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John Fahey - The Dance Of Death & Other Plantation Favorites (Reissue, Remastered) (1964/1999)

John Fahey - The Dance Of Death & Other Plantation Favorites (Reissue, Remastered) (1964/1999)

BAND/ARTIST: John Fahey

  • Title: The Dance Of Death & Other Plantation Favorites
  • Year Of Release: 1964/1999
  • Label: Takoma
  • Genre: Acoustic, Folk
  • Quality: Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 53:35
  • Total Size: 262 Mb (cover)
  • WebSite:
John Fahey - The Dance Of Death & Other Plantation Favorites (Reissue, Remastered) (1964/1999)


Tracklist:

01. Wine and Roses
02. How Long
03. On the Banks of the Owchita
04. Worried Blues
05. What the Sun Said
06. Revelation on the Banks of the Pawtuxent
07. Poor Boy
08. Variations on the Coocoo
09. The Last Steam Engine Train
10. Give Me Corn Bread When I'm Hungry
11. Dance of Death
12. Tulip (aka When You Wore a Tulip and I Wore a Big Red Rose)
13. Daisy (aka A Bicycle Built for Two)
14. The Siege of Sevastopol
15. Steel Guitar Rag

Born on February 28 1939 in Takoma Park, Maryland, USA, John Fahey was an acoustic guitar pioneer, who studied folklore and the techniques of the bluesmen. He is the man who introduced stream of consciousness into folk music and turned folk into classical music, and then made it cross the boundaries of Western and Eastern music. The spiritual father of the "American primitive guitar", Fahey turned the guitar solo into a metaphysical exercise. He set up Takoma Records in 1959 to release not only his own albums but also Leo Kottke's "6 & 12 String Guitar" (1971), an artist with whom he later also collaborated.

Fahey contracted the debilitating Epstein-Barr virus in 1986, which severely hampered his career for over 5 years. During this low period, he was championed by alternative artists such as Sonic Youth and Jim O'Rourke, and 'Spin' magazine included a large article on him by Byron Coley in 1994. The albums "City of Refuge" (Tim Kerr, 1997) and "Womblife" (Table Of Elements, 1997) marked his return to recording, showcasing a move into avant-garde, experimental, dissonant electric guitar music, far from his previous progressive-folk style.

Fahey died on February 22 2001, Salem, Oregon, USA due to complications following a heart bypass operation.



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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 21:30
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