc Two – Joe Val & The New England Bluegrass Boys.
1. Were You There When They Crucified My Lord
2. Blue Ridge Mountain Blues
3. Footprints in the Snow
4. Rawhide
5. Used to Be
6. Tomorrow I’ll Be Gone…(Talking)
7. Molly and Tenbrooks
8. Devil’s Dream
9. Durang’s Hornpipe
10. Carroll County Blues
11. Blue Grass Stomp
12. Blue Moon of Kentucky
13. Wayfaring Stranger
14. Orange Blossom Special
15. Uncle Pen

1. Country Roads
2. I Wonder How the Old Folks Are at Home
3. Cumberland Gap/The Old Home Town
4. Family Who Prays Never Shall Part
5. The Old Spinning Wheel
6. Come Walk With Me
7. I Don’t Believe You’ve Met My Baby
8. Pitfall
9. Short Life of Trouble
10. Muleskinner Blues
11. I Hear a Sweet Voice Calling
12. Can’t You Hear Me Calling?
13. Take the News to Mother
14. Dear Old Dixie
15. Along About Daybreak
16. I Wonder Where You Are Tonight
17. Goodbye Old Pal
18. Just Over in Gloryland

Notes:
Listed as “Bill MOnroe 10/13/63 Bean Blossom, Joe Val 6/23/71 Passim Coffee House” Anonymous Collection Cassette #247 Side A features a portion of a 10/13/63 performance by Bill Monroe & His Blue Grass Boys (Del McCoury-guitar, Bill “Brad” Keith-banjo, Joe Stuart-fiddle, & possibly Bessie Lee Maudlin-bass) at Monroe’s Brown County Jamboree, Bean Blossom, IN; another circulating tape of this performance contains a more complete recording. Side B features a 6/23/71 performance from the wonderful Joe Val & The New England Bluegrass Boys (Joe Val-mandolin, Herb Applin-guitar, Bob French-banjo, & Bob Tidwell-bass), recorded at Club Passim, Cambridge, MA. Val is clearly enamored with the mandolin styling of Bill Monroe and the harmonies and songwriting talents of the Louvin Brothers. –Mitchell Wittenberg

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March 25th, 2009
theSPPS
by: theSPPS

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