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John McCutcheon

 
Artist: John McCutcheon
John McCutcheon

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

Worked With:

Paul Reisler, Bob Read, Bill McElroy, Pete Kennedy, Robert Jospé, Bob Dawson, Michael Aharon, John D'earth

Formal Connection With:

Jon Carroll
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Folk
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar, Dulcimer
  • Representative Albums: "Mail Myself to You," "Wind That Shakes the Barley," "What It's Like"
  • Representative Songs: "Skip to My Lou," "Christmas in the Trenches," "Sly Old Crow/Old Blair Store"

Biography

One of the most prolific and respected children's artists, John McCutcheon has consistently produced quality children's albums (and folk albums) since the early '70s. McCutcheon is first and foremost an instrumentalist. Like thousands of others in the '60s, McCutcheon, a Wisconsin native, taught himself how to play a mail-order guitar and joined the local folk scene. His interest became more serious, however, when he sought to find the roots of this music. McCutcheon headed for Appalachia and learned from some of the legendary greats of traditional folk music. Along the way, he became adept at a multitude of instruments, including fiddle, banjo, guitar, autoharp, jaw harp, and especially the hammered dulcimer. McCutcheon is considered one of the undisputed masters on the hammered dulcimer and adapts much of his music around the instrument.

As a new father, McCutcheon found most children's music "unmusical and condescending." In 1983, he sought to remedy the situation with his first release for Rounder, Howjadoo. McCutcheon thought that Howjadoo would be the only children's record he would make. But the critical acclaim for Howjadoo was such that several other children's albums followed. McCutcheon's 1988 release Mail Myself to You featured several songs by classic folk composers such as Woody Guthrie and Malvina Reynolds. In the hands of McCutcheon, these old songs gained new luster. Family Garden followed in 1993, with several original tunes including the evocative "Baseball on the Block." McCutcheon also turned to producing and, on the Rounder label, encouraged other folk and world musicians to address children as an audience. He created the 1992 Rounder release Rainbow Sign to benefit the Grassroots Leadership, a community-building non-profit organization in the South. In 1997, McCutcheon produced two storytelling compilations to again benefit the Grassroots Leadership.

McCutcheon started a new series of children's albums in 1995 with the release of Summersongs. The album featured several tunes about the daily life of kids, with songs like "Power Mower" and "Haircut." Later that same year, Rounder released the second album in the series, Wintersongs. Again, the recording featured several cuts about the common joys of winter, including "Soup" and "Hot Chocolate." The most popular song on the album, however, was the easily imagined "Tommy Don't Lick That Pipe," written by McCutcheon and his longtime friend Si Kahn. Wintersongs was nominated for a Grammy in 1996. Storied Ground followed three years later. The time between albums reinvigorated the singer/songwriter, and in 2001 he followed it up with Supper's on the Table... Filled with more socially conscious lyrics, the album had the look and feel of an old-time folk record. The next year, a more contemporary-minded McCutcheon put out The Greatest Story Never Told on Red House Records.

It was four years before McCutcheon released another full-length album. 2006's Mightier Than the Sword was a literary effort, featuring collaborations with contemporary poets and fiction writers such as Wendell Berry, Rita Dove, and Barbara Kingsolver. McCutcheon also came out with a children's audio book that year called Christmas in the Trenches, which went on to garner a Grammy nomination in the children's spoken word category. Hail to the Chief! and Stand Up!: Broadsides for Our Times came out the following year. ~ P.J. Swift, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: John McCutcheon
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Wisconsin native John McCutcheon (born August 14, 1952) is an American folk music singer and multi-instrumentalist who has produced over twenty-five albums since the 1970s. He is regarded as a master of the hammered dulcimer, and is also proficient on many other instruments including guitar, banjo, autoharp, mountain dulcimer, fiddle, and Jew's harp.

Contents

Career

McCutcheon is a graduate of Saint John's University in Minnesota. While in his 20s, he travelled to Appalachia and learned from some of the legendary greats of traditional folk music, such as Roscoe Holcomb, I.D. Stamper, and Tommy Hunter. His vast repertoire also includes songs from contemporary writers like Si Kahn (e.g. Gone Gonna Rise Again, Rubber Blubber Whale) as well as a large body of his own music.

When McCutcheon became a father in the early 1980s he found most children's music "unmusical and condescending", and sought to change the situation by releasing a children's album, Howjadoo, in 1983. Originally, he had only intended to do one children's record, but the popularity of this first effort led to the production of several additional children's albums.

Much of his work, however, continues to focus on writing politically and socially conscious songs for adult audiences. One of his most successful songs, "Christmas in the Trenches" (from his 1984 album Winter Solstice) tells the story of the Christmas truce of 1914. He also wrote a song entitled Hail to the Chief consisting entirely of malapropisms attributed to George W. Bush[1]

Trivia

  • McCutcheon and fellow hammered dulcimer player Malcolm Dalglish were born on the same day (within half an hour of each other).
  • McCutcheon wrote and played music for Dalglish's wedding ("If I Were a Featherbed"); Dalglish was the best man at McCutcheon's wedding.
  • McCutcheon and Dalglish both learned hammered dulcimer from folksinger Guy Carawan.
  • McCutcheon was once on Car Talk.
  • McCutcheon once hosted a home video teaching hammered dulcimer for Homespun Video.
  • McCutcheon delivered the graduation address at Warren Wilson College in Asheville, NC.

Discography

  • How Can I Keep From Singing? (June Appal Recordings, 1975)
  • The Wind That Shakes The Barley (June Appal Recordings and Rounder, 1977)
  • Barefoot Boy With Boots On (Rounder, 1980)
  • Fine Times At Our House (Rounder, 1982)
  • Howjadoo (Rounder, 1983, family album)
  • Winter Solstice (Rounder, 1984, with Trapezoid and Washington Bach Consort)
  • Signs of the Times (Rounder, 1986, with Si Kahn)
  • Step By Step (Rounder, 1986)
  • Gonna Rise Again (Rounder, 1987)
  • Mail Myself to You (Rounder, 1988, family album)
  • Water From Another Time (Rounder, 1989, retrospective)
  • What It's Like (Rounder, 1990)
  • Live at Wolf Trap (Rounder, 1991)
  • Family Garden (Rounder, 1993, family album)
  • Between the Eclipse (Rounder, 1995)
  • Summersongs (Rounder, 1995, family album)
  • Wintersongs (Rounder, 1995, family album)
  • Nothing to Lose (Rounder, 1995)
  • Sprout Wings and Fly (Rounder, 1997)
  • Bigger Than Yourself (Rounder, 1997, co-written by Si Kahn)
  • Doing Our Job (Rounder, 1997, with Tom Chapin)
  • Autumnsongs (Rounder, 1998, family album)
  • Springsongs (Rounder, 1999, family album)
  • Storied Ground (Rounder, 1999)
  • Supper's on the Table (Rounder, 2001, retrospective)
  • The Greatest Story Never Told (Red House Records, 2002)
  • Hail to the Chief (self-published, 2003)
  • Stand Up! ...Broadsides for Our Time (self-published, 2004)
  • Welcome the Traveler Home: The Winfield Songs (self-published, 2004)
  • Mightier Than the Sword (Appalsongs, 2005)
  • This Fire (Appalsongs, 2007)
  • Sermon on the Mound (Appalsongs, 2008)

References

External links



 
 

 

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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