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[edit]Will the Circle Be Unbroken | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1972 | |||
Recorded | August 1971 | |||
Genre | Country | |||
Length | 105:55 | |||
Label | EMI America | |||
Producer | William McEuen | |||
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
Will the Circle Be Unbroken is a 1972 album officially by the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, but with collaboration from many famous Bluegrass and [[Country-Western music|country-western]] players, including Roy Acuff, Mother Maybelle Carter, Doc Watson, Earl Scruggs, [[Merle Travis]], Bashful Brother Oswald, [[Norman Blake (American musician)|Norman Blake]], Jimmy Martin, and others. It also introduced fiddler Vassar Clements to a wider audience.
Its title comes from a song by [[Ada R. Habershon]] (famously re-arranged by A. P. Carter) and reflects how the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band was trying to tie together two generations of musicians. The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band was a young country-rock band with a hippie look. Roy Acuff described them as "a bunch of long-haired West Coast boys." The other players were much older and more famous from the forties, fifties and sixties, primarily as old-time country and bluegrass players. Many had become known to their generation through the Grand Ole Opry. However, with the rise of rock-and-roll, the emergence of the commercial country's slick 'Nashville Sound,' and changing tastes in music, their popularity had waned somewhat from their glory years.
Every track on the album was recorded on the first or second take straight to two-track masters, so the takes are raw and unprocessed. Additionally, another tape ran continuously throughout the entire week-long recording session, and captured the dialog between the players. On the final album many of the tracks begin with the musicians discussing how to do the song or who should come in where, and provides a rare insight into the workmanship and approach that these highly-regarded musicians used to make their music, and how they decided to work together.
Originally appearing in 1972 as a three LP album, Will the Circle Be Unbroken was remastered and re-released in 2002 as a two compact disc set.
The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band made two subsequent albums, Will the Circle Be Unbroken, Vol. 2 and Will the Circle Be Unbroken, Vol. 3, in an attempt to repeat the process with other historically significant musicians, but these subsequent volumes are not as widely acclaimed as the first. However, Vol. 2 won the Country Music Association's 1989 Album of the Year. In 1990, the album was celebrated on the PBS music television program Austin City Limits, which featured a performance by the full ensemble of guests on the Carter Family song, [[Can the Circle Be Unbroken (By and By)|Will The Circle Be Unbroken]], from the original 1972 album. [1]
Track listing
[edit]Disc one
[edit]- "Grand Ole Opry Song" (Hylo Brown) – 2:59 with Jimmy Martin
- "Keep on the Sunny Side" (A.P. Carter, Gary Garett) – 3:35 with Maybelle Carter
- "Nashville Blues" (Earl Scruggs) – 3:10
- "You Are My Flower" (A.P. Carter) – 3:35
- "The Precious Jewel" (Roy Acuff) – 3:30 with Roy Acuff
- "Dark as a Dungeon" (Merle Travis) – 2:45 with Merle Travis
- "Tennessee Stud" (Jimmie Driftwood) – 4:22 with Doc Watson
- "Black Mountain Rag" (Traditional) – 2:10
- "Wreck on the Highway" (Dorsey[2] Dixon) – 3:24 with Roy Acuff
- "The End of the World" (Fred Rose) – 3:53
- "I Saw the Light" (Hank Williams) – 3:45 with Roy Acuff
- "Sunny Side of the Mountain" (Byron Gregory, Harry McAuliffe) – 2:14
- "Nine Pound Hammer" (Merle Travis) – 2:14
- "Losin' You (Might Be the Best Thing Yet)" (Edria A. Humphrey, Jimmy Martin) – 2:44 with Jimmy Martin
- "Honky Tonkin'" (Hank Williams) – 2:19
- "You Don't Know My Mind" (Jimmie Skinner) – 2:45 with Jimmy Martin
- "My Walkin' Shoes" (Jimmy Martin, Paul Williams) – 2:02 with Jimmy Martin
Disc two
[edit]- "Lonesome Fiddle Blues" (Vassar Clements) – 2:41
- "Cannonball Rag" (Merle Travis) – 1:15 with Merle Travis
- "Avalanche" (Millie Clements) – 2:50
- "Flint Hill Special" (Earl Scruggs) – 2:12
- "Togary Mountain" (Walter McEuen) – 2:25
- "Earl's Breakdown" (Earl Scruggs) – 2:34
- "Orange Blossom Special" (Ervin T. Rouse) – 2:14 with Vassar Clements
- "Wabash Cannonball" (A.P. Carter) – 2:00
- "Lost Highway" (Leon Payne) – 3:37
- Doc Watson & Merle Travis First Meeting (Dialogue) – 1:52
- "Way Downtown" (Traditional, Doc Watson) – 3:30 with Doc Watson
- "Down Yonder" (Doc Watson) – 1:48 with Doc Watson
- "Pins and Needles (In My Heart)" (Floyd Jenkins) – 2:53 with Roy Acuff
- "Honky Tonk Blues" (Hank Williams) – 2:22
- "Sailin' on to Hawaii" (Beecher Kirby) – 2:00 with Bashful Brother Oswald
- "I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes" (A.P. Carter) – 4:25
- "I am a Pilgrim" (Traditional) – 2:55
- "Wildwood Flower" (A.P. Carter) – 3:34 with Maybelle Carter
- "Soldier's Joy" (John McEuen, Earl Scruggs) – 2:05
- "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" (A.P. Carter) – 4:50
- "Both Sides Now" (Joni Mitchell) – 2:19 with Randy Scruggs
- 2002 Reissue bonus tracks
- "Foggy Mountain Breakdown" (Earl Scruggs) – 2:39
- Warming Up for "The Opry" – 2:43
- Sunny Side – 4:06
- "Remember Me" (Scotty Wiseman) – 1:32
References
[edit]- ^ [http://www.pbs.org/klru/austin/artists/program354.html Will The Circle Be Unbroken” with The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, John Denver and Friends], Austin City Limits, 1990
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d43g8unp7Wk
Category:1972 albums Category:Nitty Gritty Dirt Band albums Category:United States National Recording Registry recordings