The Uncensored Folk Music of Austria – Various Artists / Arhoolie CD-454/5
$25.00
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Description
CD 454 Two CD set.
Why would a CD called the Folk Music of Austria, with a cover photo of three older Austrian gentlemen playing a clarinet, an accordion and a hammered dulcimer have a Parental Advisory – Explicit Content sticker on it? Why is it called the Uncensored Folk Music of Austria? What’s going on here?
The Uncensored Folk Music of Austria is 2 CD set of authentic regional music, recorded between 1967 and 1998 by Arhoolie Records founder Chris Strachwitz and his friend Johnny Parth. Sixty-one songs recorded in almost every province in Austria – many released here for the first time! These location recordings bring you authentic amateurs and semi-professionals in various vocal combinations, many accompanied by unique instruments: hammered dulcimer, zither, barrel organ, jaw harp, cembalo, tarogato, brick xylophone (yes – brick xylophone), grenade glockenspiel (yes – grenade glockenspiel), flute, clarinet, accordion, fiddle, guitar and more.
And yes, several of the songs are of a very explicit sexual nature. The booklet contains extensive notes, and embedded in the CD (accessible via computer) are all of the lyrics transcribed in their original Austrian dialect, and translated into High German and English. So you can read what it’s all about.
Tracks:
Der Steirische Brauch – Original Herberstein Trio |
Wann der Schildhahn balzt – Fefi Eibisberger |
Polka aus Schwendberg – Peter Reitmeier |
Mei Haus steht auf a sechs oder siebn Spreizen – Bock, Wanzenbock, & Gollinger |
Magyar Signallied – Ladislaus Wenzel |
Halts enk z’samm (Es dauert nimmer lang) – Original Herberstein Trio |
Jagdrufe – Fritz Stradner |
Oh, Müllerin, du stolze – Christian Ortner |
Steirer san ma, Steirer bleib’n ma – Original Herberstein Trio |
Dreistettner Lied – Karl Scherrer |
Unterm Lindenbaum – Trude Mally & Heini Griuc |
Zillertaler Tanzl – Peter Reitmeier |
Bauernwalzer – Blaskapelle Oberwart |
Der schönste Mann von Wien – Bock, Wanzenbock, & Gollinger |
Potpourri – Karl Scherrer |
Als der Bauer vom Felde kam – Original Herberstein Trio |
Bauernpolka aus Übelbach – Fritz Forstinger |
Jakobischützenmarsch – Lois Blamberger & group |
Wienerlieder-Potpourri: – Pepi Rottensteiner |
Steinriegler Marsch – Franz Themessel |
Scheiben Jodler – Anna Gratz |
Wie lustig ist’s im greanen Wald – Bock, Wanzenbock, & Gollinger |
Buchbauer’s Walzer – Familie Buchbauer |
Der Turlhofer – Hermann Hartel & group |
Schackerl, Schackerl Marschlied – Franz Radosta |
Matzleinsdorf, mein Heimatort – Heini Griuc |
Schwarzaugig’s Dirndl – Karl Scherrer |
Wohl in der Niederschwing – Lois Blamberger |
Lei aufn‚ lei aufn, der Hochalma zua – David Themessel & Gunrich Netmessnig |
Djehuliri Jodler – Anna Gratz & Roswitha Neumayr |
Gstanzln aus dem Feistritztal – Original Herberstein Trio |
Tischlied – Ludwig Gangoli |
A Zither und a Geign – Hermann Hartel & group |
Da hör’n ma den Kuckuck aus der Literflasch’n schrei’n – Bock, Wanzenbock, & Gollinger |
Da setz i mein grean’s Hüatl auf – Karl Scherrer |
D’Wurzengraber – David Themessel & Gunrich Netmessnig |
Schön grau ist der Morgen – Anna Gratz Duo |
Kaufruf – Unknown Iron Collector |
Ein Liebeslied – Ladislaus Wenzel |
Feistritztaler Marsch (Aber g’rebelt muass er sein) – Original Herberstein Trio |
Heuberger Jodler – Fefi Eibisberger |
Ländler von Josef Span – Peter Reitmeier |
I bin der schene Bauernfranzl – Fefi & Josef Eibisberger |
Stoanabrünnl Jodler – Original Herberstein Trio |
Ein Kirchenlied – Karl Scherrer |
Djulliulliöh, a Landpartie wird g’macht – Bock, Wanzenbock, & Gollinger |
Geradtaktiger Ländler – Lois Blamberger & Co. |
D’lustigen Holzhackerbuam – Original Herberstein Trio |
Gstanzln: War a wia ra war/ Halts enk z’samm – Hermann Hartel & group |
Der traurige Bua (Alexander Baumann) – Duo Stadlmayr-Krupa & Maly Nagl |
Hahnbalzwalzer – Anna Gratz |
Radltruch’n Polka – Christian Ortner |
I häng an meiner Weanastadt – Maly Nagl |
Kuckuckswalzer – Original Herberstein Trio |
Der Laufnitzer – Hermann Hartel Trio |
Meine Geige ist zerbrochen – Ludwig Gangoli |
Der Hackenstiel – Josef Bock & Johann Schwendenwein |
Dingl, dangl, Hammerstiel – Original Herberstein Trio |
Wie mein Ahnl 20 Jahr – Emil Thun |
Polka – Familie Buchbauer |
Wann d’ Sunn untergeht – Fefi Eibisberger |
REVIEW
“It is astonishing that the CD compendium with the noteworthy title Uncensored Folk Music of Austria remains only negligibly recognized in Austria five years after its publication. In fact, the two people responsible for this achievement merit high praise for their work. Johnny Parth (born in Vienna in 1930) and Chris Strachwitz (born in Gross Reichenau, Lower Schlesia, in 1931, now American) are experts in the area of blues music. On his Austrian record labels, Roots and Document Records, Parth manages to release CDs of all available American blues recordings from the turn of the century to the Second World War. Strachwitz founded the US company, Arhoolie Records, under which label this double CD was released…
But what does the label ‘uncensored’ actually mean in connection with ‘folk music’? And what in heaven’s name do two blues lovers have to do with Austrian folk music? A note next to the track listing in the CD booklet provides the answer to the first question: ‘Items with an asterisk (*) are uncensored songs, mostly Gstanzel, which contain explicit sexual language probably not suitable for young ears and eyes!’ And the introductory remarks by the publisher in he CD booklet reveal what motivated two blues collectors to hunt down folk music in tiny Austrian villages, high, isolated alpine pastures, and remote alpine valleys, as well as the metropolis of Vienna: they were trying to discover ‘something like Austrian blues.’
This unique vantage point – viewing Austria’s traditional music from outside, through the eyes of two lovers of American blues – is immensely refreshing but additionally evidences profound expertise. Both perceived rather early on that the ‘wild,’ informal, generally orally handed-down folk music of Austria (which Strachwitz refers to as ‘authentic’) stands in stark contrast to the well-ordered, cultivated classics of folk-music clubs and choirs frequently performed as concert pieces (which Strachwitz assigns to the sphere of ‘purely traditional’ folk music)…He and Parth were instead interested in recording what they understood to be ‘functional music,’ in its ‘usual environment’ rather than the studio…
The recordings of Viennese songs stir enthusiasm for now-deceased singing personalities such as Trude Mally, Maly Nagl, and Heini Bruic, who scintillate in their striking individuality and flawless implementation of the Viennese singing style, with its strong vibrato and footloose rhythms…There are other gems in the collection: music for Jew’s harp; yodelling by Anna Gratz of Salzburg; songs performed in a rustic hut on a high alpine pasture in Styria by Fefi and Josef Eibisberger; the ‘barrel organ’ music of Viennese street musician Franz Radosta; and, above all else, the music composed for a homemade ‘brick xylophone’ by folk musician Karl Scherrer of Lower Austria. Thanks to the comprehensive accompanying documentation by Viennese folk music researcher Ernst Weber, the recordings are illuminated as the unique pieces they are. Strachwitz and Parth’s collection is by no means a complete, all-includive anthology, and that was never the intention. All the same, it is bursting with instructive examples of the various genres of Austrian folk music…Most importantly, it awakens a craving for still more ‘uncensored folk music of Austria.’ – Thomas Nussbaumer, 2014 Yearbook for Traditional Music
Additional information
Weight | 0.43 lbs |
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