Okeh Presents the Wayfaring Stranger
Okeh Presents the Wayfaring Stranger | ||
---|---|---|
Studio album by Burl Ives | ||
Released | August 1941 | |
Genre | Folk | |
Label | Okeh | |
Alternative covers | ||
1944 Columbia album with Flora's cover art |
Originally released in August 1941 on Okeh Records, Okeh Presents the Wayfaring Stranger (Okeh K-3) is an album consisting of four 10-inch records (78 rpm, 6315-6318) by Burl Ives. This set marked Ives's debut as a recording artist. He accompanies himself on the guitar as he sings twelve folk songs.[1]
The same collection of songs was re-released as The Wayfaring Stranger by Columbia Records (C-103) on four 10-inch records (78 rpm, 36733-36736) in August 1944, with cover art by Jim Flora.[2] This collection should not be confused with Ives' album The Wayfaring Stranger released on Asch in 1944 with different songs.
It was released again on Columbia (CL 6109) on one 10-inch microgroove record (33 1⁄3 rpm) in 1950, also with Flora's cover art.[3]
In a 1990 interview, Flora said, "Burl Ives was a troublemaker. His wife handled his affairs and if you forgot some da-da-da, she was on the phone to the president of Columbia. I don’t know whether we had to do this over again or what."[4]
Track listing
Record 1 (Okeh 6315; Columbia 36733)
Side | Track | Song Title |
---|---|---|
1. | 1. | Wee Cooper O'Fife |
1. | 2. | Riddle Song |
2. | 1. | Cowboy's Lament |
Record 2 (Okeh 6316; Columbia 36734)
Side | Track | Song Title |
---|---|---|
1. | 1. | Tam Pierce |
2. | 1. | I Know Where I'm Going |
2. | 2. | I Know My Love |
Record 3 (Okeh 6317; Columbia 36735)
Side | Track | Song Title |
---|---|---|
1. | 1. | Peter Gray |
2. | 1. | Sweet Betsy from Pike |
2. | 2. | On Top of Old Smoky |
Record 4 (Okeh 6318; Columbia 36736)
Side | Track | Song Title |
---|---|---|
1. | 1. | Darlin' Cory |
2. | 1. | Leather-Winged Bat |
2. | 2. | Cotton-Eyed Joe |
See also
- Burl Ives, The Wayfaring Stranger, Asch 345, 1944.
References
- ↑ Howard Taubman, "Records; The Smokies. Mountain Melodies--and More Folksongs--Speech and Poetry--Other Releases," New York Times, August 21, 1941, p. X6; Library of Congress Online Catalog, LCCN 2001580800
- ↑ Library of Congress Online Catalog, LCCN 00534844; William R. Daniels, The American 45 and 78 RPM Record Dating Guide, 1940–1959, Westport: Greenwood, 1985, p. 37
- ↑ Library of Congress Online Catalog, LCCN 93704386; Galen Gart, ARLD: The American Record Label Directory and Dating Guide, 1940–1959, Milford, NH: Big Nickel Publications, 1989, p. 49
- ↑ Angelynn Grant, "Jim Flora Interview," 1990: link