Category Archives: Country

Mountain Roots Covers

Mountain Roots Covers
Mountain Roots Covers

Our show explores traditional pieces and versions that have been covered by contemporary artists. “Mama Don’t Allow”, “Soldier’s Joy”, “That Nasty Swing”, “Worried Mind”, and “Mary of the Wild Moor” are just a handful of the selections we’ll share in our show tonight. Some of the performers included in our set include Ivory Joe Hunter, Bascom Lamar Lunsford, The Dixon Brothers, and Byrd Moore. Join Dave Stroud tonight at 9 on KWTF as he shares the stories of the music, song stories, and performers from the last American century…it’s roots music that does matter.

The Bristol Sessions

Bristol Sessions
Bristol Sessions

Deeper Roots: A Century of America’s Music goes deeper…back 87 years to the summer of 1927 when Ralph Peer, a producer for the Victor Talking Machine Company visited the town of Bristol, Tennessee scouting for talent. He brought with him the equipment necessary to capture those first-take performances which would come to be known as The Bristol Sessions. From late July through early August artists such as The Carter Family, Jimmie Rodgers and the Stoneman Family made recordings in a makeshift studio inside downtown Bristol’s Taylor-Christian Hat Company.  Johnny Cash once said that “These recordings…are the single most important event in the history of country music.”

Join Dave Stroud as Deeper Roots goes beyond the more notable names from these recordings and, with a certain leaning to the country sounds, he will also reveal the gospel and folk tradition that came out of these and the later Johnson City Sessions. We’ll hear from The Johnson Brothers, The Stamps Quartet, Alfred Karnes, Uncle Eck Dunford, and a host of others.

Deeper Bill Monroe

Deeper Bill Monroe
Deeper Bill Monroe

Bluegrass music owes more than a debt to Bill Monroe. It owes a name, a legacy, and a following to a man whose songwriting and musical prowess went well beyond the genre that bears his brand. Inspired by the early mountain music that his uncle, Pendleton Vandiver, would introduce him to, Bill developed a keen eye for talent and expected only the best from his band (although his lack of business acumen would trip him up time and again). That keen eye paired with an ear for stellar musicianship would show in the performers he ‘discovered’ and who rank among the greatest of the genre: Mac Wiseman, Earl Scruggs, Lester Flatt, Peter Rowan, Kenny Baker, Del McCoury, and many others.  Please join us for sets that explore Bill Monroe’s legacy. The sets include

  • The traditional music of Uncle Pen
  • The talent of Monroe’s sidemen
  • The early classic sound of “The Monroe Brothers”
  • Classic covers of Bill Monroe’s music done by late century artists
  • Two sets of some of the greatest of Bill Monroe and His Blue Grass Boys

Country Roads

Country Roads
Country Roads

The Golden Age of Country. That’s our theme. Join Dave Stroud, host of Deeper Roots, as he takes you through the sound of popular Country music of the 1950s and early 1960s, a time often referred to as “Classic Country”.  It was one of the bridges to popular country today, hardly recognizable now from the sounds that were to one day compete with a new form of popular music known as rock ‘n roll. But this classic country sound was itself a sound that was hard to connect to the 1920s hillbilly and Appalachian sounds from which it had evolved. Its sound was an amalgam of 1940s country swing, middle-of-the road pop music, and elements of almost every form of American music. It was a more familiar , safe, and palatable place on the radio dial for those middle American values of the time. We’ll hear the classic sounds of Lefty Frizzell, “Little” Jimmy Dickens, Hank Snow, Kitty Wells, and many others in this episode of Deeper Roots: A Century of America’s Music

Hillbilly Boogie

Hillbilly Boogie
Hillbilly Boogie

Deeper Roots looks at one of the many precursors to rockabilly and rock ‘n roll. Hillbilly boogie is a term used to describe an early pop music fad that blended early 20th century boogie woogie piano style, popular black music of the time, and western swing. Now many will say that it started with Arthur “Guitar Boogie” Smith but we’ll hear the swing and boogie woogie sounds that predated Smith. And the word was “boogie”. Boogie Woogie Baby, New Broom Boogie, Birthday Cake Boogie, Cherokee Boogie…well, you get the idea. We’ve got all of those and more with performances from Tex Williams, Hank Penny, Johnny Bond, Rose Maddox, and many more. Join Dave Stroud for another journey through a century of America’s music here on listener-supported community radio for Bodega Bay!

The Devil Ain’t Lazy

The Devil Ain't Lazy
The Devil Ain’t Lazy

“The Devil Ain’t Lazy” is a song by Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys and it is also the title of this week’s Deeper Roots show. In our weekly ramble through the last century of America’s music this Friday night at 9, we explore how that malevolent spirit known as the devil has been a foil and muse in song.  We start it off with the Almanac Singers and the Irving Berlin piece from pre-war, “Get Thee Behind Me Satan”,  move into a  1928 musical sermon called “Warming By the Devil’s Fire”, and find ourselves in country bible land with the Louvins, Hank Williams, and Marty Stuart. In between we’ve got lots of jazz, gospel, blues, and some modern revelations about our culture’s call and response with Lucifer himself.

The Mighty Mississippi

The Mighty Mississippi
The Mighty Mississippi

This episode of Deeper Roots explores music celebrating the “Father of The Waters”, “The Big Muddy”…”The Mighty Mississippi”.  Between its head, Lake Itasca in Minnesota, to the point where it empties into the Gulf of Mexico, the Mississippi is responsible for the watershed of 31 states, although its banks only border on 10 of them. Over the centuries, it’s been an inspiration in traditional song and story.  Join us as we are entertained by the likes of J. J. Cale, The Mississippi Sheiks, Bessie Smith, Dr. John, and a host of others in a show about a natural wonder that is part of our national identity.

Mountain Roots Covers

Mountain Roots Covers
Mountain Roots Covers

Deeper Roots’ Covers! We’re going to hear a selection of songs from the past 100 years guided by covers…some better than others, some of the great originals, and sometimes even greater covers. We’ll also dedicate a set to the great Charlie Poole, featuring covers by Earl Scruggs, Doc Watson, and Loudon Wainwright III. We’ll also hear from David Lindley, Chuck Berry, Steve Miller, and Lonnie Johnson…just to name a few. Join Dave Stroud for a walk through the last century of America’s music on a show broadcast on KWTF 88.1 FM, member-supported community radio for Sonoma County.

Deeper Jimmie Rodgers

Deeper Jimmie Rodgers
Deeper Jimmie Rodgers

Deeper Roots explores the influences, the music, and those who themselves were influenced by the yodeling brakeman. His music was influenced deeply by the blues of Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, Willie Jackson, and Blind Lemon Jefferson. And the performers he influenced read more like the comprehensive list of jazz, blues, country, and pop greats….to this day. It is sure to entertain with the music of Rodgers, Bob Dylan, Lefty Frizzell, and Merle Haggard.

Swinging Country

Swinging Country
Swinging Country

This week’s Deeper Roots show revisits country swing. Join Dave Stroud tonight at 9 for the sounds of Tex Williams, The Sons of the West, Spade Cooley, Hank Penney, and a host of others whose sounds attracted huge crowds to the dance halls and clubs in Texas, Oklahoma, and California during the thirties and forties.  With its basis in jazz and ‘gypsy jazz’, its sound is an upbeat amalgamation of rural, cowboy, polka, folk, blues, and Dixieland jazz, all played by the hot string bands who gave it a distinctive sound with amplified steel guitars, stand-up bass, fiddle, as well as an occasional accordion or brass accompaniment. It’s still alive today…you just need to look.