Slide version of a rather unknown tune by Buck Cherry or sumthin’. From “The Blues And Beyond”, ca. 1995
Sideshow Stephen: vocals, nat. res. slideguit.
the blog of the eletricblue grass
Slide version of a rather unknown tune by Buck Cherry or sumthin’. From “The Blues And Beyond”, ca. 1995
Sideshow Stephen: vocals, nat. res. slideguit.
From “The Blues And Beyond, ca. 1995
Another Blues Standard, played on the mandolin. The gritty vocal is due to two bars of Swiss chocolate, devoured immediately before recording. Works kinda opposite to helium, try it sometime!
Sideshow Stephen: vocals, mandolin, chocolate
Also from “The Blues And Beyond”
A Blues Standard, played “bona fide bottleneck slide”.
Sideshow Stephen: vocals, National resophonic guitar
Howdy Folks! Well let’s get started with an ol’ tune, recorded in my own bathroom, sometime way back in the 1990ies. Played slide on me ole trusted western guitar.
It’s a kind of a folksy, countrified version of the old Blues Number “Corinna, Corinna”. It was on my first demo tape “Sideshow Stephen Solo – The Blues And Beyond” from ca. 1995.
Sideshow Stephen: Vocals, accoustic guitar
Ingber Inbread: acc. guit., vocals
Dingus Inbread: slideguit., vocals
Rebus Inbread: fiddle, vocals
From the August 2001 demo
Ingber Inbread: dulcimer
Dingus Inbread: slideguitar, harmonica, vocals
Rebus Inbread: fiddle
From the August 2001 demo
Ingber Inbread: mandolin, vocals
Dingus Inbread: slideguitar, vocals
Rebus Inbread: fiddle, vocals
From the August 2001 demo
Ingber Inbread: dulcimer, vocals
Dingus Inbread: mandolin, vocals
Rebus Inbread: fiddle, vocals
From the August 2001 demo
Instrumental tune we play when folks wanna get down and do the “treed possum”, the “noodled catfish” or even the “get-run-over-by-a-freight” or any other of those many traditonal appalachian dances.
Ingber Inbread: appalachian dulcimer
Dingus Inbread: National resophonic slideguitar
previously unreleased