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After the success of Ralph Peer's early 1920s recordings of rural musicians such as Henry Whitter and Fiddlin' Joh Carson most every major record label slowly began dabbling in the recording of rural country ( often labeled "Hillbilly" ) artists. A new record selling market was awoken! By 1928, with the success of the first "Bristol Sessions" Victor was all in. They established their 40,000 numerical series dedicated to all ealry country recordings and then in 1930 rtheir 23,500 series which wnet on until late 1933 when the Freat Depression cribbled the record industry. American Grooves, in two programs, will dig into Victors catalog of 1928-33 Country recordings - Stringbands, Cowboy Singers, Blue Yodelers, and sacred vocal groups - they tried it all!
By Joe Lauro4.8
55 ratings
After the success of Ralph Peer's early 1920s recordings of rural musicians such as Henry Whitter and Fiddlin' Joh Carson most every major record label slowly began dabbling in the recording of rural country ( often labeled "Hillbilly" ) artists. A new record selling market was awoken! By 1928, with the success of the first "Bristol Sessions" Victor was all in. They established their 40,000 numerical series dedicated to all ealry country recordings and then in 1930 rtheir 23,500 series which wnet on until late 1933 when the Freat Depression cribbled the record industry. American Grooves, in two programs, will dig into Victors catalog of 1928-33 Country recordings - Stringbands, Cowboy Singers, Blue Yodelers, and sacred vocal groups - they tried it all!

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