Live at The Cellar Door

Live at The Cellar Door is a live album by the progressive bluegrass Maryland band The Seldom Scene.[2][3] The Washington Post called it "not only a landmark for the progressive bluegrass scene that originated here in Washington, but may be the band's finest representation on disc."[4]

Live at The Cellar Door
Live album by
Released1975
Recorded1975
GenreBluegrass, progressive bluegrass
LabelRebel
ProducerGary B. Reid
The Seldom Scene chronology
Old Train
(1973)
Live at The Cellar Door
(1975)
The New Seldom Scene Album
(1976)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Track listing

  1. "Doing My Time" 5:38
  2. "California Cottonfields" 3:08
  3. Band Intros 1:15
  4. "Panhandle Country" 2:13
  5. "Muddy Waters" (Rosenthal) 3:14
  6. "Rawhide" 2:41
  7. "Baby Blue" 3:39
  8. "City of New Orleans" (Steve Goodman) 3:03
  9. "Grandfather's Clock" 4:50
  10. "The Fields Have Turned Brown" 3:15
  11. "Hit Parade of Love" 3:18
  12. "Will the Circle Be Unbroken?" (trad.) 3:26
  13. "Pick Away" 2:40
  14. "Dark Hollow" 2:10
  15. "Small Exception of Me" (Hatch, Trent) 3:15
  16. "If I Were a Carpenter" (Tim Hardin) 3:00
  17. "Old Gray Bonnet" 2:33
  18. "C & O Canal" (Starling) 3:09
  19. "Georgia Rose" 3:04
  20. "Colorado Turnaround" 2:37
  21. "He Rode All the Way to Texas" 2:36
  22. "White Line" 3:34
  23. "Rider" (Traditional) 7:10

Personnel

gollark: I mean "accelerationism" like that political thing where you help the opposing movement because it'll magically destroy itself or something.
gollark: It would no longer be possible for humans to cut many of them down.
gollark: Also deforestation. There are so many upsides.
gollark: Which would also fix flooding.
gollark: Also, rising sea levels. This could be eliminated as an issue by breaking all the various feedback loops enough that the oceans boil.

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. Album review on www.allmusic.com
  3. Album info on www.rebelrecords.com Archived 2007-07-10 at the Wayback Machine
  4. Harrington, Richard (21 November 2003). "A Choice D.C. Dozen". Washington Post. Retrieved 4 January 2010.
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