Bill Monroe Blue Grass 1950-1958 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set)
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Bill Monroe: Blue Grass 1950-1958 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set)
Bluegrass is Bill Monroe's baby, and many of his finest recordings are in this stellar collection. In 1950 he signed with Decca, and began by cutting classics like New Mule Skinner Blues, I'm Blue I'm Lonesome, Uncle Pen, Gotta Travel On, Roanoke, Molly And Tenbrooks, Footprints In The Snow, and Blue Moon Of Kentucky.
The Blue Grass Boys on this set include Jimmy Martin, Carter Stanley, Sonny Osborne, Gordon Terry and Kenny Baker. Unavailable for years, this is haunting, intense and passionate music. Ultimate Bluegrass!
Video von Bill Monroe - Blue Grass 1950-1958 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set)
Article properties: Bill Monroe: Blue Grass 1950-1958 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set)
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Interpret: Bill Monroe
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Album titlle: Blue Grass 1950-1958 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set)
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Genre Country
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Label Bear Family Records
- Edition 2 Deluxe Edition
- Preiscode DH
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Artikelart Box set
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EAN: 4000127154231
- weight in Kg 1.2
Monroe, Bill - Blue Grass 1950-1958 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 1 | ||||
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01 | New Muleskinner Blues | Bill Monroe |
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02 | My Little Georgia Rose | Bill Monroe |
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03 | Memories Of You | Bill Monroe |
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04 | I'm On My Way To The Old Home | Bill Monroe |
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05 | Alabama Waltz | Bill Monroe |
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06 | I'm Blue, I'm Lonesome | Bill Monroe |
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07 | I'll Mee You In Church Sunday Morning | Bill Monroe |
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08 | Boat Of Love | Bill Monroe |
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09 | The Old Fiddler | Bill Monroe |
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10 | Uncle Pen | Bill Monroe |
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11 | When The Golden Leaves Begin To Fall | Bill Monroe |
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12 | Lord Protect My Soul | Bill Monroe |
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13 | River Of Death | Bill Monroe |
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14 | Letter From My Darling | Bill Monroe |
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15 | On The Old Kentucky Shore | Bill Monroe |
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16 | Raw Hide | Bill Monroe |
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17 | Poison Love | Bill Monroe |
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18 | Kentucky Waltz | Bill Monroe |
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19 | Prisoner's Song | Bill Monroe |
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20 | Swing Low Sweet Chariot | Bill Monroe |
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21 | Angels Rock Me To Sleep | Bill Monroe |
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22 | Brakeman's Blues/Travelin' Blues | Bill Monroe |
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23 | When The Cactus Is In Bloom | Bill Monroe |
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Monroe, Bill - Blue Grass 1950-1958 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 2 | ||||
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01 | My Carolina Sunshine Girl | Bill Monroe |
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02 | Ben Dewberry's Final Run | Bill Monroe |
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03 | Peach Pickin' Time In Georgia | Bill Monroe |
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04 | Those Gambler's Blues | Bill Monroe |
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05 | Highway Of Sorrow | Bill Monroe |
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06 | Rotation Blues | Bill Monroe |
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07 | Lonesome Truck Driver's Blues | Bill Monroe |
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08 | Sugar Coated Love | Bill Monroe |
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09 | You're Drifting Away | Bill Monroe |
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10 | Cabin Of Love | Bill Monroe |
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11 | Get Down On Your Knees And Pray | Bill Monroe |
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12 | Christmas Time's A-Coming | Bill Monroe |
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13 | The First Whippoorwill | Bill Monroe |
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14 | In The Pines | Bill Monroe |
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15 | Footprints In The Snow | Bill Monroe |
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16 | Walking In Jerusalem | Bill Monroe |
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17 | Memories Of Mother And Dad | Bill Monroe |
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18 | The Little Girl And The Dreadful Snake | Bill Monroe |
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19 | Country Waltz | Bill Monroe |
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20 | Don't Put It Off Til Tomorrow | Bill Monroe |
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21 | My Dying Bed | Bill Monroe |
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22 | A Mighty Pretty Waltz | Bill Monroe |
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23 | Pike County Breakdown | Bill Monroe |
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24 | Wishing Waltz | Bill Monroe |
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25 | I Hope You Have Learned | Bill Monroe |
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26 | Get Up John | Bill Monroe |
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Monroe, Bill - Blue Grass 1950-1958 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 3 | ||||
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01 | Plant Some Flowers By My Grave | Bill Monroe |
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02 | Changing Partners | Bill Monroe |
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03 | Y'All Come | Bill Monroe |
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04 | On And On | Bill Monroe |
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05 | I Believed In You Darling | Bill Monroe |
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06 | New John Henry Blues | Bill Monroe |
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07 | White House Blues | Bill Monroe |
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08 | Happy On My Way | Bill Monroe |
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09 | I'm Working On A Building | Bill Monroe |
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10 | A Voice From On High | Bill Monroe |
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11 | He Will Set Your Fields On Fire | Bill Monroe |
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12 | Close By | Bill Monroe |
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13 | My Little Georgia Rose | Bill Monroe |
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14 | Put My Little Shoes Away | Bill Monroe |
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15 | Blue Moon Of Kentucky | Bill Monroe |
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16 | Wheel Hoss | Bill Monroe |
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17 | Cheyenne | Bill Monroe |
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18 | You'll Find Her Name Written There | Bill Monroe |
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19 | Roanoke | Bill Monroe |
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20 | Wait A Little Longer, Please Jesus | Bill Monroe |
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21 | Let The Light Shine Down On Me | Bill Monroe |
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22 | Used To Be | Bill Monroe |
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23 | Tall Timber | Bill Monroe |
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24 | Brown County Breakdown | Bill Monroe |
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25 | A Fallen Star | Bill Monroe |
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26 | Four Walls | Bill Monroe |
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27 | A Good Woman's Love | Bill Monroe |
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28 | Cry Cry Darlin' | Bill Monroe |
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29 | I'm Sittin' On Top Of The World | Bill Monroe |
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Monroe, Bill - Blue Grass 1950-1958 (4-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 4 | ||||
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01 | Roane County Prison | Bill Monroe |
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02 | Goodbye Old Pal | Bill Monroe |
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03 | In Despair | Bill Monroe |
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04 | Molly And Tenbrooks | Bill Monroe |
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05 | Come Back To Me In My Dreams | Bill Monroe |
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06 | Sally-Jo | Bill Monroe |
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07 | Brand New Shoes | Bill Monroe |
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08 | A Lonesome Road | Bill Monroe |
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09 | I Saw The Light | Bill Monroe |
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10 | Lord, Build Me A Cabin In Glory | Bill Monroe |
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11 | Lord Lead Me On | Bill Monroe |
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12 | Precious Jewel | Bill Monroe |
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13 | I'll Meet You In The Morning | Bill Monroe |
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14 | Life's Railway To Heaven | Bill Monroe |
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15 | I've Found A Hiding Place | Bill Monroe |
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16 | Jesus Hold My Hand | Bill Monroe |
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17 | I Am A Pilgrim | Bill Monroe |
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18 | Wayfaring Stranger | Bill Monroe |
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19 | A Beautiful Life | Bill Monroe |
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20 | House Of Gold | Bill Monroe |
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21 | Panhandle Country | Bill Monroe |
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22 | Scotland | Bill Monroe |
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23 | Gotta Travel On | Bill Monroe |
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24 | No One But My Darlin' | Bill Monroe |
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25 | Big Mon | Bill Monroe |
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26 | Monroe's Hornpipe | Bill Monroe |
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THE MONROE BROTHERS - Bill Monroe
William Smith Monroe was born on September 13, 1911 near Rosine, Ohio County, Kentucky. His older brother Charles had been born on July 4, 1903. Bill was the youngest child of the eight children born to Malissa Vandiver and James Buchanan 'Buck' Monroe, a local farmer, coal miner, and timber cutter. Rosine was far from the rugged mountains of eastern Kentucky, but was set in the rolling hills of the western end of the state, about 30 miles from the Ohio River. Young Bill, like the rest of his family, grew up doing hard physical chores on the family's 653-acre farm -- an experience that instilled in him a work ethic that would dominate his life.
The Monroe children relaxed with music. Buck Monroe was an especially fine flat-foot dancer, often featuring a dance called the 'Kentucky Back-Step,' and three of the sons--Birch, Charlie, and Bill--would later begin their careers by doing such dancing on stage. The brothers learned music from their mother, who sang the old classic ballads; from their Uncle Pen Vandiver, who was the region's best-known square dance fiddler; from the shape-note singing schools local churches and travelling teachers held in the summer; from local black musicians like Arnold Shultz, who played a blues-tinged thumbpicking guitar style; and from the stars of Chicago station WLS's 'National Barn Dance,' such as Mac and Bob, blind musicians who used mandolin and guitar; and The Prairie Ramblers, a hot string band from western Kentucky that featured a mandola. Bill --along with thousands of others-- also admired the Victrola records of Vernon Dalhart, Jimmie Rodgers, and Bradley Kincaid.
It was the younger of the Monroe children who became most involved with the music. Older brother Birch took up the fiddle, and Charlie and sister Bertha began playing guitar. When Bill was eight or nine, he began fooling around with instruments, mainly the guitar and mandolin; he really wanted to specialize in the fiddle or guitar, but as the youngest and smallest he was stuck with the mandolin in the family music sessions. In later years, Bill liked to tell about how his brothers would only let him use four strings on the mandolin (instead of the usual eight) so he wouldn't sound too loud.
1921 Malissa Monroe died and it was several years after this that Bill started playing music seriously. He began by playing guitar backup for his Uncle Pen at dances, and later spoke of Pen as "the fiddler that I learned to play from." He also began to play dances with Arnold Shultz, a local black guitar player who was comfortable playing the blues, traditional Anglo tunes, pop music, and even jazz. (Friends of Shultz recall that he used to spend winters in New Orleans, where he picked up a fondness for 'passing' chords.) In 1927, when Bill was only 16, his father Buck Monroe passed away as well, and since his older brothers and sisters had already moved away, he was sent to live with his Uncle Pen. Bill continued to learn music from him.
Birch and Charlie Monroe, like so many young men in the late 1920s, had left the farm and gone north to work in the new factories supplying the auto industry. For a time they were in Detroit, and then moved to the East Chicago area, first to Hammond and then to Whiting, where they found jobs in oil refineries. Around 1929 Bill, who was now 18, came north to join them. His first job was working in the barrel house at the Sinclair refinery in which he moved huge, heavy drums of oil all day long--something that built his physique up to that resembling a weight lifter. It was a bruising job, but with the Depression hitting, it was the best available; Bill kept it for five years. Some of his brothers who had 'lighter' jobs were often out of work during these years, leaving young Bill as the sole support for parts of the family.
From booklet BCD16399 - Bill Monroe 1936-1949 (6-CD)
Read more at: https://www.bear-family.de/monroe-bill-1936-1949-6-cd.html
Copyright © Bear Family Records
Monroes Glanzzeit in einem sehr schönen Box Set
Für mich sind die frühen Decca-Jahre die interessantesten in Bill Monroes Schaffen. Hier hat er seinen persönlichen Stil zu voller Reife entwickelt und nach dem Weggang von Flatt & Scruggs, unter Mithilfe grandioser Musiker wie Jimmy Martin, Charlie Cline, Rudy Lyle, Bob Hicks und Vassar Clements, noch mal eine Schippe draufgelegt. In diesen Jahren ist der "high, lonesome sound" so druckvoll, schneidend, intensiv wie kaum jemals zuvor oder danach, und Monroe schreibt einige seiner besten Lieder. Die Klangqualität der Decca-Aufnahmen ist klarer und weniger dumpf als jene der vorangegangenen Columbia-Jahre. Mir gefällt der Mono-Klang dieser Jahre besser als die manchmal etwas seltsam abgemischten Stereo-Aufnahmen der Sechzigerjahre. Noch etwas: Dieses Box Set ist erstmals im Jahr 1989 erschienen, tontechnisch hat Bear Family sicherlich das Beste aus den Masters herausgeholt, doch wurden die Aufnahmen damals natürlich noch nicht für Mobilgeräte oder mp3-Player "optimiert". Die inzwischen üblich gewordenen Wummerbässe auf Kosten der Höhentransparenz sucht man daher vergeblich. Wer das braucht, wird vielleicht enttäuscht sein; ich finde es prima. Die Box ist schön gestaltet, das umfangreiche Booklet im LP-Format bietet ausführliche Kommentare zu den einzelnen Aufnahme-Sessions, mit Hinweisen auf beteiligte Musiker und die aufgenommenen Lieder. Einziger Einwand: Optisch ist dieses Box-Set minimal anders als das nachfolgende (1959-1969) gestaltet (es ist schmaler), was auffällt, wenn beide im Regal nebeneinanderstehen. Aber das lässt sich bei diesem tollen und auch preiswerten Set leicht verschmerzen.
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