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Columbia River Collection
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Originally Released: 1988
Discs: 1
Label: Rounder Select
Item Number: HSD110362

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Columbia River Collection
Track Listings
  Title
Listen
1.    Oregon Trail
2.    Roll on Columbia
3.    New Found Land
4.    Talking Columbia
5.    Roll Columbia Roll
6.    Columbia's Waters
7.    Ramblin' Blues
8.    It Takes a Married Man to Sing a Worried Song
9.    Hard Travelin'
10.    Biggest Thing That Man Has Ever Done
11.    Jackhammer Blues
12.    Song of the Coulee Dam
13.    Grand Coulee Dam
14.    Washington Talkin' Blues
15.    Ramblin' Round
16.    Pastures of Plenty
17.    End of My Line
Solo performer: Woody Guthrie (vocals, guitar).

Recorded in 1941.

In May 1941, Woody Guthrie began working for the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), a job that required him to write songs to promote development (dams) on the Columbia River. He would later claim that he wrote a song per day during his month-long association with the BPA, making it one of the most productive periods of his life. Several of his best-loved songs came from this period, including "Ramblin' Round," "Hard Travlin'," and "Pastures of Plenty." Columbia River Collection has two strong points to recommend it. First, it collects all of the available material that Guthrie wrote during this time in one place, giving the collection a thematic unity similar to Dust Bowl Ballads. Next, it includes 11 versions of the songs originally recorded in Portland, OR, in 1941, and never before released. This latter quality is Columbia River Collection's strongest point, which makes it seem odd that the liner notes aren't more helpful with sorting out which of the 17 tracks are from these early sessions. It is clear, however, that versions of "Roll on Columbia" and "Roll Columbia, Roll," two favorites, are new. It's also clear that Rounder borrowed the other six songs, including "Pastures of Plenty," from Smithsonian Folkways. The important thing, though, is that the listener can now gain a better view of Guthrie's artistic vision at this important juncture in his career. It also doesn't hurt that Columbia River Collection is a strong group of songs that capture the Dust Bowl Balladeer in top form. ~ Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr.

In the '30s, Woody Guthrie spent an extended period in the Columbia River valley of the Pacific Northwest. It was here that he wrote many of the songs that helped cement his legend as the pre-eminent American folk singer and songwriter of his generation. These songs are collected on the Rounder compilation THE COLUMBIA RIVER COLLECTION.

Many of the songs are directly related to the river, like the topical odes to the river's then-current WPA projects, "Song of the Coulee Dam," "Grand Coulee Dam," and "The Biggest Thing Man Has Ever Done." Others are paeans to the untamed beauty of the river and its environs, like the majestic "Roll on Columbia." Some songs are dedicated to the workers, like "Jackhammer Blues" and the wry self-parody "It Takes a Married Man to Song a Worried Song." The gospel-tinged "Pastures of Plenty" is the album's highpoint, and one of Guthrie's very best.


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