Read Working Girl Blues Online
Authors: Hazel Dickens
Don't Bother to Cry****
Hills of Home****
Pretty Bird. New recording made in 1987.
Only the Lonely***
Coal Tattoo*****
Little Lenaldo***
Old Calloused Hands**
Scars from an Old Love***
You'll Get No More of Me****
Mama's Hand***
Working Girl Blues*
West Virginia My Home**
Play Us a Waltz****
Don't MournâOrganize! Songs of Labor Songwriter Joe Hill.
Smithsonian/Folkways 20026. Released 1990. Hazel Dickens appears on one track.
The Rebel Girl. Hazel Dickens, vocal; Tom Adams, banjo; Dudley Connell, guitar; David McLaughlin, fiddle, mandolin; Marshall
Wilborn, bass. Reissued on Classic Bluegrass from Smithsonian Folkways, Smithsonian/Folkways 40092, 2002.
Bill Monroe and the Bluegrass Boys: Live Recordings 1956â1969, Off the Record,
Vol. 1. Smithsonian/Folkways 40063. Released 1993. Hazel Dickens appears on one track.
Roll in My Sweet Baby's Arms. Bill Monroe, vocal, mandolin. Accompanied by Hazel Dickens, vocal; Richard Greene, fiddle; Tex Logan, fiddle; Peter Rowan, guitar.
Third Annual Farewell Reunion.
Rounder 0313. Released 1994. Mike Seeger and friends. Hazel Dickens appears on one track.
They're at Rest Together. Mike Seeger, vocal, mandolin; Hazel Dickens, vocal, guitar; Tom Gray, bass.
Nashville at Newport.
Vanguard 77016. Released 1995. Various artists. Hazel Dickens appears on three tracks. Hazel Dickens, vocal, bass; Alice Gerrard, vocal, guitar. Accompanied by David Grisman, mandolin; Smiley Hobbs, banjo; Tex Logan, fiddle.
Walking in My Sleep
A Tiny Broken Heart
The One I Love Is Gone
Pioneering Women of Bluegrass.
Smithsonian/Folkways 40065. Released 1997. Reissued from
Who's That Knocking?,
Folkways 31055, and
Won't You Come and Sing for Me?,
Folkways 31034. Hazel Dickens, Alice Gerrard, and various other artists.
Coal Mining Women.
Rounder 4025. Released 1987. Various artists. Hazel Dickens appears on the following tracks reissued from
Come All You Coal Miners,
Rounder 4005(*) and
They'll Never Keep Us Down,
Rounder 4012(**).
Coal Mining Woman (**)
The Yablonski Murder(*)
Coal Miner's Grave(**)
Black Lung(*)
Mannington Mine Disaster(*)
Clay County Miner(*)
Clara Sullivan's Letter. New Recording. Hazel Dickens, unaccompanied vocal.
Coat Tattoo. New recording. Hazel Dickens, vocal, accompanied by Jerry Douglas, Dobro; Pat Enright, guitar; Bela Fleck, banjo; Mark Hembree, bass; Blaine Sprouse, fiddle; Roland White, mandolin.
Songs of the Louvin Brothers.
Rounder 7034. Released 1997. Hazel Dickens with the Johnson Mountain Boys.
Here Today and Gone Tomorrow
Heart of a Singer.
Rounder 0443, CS 0443. Released 1998. Hazel Dickens, Carol Elizabeth Jones, and Ginny Hawker, vocals. Accompanied variously by Dudley Connell, guitar; Pete Kennedy, guitar; Barry Mitterhoff, mandolin; Bruce Molsky, banjo, guitar; Lynn Morris, banjo; Ron Stewart, banjo, fiddle, mandolin; Marshall Wilborn, bass.
Forsaken Lover
Lay Me to Rest
Not a Word of That Be Said. Reissued on
Mountain Journey: Stars of Old Time Music,
Rounder 0546, 2005.
Old Memories Mean Nothing to Me
Love Me or Leave Me Alone. Reissued
on O Sister 2: A Women's Bluegrass Collection,
Rounder 0506, 2002.
Times Are Not What They Used to Be. Reissued on
O Sister 2: A Women's Bluegrass Collection,
Rounder 0506, 2002;
Mountain Journey: Stars of Old Time Music,
Rounder 0546, 2005.
Faded Pressed Rose. Reissued on
The Angels Are Singing: A Women's Bluegrass Gospel Collection,
Rounder 0485, 2002.
Jealous Heart
Old River. Reissued on
O Sister! The Women's Bluegrass Collection,
Rounder 0499, 2001.
I Can't Find Your Love Anymore. Reissued on O
Sister! The Women's Bluegrass Collection,
Rounder 0499, 2001.
Let Me Go
Time Is Winding Up
Comin' Down from God. Reissued on O
Sister! The Women's Bluegrass Collection,
Rounder 0499, 2001.
Songcatcher.
Vanguard Combustion 79586â2. Released 2001. Various artists. Hazel Dickens appears on one track.
Conversation with Death. Hazel Dickens, vocal. Two other singers, David Patrick Kelly and Bobby McMillon, also sang versions of the song.
Index
The index that appeared in the print version of this title was intentionally removed from the eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
Acuff, Roy
A Few Old Memories
(Rounder CD)
Alice Tully Hall
“An Evening with Hazel Dickens” (tribute at San Francisco State University)
Anthology of American Folk Music,
Appalachian Festival (Cincinnati)
Appalshop Films
Asch, Moe
Baker, Bobby
Balfa, Dewey
Baltimore
“Beautiful Hills of Galilee,”
Black Lung disease
“Black Lung” (song)
Bluegrass Music in Baltimore
Blue Jay (Baltimore honky tonk)
Blue Sky Boys
Boggs, Dock
Boyens, Phyllis
Boyle, Tony
Bradley, Dale Ann
Bragg, Billy
Brandywine Folk Festival
Bratmobile
Brislin, Kate
Bumgardner, Ed
By the Sweat of My Brow (Rounder LP)
Calgary Festival (Canada)
Callahan Brothers
“Can the Circle Be Unbroken,”
Carawan, Guy
Carter, Maybelle, guitar style
Carter, President Jimmy
Carter Family
Cash, Johnny
“Clay County Miner,”
Coal Industry, mechanization
Coal Mine Health and Safety Act
Coal-Mining Songs Symposia
Coal Mining Women
(Rounder LP)
Cohen, Joe
“Cold-Blooded Murder,”
Come All You Coal Miners,
Connell, Dudley
Cooke, Dorothy Anne,
See also
Anne Romaine
Country Music Parks
Country Song Roundup,
Cousin Emmy (Joy May Carver)
“Cowboy Jim,”
Cozy Inn (Baltimore honky tonk)
Cronkite, Walter
“Crying Holy,”
“Custom-Made Woman Blues,”
Dickens, Arnold
Dickens, Charles
Dickens, Hazel Jane: affiliation with Rounder Records; awards and honors; birth; decision to perform music full time; distinguished performing venues; early music influences; influence of Primitive Baptist Church; marriage and divorce; membership in the Strange Creek Singers; membership with the Southern Folk Cultural Revival Project; mentorship of Alyse Taubman; migration to Baltimore; moving to Washington, D.C.; music in the Baltimore honky tonks; origins of her feminist songs; parents; performance in movie soundtracks; performances with Alice Gerrard; political and coal-mining songs; relationship with Mike Seeger; singing in
Harlan County, USA,
Dickens, Hillary N. (H. N.)
Dickens, Robert
Dickens, Sarah Aldora
Dickens, Thurman
Dickens, Velvie
Don't Mourn, Organize! Songs of Labor Songwriter Joe Hill,
“Don't Put Her Down, You Helped Put Her There,”
Drayton, Michael
Dry Branch Fire Squad
Earle, Steve
Esquire,
article on Bluegrass
Estep, Francis F.
Estep, Maud
Evidence of Blood
(TV movie)
Exene
Feminist Songs and Audience
“Fire in the Hole,”
Folksong Society of Greater Boston
Folkways Records
Foshag, Willie
Foster, Jeremy
Freakwater
Friskics-Warren, Bill
“Gabriel's Call,”
Galax, Virginia
“The Gathering Storm,”
Gerrard, Alice
Gladden, Texas
Goble, D. H.
Grand Ole Opry,
Green, Archie
Grier, Lamar
Grisman, David
“Guide Me O Thou Great Jehovah,”
Gunning, Sarah Ogan
Guthrie, Woody
Hard-Hitting Songs for Hard-Hit People
(Rounder LP)
Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival (Golden Gate Park)
Harlan County, USA,
Harris, Emmylou
Hawker, Ginny
Hazel and Alice, singing duo
Hazel and Alice
(Rounder LP)
“Hazel Dickens: A Life's Work” (Smithsonian Folk Festival Symposium)
Hazel Dickens and Alice Gerrard
(Rounder LP)
Hazeldine
Heart of a Singer
(Rounder CD)
Highlander Folk Center
“High on a Mountain,”
Holcomb, Roscoe
Hollis, Julia
Honky Tonks in Baltimore
Horse Creek Meeting (Clay County, Kentucky)
“I'd Die Before I'd Cry Over You,”
International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA)
Irwin, Ken
It's
Hard to Tell the Singer from the Song
(film documentary)
It's
Hard to Tell the Singer from the Song
(Rounder LP)
“It Wasn't God Who Made Honky-Tonk Angels,”
“I've Endured,”
Jackson, Aunt Molly
Jennings, Waylon
Johnson Mountain Boys
Jones, Carol Elizabeth
Jones, George
Judds (Naomi and Wynonna)
Justice, Kay
“Keep on the Sunny Side,”
Kenny, Maxine
Kentucky Black Lung Association
King, James
Kopple, Barbara
Krauss, Alison
Kuykendall, Pete
Leadbelly
Ledford, Lily May
Leighton, Marian
Lewis, Laurie
“Little Margaret,”
Lomax, Alan
Lomax, John
Louvin Brothers
“Lover's Return,”
“Love's Farewell” (poem that inspired “You'll Get No More of Me”)
Macon, Uncle Dave
“Mannington Mine Disaster,”
“Man of Constant Sorrow,”
Matewan
(movie)
Menius, Art
Mercer County, West Virginia
“Midnight on the Stormy Deep,”
Mitterhoff, Barry
Monroe, Bill
Morris, Lynn
Mountain People's Rights
“My Better Years,”
National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship
National Folk Alliance
Nelson, Willie
New Riders of the Purple Sage
New River Ranch
New York Film Festival
Nowlin, Bill
Old Mexico Imports
Old Town School of Folk Music (Chicago)
“The One I Love Is Gone,”
“One Morning in May,”
Our Singing Country,
Owens, Don
Pickering, Mimi
Pike County Boys
Pittston Strike
Pneumoconiosis (Black Lung Disease)
“Pretty Bird,”
Primitive Baptists, fellowship among
Primitive Baptist Hymn Book,
Primitive Baptist Theology
Reagon, Bernice Johnson
“Rebel Girl,”
Reece, Florence
Reed, Ola Belle
Resettlement Administration
Rinzler, Kate
Rinzler, Ralph
Rittler, Dickie
Romaine, Anne
Romaine, Howard
Rounder Collective
Rounder Records
Sayles, John
Schwarz, Tracy
Seeger, Charles
Seeger, Marj
Seeger, Mike
Seeger, Pete
Seeger, Ruth Crawford
79 Club (Baltimore honky tonk)
Shanklin, Bob
Shapiro, Bruce
Shepherd College (West Virginia)
Shines, Johnny
Siegel, Peter
Smith, Curley
Smith, Harry
Smithsonian Folklife Festival
Society for the Preservation of Bluegrass Music in America (SPBGMA)
Southern Folk Cultural Revival Project
Spottswood, Richard
Stanley Brothers
Stearns Strike (Kentucky)
Stecher, Jody
Stoney Mountain Boys
Strange Creek Singers
Strip Mining
Sunset Park
“The Sweetest Gift, a Mother's Smile,”
Sweet Honey in the Rock
Symphony Singers
Taubman, Alyse
Taylor, Earl
“They'll Never Keep Us Down,”
Thomason, Ron
Tubb, Ernest
Twangfest (Pittsburgh)
United Mine Workers of America (UMWA)
Vancouver Folk Music Festival
Vincent, Rhonda
Watson, Doc
West Virginia Ramblers
“When I Can Read My Titles Clear,”
“Which Side Are You On,”
Who's That Knocking?
“Wildwood Flower,”
Wise, Chubby
Wolfe, Allison
Women's Songs
“Won't You Come and Sing for Me?
“Working Girl Blues,”
Workman, Nimrod
Yablonski, Jock
“Yablonski Murders,”
Hazel Dickens is an Appalachian singer and songwriter known for her powerful vocal style, superb musicianship, feminist country songs, union anthems, and blue-collar laments. She has performed widely in this country and abroad and has appeared on many recordings and in a number of films.
Bill C. Malone is the leading historian of country music, now retired as professor of history at Tulane University. He is the author of many books, including
Country Music, USA
and
Don't Get Above Your Raisin': Country Music and the Southern Working Class.
Only a Miner: Studies in Recorded Coal-Mining Songs
Archie Green
Great Day Coming: Folk Music and the American Left
R. Serge Denisoff