
Doc Watson - Live At Club 47 2LP NEW
Doc Watson - Live At Club 47 2LP
NEW. SEALED.
Yep Roc Records
Recorded live February 10, 1963 at Club 47 in Cambridge, MA, today known as Club Passim, this never-before-heard album features four previously unreleased songs from Docâs early repertoire, in addition to performances of Docâs favorite songs of the Carter Family, Frank Hutchison, Charlie Poole, and Merle Travis. Doc is accompanied by John Herald and Ralph Rinzler of The Greenbrier Boys on five of the albumâs tracks.
âThis recording documents a pivotal moment in virtuoso Doc Watsonâs early solo career,â notes Steven Weiss, director of the Southern Folklife Collection. âThis is Doc, paying his dues and playing his heart out, performing two sets of classic, old-time country songs he learned as a child from his family and from old 78 RPM records.â
Following the success of the Club 47 show, Doc was booked at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival and released his debut solo album on Vanguard Records in 1964. He went on to become Americaâs premier folk guitarist earning seven Grammy Awards, a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, and in 1997 was presented with the National Medal of Arts at the White House by then-President Bill Clinton, who introduced him saying, âThere may not be a serious, committed baby boomer alive who didnât spend at least some of his or her youth trying to learn to pick guitar like Doc Watson.â
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Description
Doc Watson - Live At Club 47 2LP
NEW. SEALED.
Yep Roc Records
Recorded live February 10, 1963 at Club 47 in Cambridge, MA, today known as Club Passim, this never-before-heard album features four previously unreleased songs from Docâs early repertoire, in addition to performances of Docâs favorite songs of the Carter Family, Frank Hutchison, Charlie Poole, and Merle Travis. Doc is accompanied by John Herald and Ralph Rinzler of The Greenbrier Boys on five of the albumâs tracks.
âThis recording documents a pivotal moment in virtuoso Doc Watsonâs early solo career,â notes Steven Weiss, director of the Southern Folklife Collection. âThis is Doc, paying his dues and playing his heart out, performing two sets of classic, old-time country songs he learned as a child from his family and from old 78 RPM records.â
Following the success of the Club 47 show, Doc was booked at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival and released his debut solo album on Vanguard Records in 1964. He went on to become Americaâs premier folk guitarist earning seven Grammy Awards, a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, and in 1997 was presented with the National Medal of Arts at the White House by then-President Bill Clinton, who introduced him saying, âThere may not be a serious, committed baby boomer alive who didnât spend at least some of his or her youth trying to learn to pick guitar like Doc Watson.â












