The seminal Orville recording. Recorded by Bartow Riley in 1971 with Omega Burden, Pete Osborne, and Ollie Miller on guitar. As a bonus, we get Sally Johnson played by Louis Franklin on the last track, accompanied by Pete, Ollie, and Amy Burden on piano!
Download Link: Orville Burns - the Bartow Riley Recordings (43 MB)
Welcome!
If you download something, please share something back, too. Also, if you have information about any of these recordings, please pass it along. The goal of this site is to preserve the music with as much supplemental information as we can get!
Most of the music is shared in a .zip file format. You must decompress the .zip file before you can access and play the individual .mp3 songs. It's pretty easy with both Windows and Mac.
Most of the music is shared in a .zip file format. You must decompress the .zip file before you can access and play the individual .mp3 songs. It's pretty easy with both Windows and Mac.
DISCLAIMER:
Much of this music was recorded from old worn cassettes that have been sitting in a box deteriorating for years. So...sometimes it sounds like music recorded from old worn cassettes that have been deteriorating for years. It's not studio quality, but it is good enough that you will still love the music.
Friday, July 14, 2017
Wednesday, May 17, 2017
Bar D Wranglers On Stage
Here's a really fun live record put out (probably in the early 1980's) by the Bar D Wranglers from Durango, Colorado, featuring Terry Morris on the fiddle. Many of us fiddlers from the Northwest grew up with this recording on heavy rotation, inspiring some to go on and become chuckwagon fiddlers themselves, including Tim Hodgson (Bar J Wranglers) and Tony Ludiker (Flying W Wranglers).
The Bar D Wranglers are still going strong and I encourage you to go see their chuckwagon show for an evening of great food and entertainment: www.bardchuckwagon.com.
Saturday, March 18, 2017
Orville Burns with John Hartford
Here's a playlist with over two hours of Orville Burns fiddling with John Hartford on the banjo and Bobby Christman on guitar. The banjo overwhelms the audio at times, but it's still a great watch and listen. Orville plays some tunes here that likely aren't recorded anywhere else. You can tell these guys were really enjoying the opportunity to play together.
Orville Burns - fiddle
John Hartford - banjo
Bobby Christman - guitar
Mark Ralph - fiddle
Direct YouTube Link:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTtU3L7dFwuxMR7YhwLbmtBkcsFvoziLV
Orville Burns - fiddle
John Hartford - banjo
Bobby Christman - guitar
Mark Ralph - fiddle
Direct YouTube Link:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTtU3L7dFwuxMR7YhwLbmtBkcsFvoziLV
Monday, January 30, 2017
Major Franklin - June Bug on a Barbed Wire
This is my favorite Major Franklin tape. Actually, it's probably my favorite tape, period. I had assumed everyone had this, but just in case you didn't, here it is. There are multiple copies of this floating around, mostly labeled "June Bug on a Barbed Wire" due to Major's unforgettable version near the end of the tape. I tried to reassemble the tunes in the original order to preserve that old cassette vibe.
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
Orville Burns with Royce Franklin
Orville Burns playing in the parking lot at a fiddle contest sometime in the early 1990's. There is a lot of joy in this video. Accompanists include:
Anthony Mature - guitar
Royce Franklin - guitar
Matt Hartz - tenor guitar
Carl Hopkins - guitar
VCR recording by Bartow Riley.
Direct YouTube Link (for a larger picture):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E04NDHwJV2g&t=110s
Anthony Mature - guitar
Royce Franklin - guitar
Matt Hartz - tenor guitar
Carl Hopkins - guitar
VCR recording by Bartow Riley.
Direct YouTube Link (for a larger picture):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E04NDHwJV2g&t=110s
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Eck Robertson - Radio Theme Song
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! Here is an Eck Robertson song that has never been released digitally. This is the last track from the 1976 Sonyatone release, "Eck Robertson: Master Fiddler." Taken from a field recording in 1965, this track didn't make it onto to the 1920's Victor-era CD compilation that you can buy directly from County Sales. Be warned, this song gets stuck in your head!
Direct YouTube link (for a larger picture):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xP169sO4hgk
Lyrics:
Well friends, we're on the air
Please listen everywhere
As I would like to please you
Don't think that I don't care
I've played my way to fame
Eck Robertson is my name
And if you like my program
Well, I'll come back again
Call if you will, and tell us who you are
And I will try to see you, no matter if it's near or far
Or drop me just a line, or see thee on your way
And I will always love you, until my dying day
Direct YouTube link (for a larger picture):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xP169sO4hgk
Lyrics:
Well friends, we're on the air
Please listen everywhere
As I would like to please you
Don't think that I don't care
I've played my way to fame
Eck Robertson is my name
And if you like my program
Well, I'll come back again
Call if you will, and tell us who you are
And I will try to see you, no matter if it's near or far
Or drop me just a line, or see thee on your way
And I will always love you, until my dying day
Monday, November 28, 2016
Texas Shorty/Terry Morris: Backstage at Hallettsville
![]() |
| Texas Shorty |
Blogger: Grant Wheeler
This audio was originally recorded sometime around 1985-86 by Bill McNeil in one of the contestant warm-up rooms that flank the stage at the Fiddler's Frolics in Hallettsville, Texas. Audiences can always expect to witness fierce competition at this contest, but as can be heard on this recording, there was some incendiary fiddling going on back stage, as well. As Bill so eloquently states at the 1 minute 8 second mark on the very first track:
This audio was originally recorded sometime around 1985-86 by Bill McNeil in one of the contestant warm-up rooms that flank the stage at the Fiddler's Frolics in Hallettsville, Texas. Audiences can always expect to witness fierce competition at this contest, but as can be heard on this recording, there was some incendiary fiddling going on back stage, as well. As Bill so eloquently states at the 1 minute 8 second mark on the very first track:
"Aww...SOOEY!"
The fiddlers are the incomparable Jim "Texas Shorty" Chancellor and the late, forever great, Terry Morris. The faded hand writing on the cassette lists a first string, dream team trio of backup pickers: Bobby Christman and the legendary Franklin Brothers power duo, Royce and Ray. (Other guitarists pinch hitting here are there on a few tunes are Shorty's brother Robert Chancellor and Gerald Jones. And you don't have to listen too closely to hear the gleefully maniacal laughter and thumping stand-up bass lines of Alfred Eugene Mouledous.)
Shorty (Tracks
1-11) lights the fuse, laying a blistering 4 minute long smack down
on "Tug Boat" and later serves up a few deep cut tunes like
"Liverpool Hornpipe" and "Old Sport," and gets his swang
on with "Kansas City Kitty" and "Brown Skin Gal."
Terry (Tracks 12-16) keeps it cookin' doing what Terry does; pulling rabbits out of his hat on standards "Sally Johnson" and "Dusty Miller" and executing exquisite acrobatics on "Wednesday Night Waltz". We close out the set of tunes with a bonus track of Terry taking a second run at "I Don't Love Nobody."
![]() |
| Terry Morris |
Thanks to Brother Sumner
for re-discovering the cassette tape from which this audio
was digitized and to Brother Matthew for filling in some details about this
recording. This music lives on and continues to inspire when it is shared.
Aww...Sooey.
In memory of Royce
Franklin...gentleman picker extraordinaire.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)



