
My Old KY Home Compilation
Full 1853 lyrics compiled from recordings by The Minster Singers, Elizabeth Spencer, Invincible Quartette, Madame Alma Gluck, Trinity Mixed Quartette, Frieda Hempel, George Alexander, Trinity Mixed Quartette.
ListenFull 1853 lyrics compiled from recordings by The Minster Singers, Elizabeth Spencer, Invincible Quartette, Madame Alma Gluck, Trinity Mixed Quartette, Frieda Hempel, George Alexander, Trinity Mixed Quartette.
ListenLee Wiley here sings the hit from Cole Porter’s 1930 Musical, The New Yorkers, starring Henrietta’s lover, Hope Williams as a New York socialite in love with a bootlegger. Hope flew away with Henrietta to her Wyoming ranch in the summer of 1932.
ListenHenrietta patronized many of the famous jug bands of Louisville, but she must have particularly admired Buford Threlkeld, also known as “Whistler.” Seen here on the guitar, he was known for playing the nose whistle and performed a private all-night set for Henrietta and John Houseman in 1925. A rare video captures Whistler’s Jug Band […]
ListenRainey was the first black woman to record a blues record and sang openly about her bisexuality. The jug adds a Louisville touch to this recording.
ListenA favorite tune of Henrietta’s by Jug band musicians she had known since her teenage years, includes the exhortation of a boy whose mother regularly entertains male companions. Henrietta put down the lyrics before this early recording, while she was living in Manhattan in the mid 1920s. An even racier version was recorded by […]
ListenIn 1926, following a visit to the English countryside, Henrietta left behind a 78 rpm record with a new hillbilly feud song on one side and a ballad about death and loss on the other. Her close friend, Bloomsbury novelist David “Bunny” Garnett described playing it on his victrola over and over in Henrietta’s absence. […]
ListenRemarkable footage of a dance number by Florence Mills’s husband, U. S. “Slow Kid” Thompson and Willie Covan in the show Henrietta attended in London in 1923. She and Mina Kirstein entertained members of the show at their home that summer in a party Duncan Grant called “absolutely perfect.”
ListenEdith Wilson was born in Louisville in 1896 and broke into the early “cabaret blues” scene in New York about 1921, where she recorded with Johnny Dunn’s Original Jazz Hounds. Henrietta crossed paths with her fellow Kentuckian and one of the earliest female blues artists during Wilson’s tours as a performer in London and in […]
ListenHenrietta was sixteen when this very early jazz recording became a hit. She bought the sheet music and may have tried it on her own saxophone.
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