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MP3 Get Off Your Money - COUNTRY: Old-Timey

 

MP3 Album Cover


Contains these products:
  • Single items of this product are seperate available.
  • play Kentucky Winder
  • play Hangman Tree
  • play Boats Up The River
  • play Cinderella
  • play Whos To Blame
  • play Shuffle and Shine
  • play Stay All Night
  • play Selina/Nancy Blevins
  • play Swing Low
  • play Charleston #1
  • play Silly Liza Jane
  • play Cannonball
  • play Sleep When Youre Dead
  • play Black Eyes
  • play David and Goliath
  • play Get Off Your Money
  • play Fitch Mountain Waltz


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Description:
San Francisco's all gal old-time teardown, "cranks out an acoustic old-timey sound with a punk-rock intensity."  -Anchorage Daily News

17 MP3 Songs
COUNTRY: Old-Timey, FOLK: Political

Details:
Producer Lloyd Maines recalls hearing The Stairwell Sisters for the first time: âI happened upon this tribe of women musicians, playing old-time string music, with the power and excitement of a great rock band.â

Tribe of women indeed. Evie Ladin explains what holds sway with the sisters, themes similarly found in one of their early influences, Hazel Dickens & Alice Gerrard: ânot exactly the sweet and tender ladies, but the stand up for yourself and face the world kind of women.â

Which is exactly the kind of women that make up The Stairwell Sisters. Evie, Stephanie Prausnitz. Lisa Berman, Martha Hawthorne, and Sue Sandlin are career women, organizers, activists and mamas; making ends meet working and living in San Francisco. They also happen to crank out acoustic, old-time music with a punk-rock intensity. Somehow, between raising children, working and releasing records, theyâve taken their band to some rather well-regarded places â appearing on A Prairie Home Companion, festival stages from Lincoln Center (NYC) and Hardly Strictly Bluegrass (SF) to Celtic Connections (UK), and many points in between.

Their third release Get Off Your Money, produced by Maines and out May 12, covers substantial ground as well. There are fiddle tunes crafted decades ago from Alabama to Scotland, and from points unknown. There are old songs of trains, boats and possums. One song is translated from Swahili, an all-too familiar story learned from a street musician in Tanzania. There are new songs too â original songs of trial and work, loss and love, and all-night parties. The women run all of it through the âSister Mill.â Regardless from which era or continent the songs have traveled, The Stairwell Sisters make such heartfelt and skillfully played music that boundaries dissolve beneath the chugging force of old-time fiddle and banjo, the whomp of bass and guitar, the grit of the slide guitar, and the tight, closely interwoven harmonies.

The Stairwell Sisters come from varied musical backgrounds, some from acoustic traditions, others through amped-up rock and roll. Sue Sandlin says hearing Flatt and Scruggs brought her back to the country music her family loved, âIt was akin to the hair raising excitement I felt the first time I heard The Clash as a teenager.â The Sisters are all about bringing that excitement to the stage. Lauded for infectious shows that combine buckdancing with balladry and sass, these women unfailingly play their instruments hell-bent to drive the music.

The driving tune âKentucky Winder,â leads off the album with a crooked jump in the beat that fiddler Stephanie Prausnitz says, âreally wallops the punch.â Stephanie also brought the mischievous title song Get Off Your Money to the group, having found it on a recording of old Alabama Fiddlers. Its whimsical happiness is the essence of what makes playing together so much fun.
Lisa explains the communal lure of the genre. âYou can be anywhere, among friends or strangers, and jump right in - the living room, the kitchen, the woods, even a demonstration. No electrical outlets needed. It's an ever-changing music, grounded in a strong tradition.â

Evie, who grew up clogging and playing banjo in the unlikely locale of suburban New Jersey, elaborates why old-time music is timeless. "People have always sung of their struggles, with work, love, the forces of nature. Coal mining songs, union songs, not too much has changed when you consider the common person. Either way, it's about enduring and working for a decent life.â

Some of the original songs on Get Off Your Money have these socio-political struggles in mind. The imagery of âDavid and Goliathâ inspired Sue to pay homage to the âgenerations of young people who stand up with incredible courage against unbelievable instruments of power.â The first line of âShuffle and Shineâ jumped into her head after seeing men in her neighborhood gathered, looking for day laborâ âHey there captain / give me a sign /sure could use a spot on your line.â

Marthaâs job as a public health nurse and union activist shaped âWhoâs To Blame.â âI place the blame for addiction and homelessness not on personal failure, but on a system that puts profit before people,â she says. âI tried to end the song on a hopeful note - we can find love and comfort despite the odds stacked against us.â

Stephanie found the Swahili song âSelinaâ in Tanzania. A street musician - a one-man show on a two-string fiddle - wrote this original, which everyone around the village quickly grew to love. âI was struck by the universality of the message, and how similar it was to the old time and bluegrass songs we sing, as well as the rock songs we all grew up hearing,â says Stephanie. âSkipping school, getting pregnant, snubbing authority; laying with the dogs and picking up fleas.â

Lisa, who originally founded the group with Sue, practicing old-timey harmony singing in the stairwell of their workplace, brought the funky âHangman Treeâ to the Sister Mill. Lisa recounts that Lloyd Maines was enchanted with the song â âHe kept saying how âtrabbleâ it was, and how âtrabbleâ we are. I finally had to ask him what does âtrabbleâ mean?! He's from Texas you know. âTRIBAL, TRIBAL!â he said, reshaping his accent.â

Lloyd Maines has it right. The Stairwell Sisters are tribal; laying down that all-gal teardown wherever they go. Get Off Your Money carries the spirit and message of the urban evolution of country string band music.

People who are interested in Coon Creek Girls Uncle Earl should consider this download.

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