Sneha Girap (Editor)

Kelly Harrell

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Origin
  
Name
  
Kelly Harrell


Years active
  
1920s

Genres
  
Role
  
Singer

Kelly Harrell wwwcelestialmonochordorglogimageskellyharrel

Born
  
September 13, 1889 (
1889-09-13
)

Died
  
July 9, 1942, Virginia, United States

Albums
  
Blues Hits Volume 3: Kelly Harrell, Blues Masters

Record labels
  
Victor Talking Machine Company, Okeh Records

Similar People
  
Frank Hutchison, Henry Whitter, Buell Kazee, The Carolina Tar Heels, G B Grayson

Associated acts
  
Virginia String Band

Kelly harrell i was born about 10 000 years ago


Kelly Harrell (September 13, 1889 – July 9, 1942) was a country music singer in the 1920s. He recorded more than a dozen songs for OKeh and Victor Records and wrote songs which were recorded by other artists, including Jimmie Rodgers and Ernest Stoneman, in his own lifetime.

Contents

Kelly Harrell Complete Recorded Works Vol 2 19261929 Kelly Harrell Songs

Dying hobo by kelly harrell 1926


Biography

Kelly Harrell httpsiytimgcomvilt9vckF1Om0hqdefaultjpg

Harrell was born in Draper's Valley, Wythe County, Virginia and from his early teens worked in various textile mills. In early 1925, when Harrell was already 35 years old, he went to New York City and recorded four tracks for Victor Records, among them "New River Train" (made famous by Bill Monroe) and "The Roving Gambler". He recorded for OKeh later that year, including a version of "The Wreck of the Old 97" and "I Was Born 10,000 Year Ago" (the latter often known as "The Bragging Song" and recorded by Elvis Presley, The New Christy Minstrels, Odetta and several others).

He made more records for Victor in 1925, 1926, 1927 and 1929. "The Butcher's Boy" and "I Wish I Was A Single Girl Again" on Victor 19563 on 1/7/25. "The Dying Hobo" (1926) is a variant of the traditional English folk song "George Collins". "My Name Is John Johannah" was recorded in 1927 at RCA Victor's studios in Camden, NJ, with Posey Rorer on fiddle, Alfred Steagal on guitar and R.D. Hundley on banjo. Bob Dylan used the tune of "John Johannah" as the basis of his song "Long Time Gone". In a prose piece, "For Dave Glover" (Newport Folk Festival programme 1963), Dylan writes: "I can't sing "John Johannah" cause it's his story and his people's story."

After 1929, his recording career came to a halt, owing to his inability to play an instrument — Harrell always required backing by other musicians, and the Great Depression had so damaged the recording business that Victor was unwilling to pay the cost of hiring backup musicians.

Harrell's "My Name Is John Johannah" appeared on Harry Smith's Anthology of American Folk Music (1952), which was extremely influential on the folk revival of the 1950s-60s. Harrell's complete recorded music was reissued by Bear Family on a triple-LP set in the 1970s, and he is also represented by an LP on the County label. More recently, Worried Blues was released 2006

References

Kelly Harrell Wikipedia