Artist's albums
40 Years Of Concert Performances (Live)
2001 · album
Remembrance of Things to Come
1973 · album
There Ain't No Way Out
1997 · album
The Early Years, 1958-1962
1991 · album
20th Anniversary Concert (Live / 1978)
1986 · album
On the Great Divide
1975 · album
Golden Country: Best Of New Lost City Ramblers
2015 · album
The New Lost City Ramblers
2014 · album
The New Lost City Ramblers
2004 · single
Modern Times
1968 · album
New Lost City Ramblers
1958 · album
Old Timey Songs for Children
1959 · album
Songs from the Depression
1959 · album
New Lost City Ramblers - Vol. 2
1960 · album
New Lost City Ramblers - Vol. 3
1961 · album
American Moonshine and Prohibition Songs
1962 · album
New Lost City Ramblers - Vol. 4
1962 · album
New Lost City Ramblers - Volume 5
1963 · album
Rural Delivery No. 1
1964 · album
String Band Instrumentals
1964 · album
Similar artists
The Doc Watson Family
Artist
The Carter Family
Artist
Ola Belle Reed
Artist
The Delmore Brothers
Artist
Cisco Houston
Artist
Hazel Dickens
Artist
Dock Boggs
Artist
Uncle Dave Macon
Artist
The Kentucky Colonels
Artist
Harry McClintock
Artist
The Blue Sky Boys
Artist
The Country Gentlemen
Artist
Frank Proffitt
Artist
Jean Ritchie
Artist
Charlie Poole
Artist
Roscoe Holcomb
Artist
Mike Seeger
Artist
Biography
During the folk boom of the late '50s and early '60s, the New Lost City Ramblers introduced audiences to the authentic string band sound of the 1920s and '30s, in the process educating a generation that had never heard this uniquely American sound of old-time music. While maintaining music with a social conscience, they added guts and reality to the folk movement, performing with humor and obvious reverence for the music. In 1958, Mike Seeger, John Cohen, and Tom Paley modeled their band after groups like the Skillet Lickers, the Fruit Jar Drinkers, and the Aristocratic Pigs, choosing a name in keeping with the past. When Tracy Schwarz replaced Paley in 1962, the NLCR added solo songs from the Appalachian folk repertoire, religious and secular, educating a large segment of the American population about traditional music. Folkways recorded the NLCR on five albums in the early '60s, making the Ramblers famous and leading to TV appearances, successful tours, and appearances at the Newport Folk Festival. A songbook with 125 of their songs came out in 1964 and sold well. The NLCR served at least three important purposes: they brought real folk music to a huge audience, they were highly entertaining, and they led their audience to rediscover the original music on which they had based their band. After the NLCR's heydays, Tracy Schwarz went on the road with his wife and then his son, gradually leaning toward Cajun squeezebox music; Mike Seeger toured with his wife, Alice Gerrard, and did many solo spots; and John Cohen continued playing in another string band, while making award-winning documentaries about the old music. In the '90s -- over 20 years after they had last entered a studio -- Schwarz, Seeger, and Cohen reunited as the New Lost City Ramblers to record There Ain't No Way Out, released in 1997. In 2009 the band celebrated its 50th anniversary; sadly however, Mike Seeger died of cancer on August 7 of that year at his home in Lexington, Virginia; he was 75 years old. Tom Paley died at age 89 on September 30, 2017 in Brighton, England, and John Cohen died in 2019. ~ David Vinopal, Rovi