Reso Hangout Top 20 Old-Time Songs

Reso Hangout Members

Top 20 Old-Time Songs resonator guitar songs which Reso Hangout members have uploaded to the website.

  • Alabama Jubilee
    An oldie but a goody ............. Thanks to Uncle Leegee for the arrangement
    25 December 2019, 12:29 pm
  • MAIDEN'S PRAYER~Greg Booth Version
    This is based off of Greg booth's version. the Tuning is EBDGBD
    26 January 2018, 1:56 pm
  • Springtime in Stockholm
    8 July 2016, 4:18 pm
  • Earl Osenbach's 1935 Model 27 Regal/Dobro®
    This old Model 27 is for sale. It is rather weather beaten but sounds wonderful. This is a round neck with a nut rizer and has a short spider and lugged cone.
    17 October 2014, 12:31 pm
  • Alabama Jubilee
    Old tune from about 1905
    5 April 2014, 12:31 pm
  • lorena
    "Lorena" is an antebellum song with Northern origins. The lyrics were written in 1856 by Rev. Henry D. L. Webster, after a broken engagement. He wrote a long poem about his fiancée but changed her name to "Lorena," an adaptation of "Lenore" from Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The Raven." Henry Webster's friend Joseph Philbrick wrote the music, and the song was first published inChicago in 1857. It became a favorite of soldiers of both sides during the American Civil War.
    30 March 2014, 11:37 am
  • I'll Be All Smiles Tonight
    My attempt.
    4 February 2014, 1:10 am
  • Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
    "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot" was written by Wallis Willis, a Choctaw freedman in the old Indian Territory in what is now Choctaw County, near the County seat of Hugo, Oklahoma sometime before 1862. He was inspired by the Red River, which reminded him of the Jordan River and of the Prophet Elijah's being taken to heaven by a chariot.
    29 December 2013, 10:57 pm
  • Angeline the Baker
    recorded on a 1936 National Triolian tuned to open D
    15 November 2013, 11:07 am
  • Carroll County Blues
    Mississippians W.T. Narmour and S.W. Smith cut about 50 sides between 1928 and 1934. Their most enduring contribution to the country music canon is this unusual fiddle tune, Carroll County Blues. One can safely assume that the titular Carroll County is their home Carroll County, Mississippi. The tune is credited to Narmour. Whether it originated with him or was learned from other local players, I can’t say. The tune is interesting in a number of repects: the languid pace, the conspicuous flat thirds and sevenths, the use of a melodic sequence in the ‘a’ strain, the occasional added beats, the backbeat rhythm of the ‘b’ strain, more. It’s a wonderful performance, and the tune has long since been a standard among old-time musicians. It was recorded in Atlanta in March, 1929, for the OKeh label.
    10 October 2013, 5:28 pm
  • End of the World
    31 August 2013, 4:24 pm
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