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Hear a Sample of
Our CD "Where the Allegheny Flows"
Peter Gray,
Run Johnnie
Run, The Johnstown
Flood,
Hard Times,
The Homestead Strike
Where the Allegheny Flows,
Pittsburgh Town,
Dark as a Dungeon,
Copper Kettle,
Monongahela Sal
The NewLanders CD "Where the Allegheny Flows"
has songs about Pittsburgh steel, the Johnstown Flood, coal mining, our rivers,
the Homestead strike, songs of Western Pennsylvania. Also on the CD, the printed
lyrics and historical information that can be viewed on your computer. Featured
artists include Doug Wilkins, Paula Purnell, Gerard Rohlf and Art Gazdik. Their
new album Where the Allegheny Flows includes the following songs: “Peter Gray" Written over the often used melody of
the English marching song, "The Baffled Knight," the song is about a broken
hearted man who travels west and is killed by Indians. “Hard Times" One of the
most popular songs by Pittsburgh
songwriter Stephen Foster, it was inspired by his difficult life and the hard
times Pittsburghers face just before the Civil War. “The Johnstown Flood." On Friday, May 31, 1889,
2,000 people were killed in one of America's most infamous disasters. The song
follows the ride of John G. Parker, who galloped his horse ahead of the 40-foot
wave and tried to warn the people of Johnstown. NewLanders’ guitarist Gerard
Rohlf's great-grandparents were killed in the flood. “The Homestead Strike" Believed to have been
sung during the epic battle of July 6, 1892, when Pinkerton militiamen tried to
quell a revolt by locked out steelworkers. Singer Paula Purnell's great-great
uncle was shot, but not killed, during the battle “In the Valley Where the Allegheny Flows” A
love song written in and about New Kensington, Pa., in 1912. “Monongahela Sal" A 20th-century, “done her
wrong” ballad inspired by the rough-edged steel town just upriver of Pittsburgh.
“Pittsburgh Town (Is a Smoky Ol' Town)"
Pete Seeger retold the story about the hard and dirty work that was done in
Pittsburgh. “Run Johnny Run” songwriter Jimmy Driftwood wrote this
1950s rocker about the stubborn Scotch-Irish whiskey-producing farmers of
western Pennsylvania who refused to pay a whiskey tax levied by President George
Washington. The predominance of the federal government was enforced for the
first time when Washington sent 15,000 troops to quell the rebellion. “Dark as a Dungeon” A coal-mining song written by
Merle Travis, who also wrote the classic "Sixteen Tons." “Copper Kettle” Another 1950s song about the
Whiskey Rebellion of the 1790s. [Text from
Westsylvania Web Site]
Our
CD "Where the Allegheny Flows" was voted a
Top 10 CDs of 2003 FROM THE CD PLAYERS OF THE STAFF OF CALLIOPE, THE
PITTSBURGH FOLK MUSIC SOCIETY
(As Published in the Pittsburgh City Paper December 31, 2003)
not necessarily in any particular order
Gillian Welch, Soul Journey (ACONY)
Marcia Bail, So Many Rivers (ALLIGATOR)
The Iguanas, Plastic Silver 9 Volt Heart (YEP ROC)
Vasen, Trio (NORTHSIDE)
Pierre Bensusan, Anthology (ENG)
David Long, Midnight from Memphis (BIG EVE MUSIC)
The NewLanders, Where The Allegheny Flows
(NEWLANDERS)
Lunassa, Redwood (GREEN LINNET)
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Will the Circle Be Unbroken (CAPITOL)
Bruce Cockburn, You've Never Seen Everything (ROUNDER)
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Our
CD,
Where the Allegheny Flows is now available ($14.00, plus shipping) --
Easy ways to order:
1.) Click the BUY NOW
icon below
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NewLanders - This site built by the Newlanders |
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