The History Of Country Music 02 Louvin Brothers

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  • Опубліковано 28 сер 2024
  • Part two of this excellent series kicks of with "The Singing Brakeman" Jimmie Rodgers.It then examines the influence of the radio and the popularity of singing brothers such as the Stanley Brothers, The Monroe Boys and The Louvin Brothers

КОМЕНТАРІ • 67

  • @myradioon
    @myradioon Рік тому +2

    I was honored to meet Charlie Louvin and have his autograph.

  • @haroldbaker3362
    @haroldbaker3362 3 роки тому +2

    Anybody who says thumbs down to this music never lived
    when life had a quality !

  • @Grimmmer
    @Grimmmer 9 років тому +44

    I could listen to the Louvin Brothers all day.

    • @wayneboudreaux664
      @wayneboudreaux664 6 років тому

      Harriet Brown 1

    • @aleksanderreljanovic
      @aleksanderreljanovic 3 роки тому +1

      @Kelly Norman sad

    • @aleksanderreljanovic
      @aleksanderreljanovic 3 роки тому +1

      @Kelly Norman I ain’t sad it’s just sad that you are saying you don’t care and you came here yourself no one asked you to comment. So clearly you do.

    • @gideonjonathan1984
      @gideonjonathan1984 3 роки тому

      I know it is quite randomly asking but does anybody know of a good site to watch new series online?

    • @zaiddrew1084
      @zaiddrew1084 3 роки тому

      @Gideon Jonathan I use FlixZone. You can find it by googling =)

  • @philokevetch8691
    @philokevetch8691 8 місяців тому

    In these hard times we're going through it's uplifting to listen to the High Lonesome voice of Jimmy Rodgers and know you're not alone

  • @holdthemaccountable9257
    @holdthemaccountable9257 5 років тому +14

    Wish you hadn't left this earth so soon.I think about you all the time.The time we walked around the family farm was one of my fondest memories.
    That and sitting by the beautiful fireplace in that awesome sunken living room of your log house on sand mountain. It was a magical time and a magical memory that lives own in my heart and mind.
    I remember the first time mother and I went to the opry to see you and uncle Charlie perform and I had what I think was an anxiety attack I was in the opry bathroom sick as a dog.
    I remember so many performers standing and looking in on me and so concerned for me..
    Thank you all so many wonderful opry performers for caring that night.
    I've always thought you were such a cool man and musically ahead of the times back then.
    Love ya and miss you ,my dear grandfather Ira Loundermilk/Louvin

    • @patk1254
      @patk1254 3 роки тому +1

      Please know that my family got so much enjoyment from these two guys ! I talked to Charlie when he was moving the “museum” from Bell Buckle. I loved them both.....Patsy

  • @ustheserfs
    @ustheserfs 4 роки тому +2

    Ken Burns' documentary is the defining article on country, but BBC has always elevated subjects which we put so much importance in.

  • @mariacardenas4665
    @mariacardenas4665 3 роки тому +12

    Love the Louvin Brothers

  • @shirleymurphree1660
    @shirleymurphree1660 Рік тому

    Thank you very much. Country music has its roots in our hearts.
    I opened for Marty Robbins many years. Opened for Conway also. As a kid I lived About 95 miles from Grand ole opry. Hen I was old enough I was there on front row center. Thanks to Marty.

  • @AverageCanadianGuy
    @AverageCanadianGuy 3 роки тому +2

    Thanks for your meticulous preservation of these music documentaries

    • @corporalhenshaw
      @corporalhenshaw  3 роки тому

      Thanks for your appreciation, Kyle. I tend to do so little these days, because of copyright claims. I don't want to risk what is already up.

  • @SuperOlds88
    @SuperOlds88 10 років тому +21

    I agree with Ralph, I don't really care what the words are, it's the harmony of the voices, the voices are another instrument to me.

    • @mbsnyderc
      @mbsnyderc 3 роки тому

      The words do matter.

  • @CharlieWhitley
    @CharlieWhitley 10 років тому +4

    Comment about The Delmore Brothers is spot on.

  • @cbthethird
    @cbthethird 10 років тому +8

    Imagine- MUSIC used to be played on the radio. And people used to play REAL instruments and families would play music together.

  • @TheHB69
    @TheHB69 10 років тому +4

    Didn't know about this series when it was on BBC4 Damm! I missed a good series!

  • @user-xo1tc9ts1q
    @user-xo1tc9ts1q 10 місяців тому

    Ira does a little jump at the end of "Love Thy Neighbor" that reminds me of Chris Thile. Pure enjoyment of the music.

  • @elsenorgatito
    @elsenorgatito 11 років тому +3

    Loving watching this

  • @tacopcoltrane
    @tacopcoltrane 11 років тому +5

    i truely appreciate the videos you post, please dont stop!

  • @rogeralsop3479
    @rogeralsop3479 4 роки тому +1

    Marvellous!

  • @captainwalker7927
    @captainwalker7927 11 років тому +3

    Thank you so much for this documentary!

  • @indianeyesonyou
    @indianeyesonyou 10 років тому +7

    Thank you so much for your time and work completing these videos of country music history...awesome job! I loved the interviews and appreciate it all.

  • @briartlaw
    @briartlaw 11 років тому +3

    Just great thanks for posting..

  • @kerryg100
    @kerryg100 9 років тому +4

    I agree re docs bbc are just brilliant
    In particular with music
    Ker

  • @OldDogNewTrick
    @OldDogNewTrick 6 років тому +2

    Listened to music like this on a battery powered radio with a hand cranked windup gramophone. Also listened on a home made crystal radio. (no batteries required)

    • @monicaphillips2730
      @monicaphillips2730 Рік тому +1

      GRAMOPHONE OMG
      When I was a child there was a guy who use to play his always this song
      LOST LOVE I remembered it sometime ago and asked my sister if she remembers
      That was luxury in those days

  • @fr33k3r
    @fr33k3r 11 років тому +3

    Awesome work....thnx....

  • @newfful
    @newfful 11 років тому +2

    Thank you for uploading this. Very fascinating.

  • @johndoylemc
    @johndoylemc 5 років тому +7

    Jimmie Rodgers WAS a railroad man - until his health failed and he wasn't able to do the work. Available sales records show he sold less than the 20 million - but - where he may have sold only 10 to 15 thousand of a record - others sold only 500 to 1000. Jimmie was too ill to tour extensively - and he never toured north of the Mason-Dixon line. Jimmie Rodgers is accredited with the direct sale of more phonographs and guitars than anyone before or since his time. His records have been found worldwide.

  • @bobquack1
    @bobquack1 Рік тому

    Been searching YT for Lights in the Valley by Roy Acuff from the Grand Ole Opry. This is where I found it and may be where I originally saw it. It had Hays blowing that train whistle. Lights in the Valley also morphed into Do Lord.

  • @MessianicJewJitsu
    @MessianicJewJitsu 6 років тому +1

    Badass video

  • @ratherknotty
    @ratherknotty 10 років тому +7

    While this is very good, like many other examples dealing with brother duets, the Delmore brothers are largely overlooked yet they pre-date most of the others. They first recorded in 1931, and appeared on the Grand Ole Opry every week from 1932 to 1938 and must have been heard by, and influenced The Monroe brothers , the Blue Sky Boys and the Stanley brothers who all followed with similar styles, the one difference being, Rabon Delmore played a tenor guitar, the others used a mandolin.

    • @dvedwards1
      @dvedwards1 10 років тому

      Jon Emery
      And We Need a Whole Lot More of Jesus, and a Lot Less Rock 'N' Roll!

    • @lobstergod1715
      @lobstergod1715 8 місяців тому

      Completely agree with this. The Delmore Brothers are a pillar of early music. They are so catchy too! The great Bob Dylan even got inspiration from them. I know this comment was made 9 years ago but I still agree with it regardless lol. 👍👍👍

  • @rickeycarroll7369
    @rickeycarroll7369 8 років тому +4

    The National Barn Dance deserves a mention.

    • @janelynch8599
      @janelynch8599 7 років тому

      Rickey Carroll not yuYgk

    • @lordofthemound3890
      @lordofthemound3890 Рік тому

      WLS in Chicago.
      Absolutely! It preceded and was, for its first two decades (the Golden Age of Radio), bigger than the Grand Ole Opry. I think there’s a little revisionist history going on here.

  • @ericsalles3393
    @ericsalles3393 8 років тому +2

    its the internet now

  • @DumpTruck500
    @DumpTruck500 10 років тому +6

    "It's one of a number of ballads that involve the murder of young girls. There's an entire sub-genre of these."

  • @jirirehorka
    @jirirehorka 4 місяці тому +1

    👍👍👍👍

  • @shirleymurphree1660
    @shirleymurphree1660 Рік тому

    The first time I worked with Charlie an IRA they were only singing gospel songs.

  • @ericsalles3393
    @ericsalles3393 8 років тому +4

    wexford may be in ireland ..irish song

    • @USA24541
      @USA24541 8 років тому

      Yes, that is the origin of Knoxville Girl. Wexford Ireland.

  • @davestambaugh7282
    @davestambaugh7282 4 роки тому +1

    The current batch of country singers southern accents are way thicker than any of these historical recordings.

  • @Levoy1
    @Levoy1 6 років тому +1

    Great stuff. Love his hat. What kind is it. I want one.

  • @CAROLUSPRIMA
    @CAROLUSPRIMA 10 років тому +7

    I understand that this is a generalization and these are necessarily at risk of being fraught with folly, but . . . We may as well face it; none can do docs as well as the Brits.

    • @CAROLUSPRIMA
      @CAROLUSPRIMA 9 років тому +1

      Marcus Clements
      Perhaps I didn't make myself clear. I was referring to the high quality in general of BBC documentaries, not the popularity of the music. But since you brought it up, it does seem that many US artists are more appreciated in the UK than in the US. Remember, groups and acts such as the Beatles and Eric Clapton had to educate us as to the greatness of our blues artists. But, yes, in the hollow where I grew up in Eastern Kentucky I heard many a song that made its way to here across the Atlantic and in many genres the influence continues to be apparent. And my first instrument was the fiddle when I was six years old. A direct and almost unbroken connection to my Scots-Irish ancestors.

    • @1961axis
      @1961axis 9 років тому

      I know! When I said that I don't know why people are surprised about our liking for country/folk music from the States, it was a general observation. I was sharing your pleasure in what is a marvelous musical form...sorry to have gassed on about its origins - I'd love to get over to your part of the world one day - good to hear from a fellow musician.

    • @CAROLUSPRIMA
      @CAROLUSPRIMA 9 років тому +1

      Marcus Clements
      No apology necessary. Few on this side on the waters are sufficiently aware of these origins, this writer included. We're on the same page.

    • @CriticalListener
      @CriticalListener 8 років тому +3

      +CAROLVS That wasn't always the case. I remember enjoying and learning things from American documentaries in the mid-60s. But through the years studio owners and management concentrated on celebrity and shallow things, not facts & learning. Couple that with sped-up, super-quick edits that pared down the American attention span, and refusal to make more informative programming for its own sake--and there you go.

  • @lordofthemound3890
    @lordofthemound3890 Рік тому

    “All at once he just grabbed up a stick and beat her to death. It don’t say why he done it.”
    This has always been the basis of my fascination with the song Knoxville Girl. If the guy actually had a motivation it wouldn’t be half as interesting as it is. But the guy LOVED the girl, yet he felt compelled to do what he did.

    • @TelegraphRoadWhittier
      @TelegraphRoadWhittier 3 місяці тому

      Well, she had "dark and roving eyes."..maybe that's the clue as to why....

  • @gaylegreene
    @gaylegreene Рік тому

    Knoxville Girl dark song

    • @dennisraymond8071
      @dennisraymond8071 Рік тому

      You're absolutely right..... Good evening Jess how are you doing over there hope you're having a wonderful day it's a wonderful day that the lord has made.

  • @KingVito400
    @KingVito400 10 років тому +2

    where can I find the song ¨lights in the valley¨ by Roy Acuff?
    Cant find it :( Amazing video. Hope someone can help me out:-)

    • @tccoops
      @tccoops 7 років тому

      I can't find it either. Boo.

    • @no_peace
      @no_peace 5 років тому

      Well I know a version called "light in the valley" by Mrs. Reed and Mrs. Duncans that I presume is just as good

    • @bobquack1
      @bobquack1 4 роки тому

      Not by Roy Acuff, but by Doc Watson here: ua-cam.com/video/R8yyIsgoni0/v-deo.html