Anthology of American Folk Music

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April 03, 2007

Comments

Maria Hodges

Charlie Lawson killed 6 of his children, not 8. He had 8 children in all. One son died at age 6 in 1920, nine years before the murders. One other son 16 year old Arthur Lawson escaped being murdered because he was somewhere else when the murders were committed.
Maria C. Hodges

Lyle Lofgren

Thanks for the correction. My source was "Country Music Sources" by Meade, Spottswood, and Meade. I've heard there are other errors in that book, also.

Lyle

Don Cooney

Could Dylan have heard the Stanley Brothers version of this song?

Jerome Clark

I've written this before in this space, and I now repeat myself:

"Hollis Brown" was based on Dave Rankin's "Poor Man," recorded on a 1961 Arhoolie album, Bayou Bluegrass, by the Louisiana Honeydrippers. The album was reissued in CD in 2002, though this time attributed to Jim Smoak & the Louisiana Honeydrippers.

Tom Rush also covered "Poor Man" on his 1965 self-titled Elektra debut (reissued in 2001 as a Collector's Choice CD). Rush credits it, inaccurately, to "Traditional."

Trevor Blank

Jerome, I've done a lot of research on "Hollis Brown" and some of the historical underpinnings to its tale. I agree that "Poor Man," both in content and musical lingerings, does seem like a parent to "Hollis Brown," but I was wondering what your source was for claiming that the song was based on it. I'd love to know since I've been writing about the topic a bit and it would be a neat thing to pull in.

geoff weston

As a great (english) fan of BD, I regard the power of the rhythmn line of HB underscores the powerful social commentary. Following the last few fallow years in his material (sorry, compared with his first 5 albums) we are now able to take a longer look and see the overall power and effect. This and his other concurrent songs stand singing ( as long as the audience listen) today. I do I'm afraid.

The Modesto Kid

In the recording that is on "The Witmark Demos" and also in the performance at Brandeis in 63, Dylan introduces the song by saying it's a true story, which suggests he did base it on a story in the newspaper.

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