Back Home (Merle Travis album)


Back Home is the original LP reissue of Merle Travis's first album, Folk Songs of the Hills, with four previously unreleased tracks and a new cover. This album marked a new turn in Travis's career, bringing his Kentucky-style fingerpicking and down-home vocal stylings to the attention of a broad public of country and folk music enthusiasts at the onset of the American folk music revival. Together with another Capitol release the following year, The Merle Travis Guitar, it introduced the style of guitar playing that came to be known, in simplified form, as Travis picking. The album includes a selection of traditional country songs such as "John Henry", "Muskrat", "Lost John ", "Barbara Allen", and Travis' signature gospel song, "I Am a Pilgrim". Also included are the original compositions "Dark as a Dungeon" and "Sixteen Tons". All songs are introduced by a spoken narrative.
This was Travis' first LP to be played entirely on acoustic guitar rather than electric. The cover shows a grist mill powered by a water wheel, a main source of energy "back home" before the arrival of electricity.
In his autobiography Johnny Cash says about this album: "If I had to answer that old but still interesting question, 'What music would you want with you if you were stranded on a desert island?', I'd say the Freewheelin' would have to be on the list. So would Merle Travis's Down Home, which has "Sixteen Tons" and all those other great songs on it and was the first country concept album." Although Cash can't remember the exact title of the album, it's clear that he talks about Back Home.

Track listing

  1. "Nine Pound Hammer"
  2. "John Henry"
  3. "Sixteen Tons"
  4. "Dark as a Dungeon"
  5. "That's All"
  6. "Over by Number Nine"
  7. "I Am a Pilgrim"
  8. "Muskrat"
  9. "John Bolin"
  10. "Possum up a Simmon Tree"
  11. "Barbara Allen"
  12. "Lost John "
Tracks 9-12 were not included in the original release Folk Songs of the Hills

Personnel