Negro Folk Songs Explained

Negro Folk Songs
Type:studio
Artist:Lead Belly
Cover:Negro Folk Songs by Lead Belly 600px.jpg
Released:1946
Recorded:October 1943, New York City
Genre:Folk, blues
Label:Disc Records
Producer:Moses Asch
Prev Title:Songs by Lead Belly
Prev Year:1944
Next Title:Midnight Special
Next Year:1947

Negro Folk Songs (or Negroe Folksongs Sung by Lead Belly) is an album by Lead Belly, recorded in 1943 and released as an album in early 1946.[1] [2]

By 1943, Lead Belly had recorded and released two albums and several singles with producer Moe Asch and his label Asch Recordings. In October of this year, Lead Belly went into the studio and recorded six more sides for Asch. These songs were intended to be released as an album under Asch Recordings, but it is unlikely this was ever issued.[3] In 1945, Asch Recordings went out of business and Moe Asch partnered with Herbert Harris to form Disc Records.[4] By the fall of 1945, Disc Records would entirely replace Asch Recordings, owning all its previously recorded material. Asch would reissue several of Lead Belly's records on this new label. These songs that were recorded years earlier may have been issued for the first time as Negro Folk Songs (catalog number Disc 660), a three-disc collection of 12" 78 rpm records. The linear notes were written by Fred Ramsey. In July 1946, Studs Terkel (a Chicago disc jockey) wrote a fan letter to Asch, telling him he had received positive responses to this album, as well as other albums released by Disc Records.

Multiple short songs were recorded as one continuous take and therefore have the same matrix number. Each matrix number was given its own side of a record.

In 1994, Document Records released digital remasters of these songs on the album Leadbelly: Complete Recorded Works 1939–1947 in Chronological Order, Volume 3: October 1943 to 25 April 1944, catalog number DOCD-5228. On this remaster, each of the matrix numbers were given their own track. The six tracks are meant to represent the six sides of the album.

Notes and References

  1. February 25, 1946. Offbeat. Time. 47. 8. 65. 0040-781X.
  2. Book: Goldsmith, Peter D.. Making People's Music: Moe Asch and Folkways Records. Smithsonian Institution Press. 1998. 1560988126. Washington.
  3. Book: Wolfe. Charles. The Life and Legend of Leadbelly. Lornell. Kip. 1992. HarperCollins Publishers. 0060168625. New York.
  4. Book: Place, Jeff. Lead Belly: The Smithsonian Folkways Collection. 2015. Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. 9780970494252. Washington. 24. The Life and Legacy of Lead Belly. .