PLAYLISTS FOR WUWG'S APPALACHIAN TRAIL Vaguely Folk Music Show September 2001

***playlist for 25 Sept 2001*** this program produced and hosted by volkszangur steve sedberry Peter Kearney (group) singers: Claire Parkhill and Jan Arie Martha and Mary (Peter Kearney) Center Stage Bluegrass Band Supertime Peter Kearney (group) singer: Claire Parkhill A King In Rags (Peter Kearney) Peter Kearney A Confession To Jesus the Poor (Peter Kearney) Randall Goodgame Sylvester ClarySage (Texans: Stacey and Debbie) a rose is a rose The Gourds (Shinebox CD, Sugar Hill Records) Two Girls (Townes van Zandt) rounds galore... and more (Evy Mayer and friends including Sol Roundman Weber) Scalloped Potatoes (you haven't been eating scalloped potatos for three days like we have) Joy of My Heart E.C. Scott (on Blind Pig Records; 1995) You Got The Wrong Number Gerri Gribi Prince Charming Doesn't Live Here (Gerri Gribi) Doc Watson (at Gerdes Folk City, 1962) The Dream of the Miner's Child (dedicated to all the folks working over 2,000 feet below Brookwood, AL to provide coal for so-called clean electrical power; In Honor of lives lost there this past week!) Doc Watson (at Gerdes Folk City, 1962) Cannonball Rag Katherine Dines Hunk Ta Bunk Ta Boo! Betty and the Baby Boomers Their Brains Were Small (and they died) (dedicated to all the modern dinosaurs who can't seem to get it together) Betty and the Baby Boomers All Mixed Up (Pete Seeger) the following five selections are from a new CD; a tribute to THE SONGS OF WOODY GUTHRIE, live concert and album produced by ani defranco Indigo Girls w/Ani Difranco Ramblin' Round (Woody Guthrie) Arlo Guthrie Change the Moment Tim Robbins born naked Ramblin' Jack Elliott Talking Dust Bowl (Woody Guthrie) Arlo Guthrie w/all severance hall cast 'til we outnumber 'em (This Land Is Your Land) Greg Brown Canned Goods Woody Guthrie Miss Pavlichencko Randle Goodgame The Wind Jonathan Hoffman McKenzie Lucinda Williams Little Angel, Little Brother Lucinda Williams, vocal and acoustic guitar, w/ Colin Linden, electric dobro Angels Laid Him Away (Mississippi John Hurt) Randall Goodgame Laundromat (on Arkadeplphia Road) Honey Novick I Am A Winner Laura Lind and Adam Smith River of Jordan Medici Quartet (from motion picture soundtrack, Miss Jones) Folk Tune #2 ***end of program for 25 Sept 2001*** ***playlist for 18 Sept 2001*** This program produced and hosted by folksingin' Steve Sedberry Katherine Dines Hunk Ta Bunk Ta Boo! Randall Goodgame Laundromat Gerri Gribi (http://creativefolk.com) The Hills of Kentucky (Gerri Gribi) Evergreen (Mary Lou Layne Chandler) Bread and Roses (John Oppenheim, 1912; Martha Coleman, Caroline Kohlsaat, Mimi Farina) I Didn't Raise My Boy To Be A Soldier (Alfred Bryan, 1915; Al Piantadosi) Peter Kearney Start From Where You Are What A Time To Go To War! Makers of Peace Doc Watson (at Gerdes Folk City; 1962-1963) The Lone Pilgrim The Roving Gambler Mollie O'Brien Big Red Sun Blues Wendy Curl (Street Called Straight, CD) Love In A Box Straight Ave. Kate Campbell Bear It Away (Ira and Kate Campbell) Ray Korona Band Our Soup of Many Lands Tim and Mollie O'Brien If I Had My Way Ray Korona Band Tous Ensemble Rosanne Cash Fair and Tender Ladies Iris Dement Pretty Sara Laura Lind and Adam Miller Going to the West Doc Watson (at Gerdes Folk City; 1962-1963) Blue Smoke (guitar instrumental) St. Louis Blues John Herald introduction Sing Song Kitty Betty and the Baby Boomers Children of Darkness (Richard Farina) Honey Novick Oh, Mother earth Betty and the Baby Boomers All Mixed Up (Pete Seeger) Bill Monroe and Doc Watson Soldier's Joy Clary Sage Fun Flute ***end of show for 18 Sept 2001*** ***no show on 11 Sept 2001*** It was about 9:25 AM when I was sitting at the control board in the main
studio listening to Kate Campbell's song, Lanterns on the Levee. A woman from
Learning Resources came in and asked why IT wasn't on the radio. I had no
idea what she meant but she explained. The Georgia Public Radio feed from
Atlanta, flowing through our control board and on to our own station's
transmitter, was simply classical music of some sort. Having turned down
the main monitor speaker I was beginning to audition several unfamiar
recordings for possible use on my soon-approaching Tuesday night show.
Musicians and recording companies send them and I have to study each song to
try and separate the sheep from the lambs.

I went to the satellite receivers to see if any news was coming in there
and soon heard about the morally-incomprehensible tragedy in New York.
First I listened on headphones, then cued the feed from Satellite Receiver
#2 to the small speaker built into the control board. Within fifteen
minutes Georgia Public Radio began distributing the same feed from National
Public Radio to affiliate stations such as our W.U.W.G. here in Carrollton.
N.P.R.'s Bob Edwards, notably shocked by the events, was stumbling through
his report. The unbelievable news was beginning to sink in. The folk music
recordings I was auditioning began to lose their importance to me. My
country was suddenly at war.

I began to worry about all the musicians, activists and cultural workers
I know in the New York area, many living or working near the World Trade
Center which is just south of Greenwich Village, long time mecca of the
folk music world and of the counterculture in general. I thought of the
protests against organizations such as W.T.O., the World Trade
Organization, and of the many New York folksingers and activists who had
posted related notices to the People's Music Network (for Songs of Freedom
and Struggle) listserve, e-mail notices which have been coming to me at an
average of 25 to 30 per week for many months.

God help us all! Call Him Allah, YHWH, or whatever; he is our God. It is He
that has made us and not we ourselves.

The news kept coming from N.P.R. and I let it come. It was my own decision
not to broadcast my Appalachian Trail Vaguely Folk Music Radio Show live
tonight. It was the first time in almost two years that Appalachian Trail
was not heard on Tuesday night in Carrollton. -Steve Sedberry ***end of no playlist for 11 Sept 2001*** ***playlist for 4 Sept 2001*** Appalachian Trail Vaguely Folk Music Show Tuesdays, 8 to 10 PM produced and hosted by Steve Sedberry, the folksinging follower of Christ. Kate Campbell (Songs From The Levee, CD) Mississippi and Me Jonatha Brooke Bleecker Street Dolly Parton and Emmy Rossum When Love Is New Doc and Merle Watson (Then and Now) Bottle of Wine (Paxton) Tom Paxton (Wearing the Time, CD; Sugar Hill) Bottle of Wine (Paxton) Along the Verdigris (Paxton) harmonies by Iris Dement Doc and Merle Watson Matchbox Blues (Lemon Jefferson) If I Needed You (Townes Van Zandt) Nancy Tucker (The Longing, CD) Howl at the Moon (Tucker) Rodney Crowell (The Houston Kid) Highway 17 (a morality tale) Morning Star (with Mary Courtney) I Will Stand on this Land Crooked Jack Doc and Richard Watson Uncloudy Day Eddy Lawrence 1931 (Lawrence) Peter Kearney John and Jesus (Kearney) Pete Seeger The Willing Conscript (Tom Paxton) Fred Starner The Wild Dogs of Kitwanga (Al Grieson) Marion McKay My Mellow Man Carter Family (Victor recordings 1931-1932) Jimmie Rodgers Visits the Carter Family The Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers in Texas The Doc Watson Family (Songs from the Southern Mountains; CD; ca. 1964) Anniversary Blue Yodel (Blue Yodel #7) (by Jimmie Rodgers) Doc and Rosa Lee Watson Just A Friend Kate Campbell (Wandering Strange, CD) Bear It Away (in memory of four children killed in 1963 church blast, Birmingham, AL) Judy C. Cumbee (Moment of Dawn, cassette) Alleluia, Anyhow (Cumbee) Doc and Merle Watson Don't Tell Me Your Troubles Doc Watson My Little Woman, You're So Sweet Stephen Sedberry (Kidsongs, vol. 1) Waydy Bug and Wittle Woim Doc Watson and Bill Monroe Chicken Reel ***end of program for 4 Sept 2001*** If you live in Carrollton County, Georgia area please consider volunteering at
the Carroll County Soup Kitchen. If you can wash dishes or make peanut
butter sandwiches you'll feel useful there. The Kitchen is open to any
hungry person the last full week of every month, Monday-Friday, from 11 AM
to noon. Volunteers arrive much earlier. Located at 1014 Dixie Street,
Carrollton, GA; sponsored by the Carroll County Association of Churches.
Questions: 770 834-6943 (Bill) or 770 834-8901 (Bobbye Jean)
For other ways you can help click here: soup kitchen

United Voices Gospel Choir
rehearses Wednesdays at 7 PM in Rm. 301 of the Humanities Bldg.
at State University of West GA at Carrollton.
No audition required.
Make a joyful noise unto the Lord all ye lands. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. Col 3:16 If we are already playing your music
call some Tuesday night between about 8:15 and 9:45, eastern time,
for a brief phone interview
770-836-6732 Steve Sedberry Radio Station WUWG 1601 Maple St. Carrollton, GA 30118 folksinger48 (AT) netscape (DOT) net for info. telephone Tuesdays between 7:30 and 10:00 PM eastern 770-836-6732 770-836-6731