Thursday, December 29, 2011

Come to Our Party This Friday Night, Dec. 30!


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood features another track from the band's new CD, "Wade in the Water."

If you're in the Huntington area, we sure hope you'll drop by to party with us this Friday night, Dec. 30, at the Ballroom of the Renaissance Center at 900 8th Street. We'll be playing tunes from "Wade in the Water," our first new CD in nearly eight years. The whole band will be on stage and the new CD will be available for purchase.

Oh, and if you can't attend our New Year's Eve Eve do, remember you can also buy the CD online through our web site -- click here to read all about it.

Meanwhile, to get you in the mood, here's another sample track from the new disc -- fiddlin' Joe Dobbs and "Whisky Before Breakfast" -- bad idea, but a great tune. Click here to hear the audio.

Oh and by the way, our friend Dave Lavender gave us a great shout-out in this morning's Herald-Dispatch. Click here to see his report.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Sample The Flood's 1st New CD in 8 Years!


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood features the title track of the band's new CD, "Wade in the Water."

This is the 150th episode of this podcast. Three years ago this week we started these weekly installments of our ongoing digital jam session. But that's not the only thing we're celebrating.

This week The Flood rolls out its first new CD in almost eight years. We unveiled it at last night's jam session and now, so that our online family can be part of the festivities too, we're devoting this week's podcast to a sample track from the new album. Click here to come to the web site to read all about it and to hear the audio.

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features The Flood's spin on a traditional theme.

There must be a million versions of the song "Pretty Polly." You can trace it all the way back to the British Isles and ballads like "The Gosport Tragedy" and "The Cruel Ship's Carpenter." We've always played a little fast and loose with the traditional Appalachian melody and lyrics, particularly late at night, as with last night's version when it was the final tune of the jam session. Hear the audio.

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

This Week from The Flood Jam Sessions


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features an old friend doing a great old Utah Phillips standard.

Our weekly jam sessions are often blessed with extraordinary instrumentalists -- guitarists, fiddlers, banjo pickers and more -- but occasionally we're also joined by an excellent song stylist.

Such a singer is Dan Cowan, who hails from the little town of Pinch, W.Va., in Kanawha County. Dan's work schedule doesn't allow him to drop by very often, but when he does it's always a special moment. In this track, it's late in the evening. Doug Chaffin brings out his fiddle and he and Dan duet on"Rock Salt & Nails." Hear the audio.

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a new spin of an old, old song.

The jam session seldom starts with the same tune week after week, but often ends with one. After several hours of music, after the voices are spent and fingers are sore, someone's calling for the old folk music chestnut "House of the Rising Sun" usually signals that the collective is finished for another week.

But that doesn't mean the assembly will play the song the same way each time. Sometimes it's fast and furious, other times it's slow and bluesy. Sometimes it's a serious ballad, other times, new, just for laughs. Last night? Well, it wasn't a first -- but it has been a while since we've done it in waltz time… Hear the audio.

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a moment for last night's pre-Thanksgiving bash.

For many around here, Thanksgiving isn't so much about travel. Instead, we're the home that people come back to for the holiday.

On the eve of Thanksgiving 2011, we had our dear friend Jacob Scarr home from college in Colorado. And New Yorker Matt Parker was in the town visiting his grandparents. Well, we had to get these two young guitarists trading licks on an old blues, the way they have on Thanksgiving jam sessions in previous years.

Oh, and if you listen closely toward the end of the track, that's jam session newcomer Sonny Sumner with a tasteful little ride on his electric. Yes, it was a guitaroarious evening. Hear the audio.

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features a favorite swing standard.

Bassist Randy Hamilton nailed it last night. As he was packing up at the end of the evening, he said, "Boy, there sure is a lot of energy in the room when the chick singer's here. She just radiates it!"

So true! Our Michelle Walker can't make it to the jam session every week, but when she does, the room lights up. Here's her last number of the evening -- "Sunny Side of the Street" -- and it's just as powerful as her first two hours earlier. Hear the audio.

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features an old tune with a new friend!

Pittsburgh harmonica sensation Mark Keen actually grew up in our town. In fact, he and one of our jam session regulars, guitarist Randy Brown, went all through school together here back in the '70s.

Well, Mark was back home in Huntington this week. Last night Randy brought him to his first Flood jam session, and, good golly, we had a ball. Mark limbered up his harps as soon as he hit door and we didn't stop for more than two hours. Now, we understand Mark doesn't get home very often but we hoping that from now when he does, he puts The Flood on his "to-do" list! Hear the audio.

By the way, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

This Week from The Flood Jam Sessions


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features our revisiting a tune we started playing more than a decade ago.

Not long ago, Joe Dobbs added a fifth string to one of his fiddles which gives him a lovely new lower register to play with. Sometimes it's like having another instrument in the band, a cross between a violin and viola.

Late in the evening at a recent jam session, Joe demonstrated how this innovation can give a whole new voice to tune like "Down by the Sally Gardens," which The Flood's been playing since its first CD more than 10 years ago.

Oh, and by the way, that's our buddy Jim Rumbaugh playing that beautiful harmonica solo. Hear the audio.

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features a great old 1930s fiddle tune.

Sometimes one tune sets the mood for the whole evening. Last night I said to Joe Dobbs, "How about a fiddle tune?" Out came "Cincinnati Rag," a great old Byrd Moore - Clarence Green piece from 1930 that we haven't really done much with in years.

Well, it got everybody grinning. And if you listen closely, that Randy Brown in the middle of things, taking a break on a borrowed guitar. It was just that kind of night. Hear the audio.

In other Flood news, we have a new video for you to check out! Last August, The Flood visited the studios of theTrackside Live, Adam Harris's newly developed live performance video shoot that captures high quality video and audio recordings of unique bands performing in a relaxed atmosphere. We spent a great evening with Adam, Bud Carroll, Michael Valentine and the rest of the guys, and some exciting things are in the works that we'll be able to tell you about in the months ahead. In the meantime, for a 4-minute YouTube teaser, CLICK HERE!.

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features an original by a jam session first-timer.

Tom Norman has been playing in rock 'n' roll bands around here for decades, occasionally dipping into rockabilly. For instance, back in the '90s, he was on Joe Dobbs's old "Music from the Mountains" radio show on West Virginia Public Radio show.

Well, last night Tom finally made it to a Flood jam session and before the evening was out, we had him singing an original. Hear the audio.

In other Flood news, this just in -- we have a new video for you to check out! Last August, The Flood visited the studios of Trackside Live, a newly developed live performance video shoot that captures high quality video and audio recordings of bands performing in a relaxed atmosphere. We spent a great evening with Adam Harris, Bud Carroll, Michael Valentine and the rest of the Trackside team. Some exciting things are in the works that we'll be able to tell you about in the months ahead. In the meantime, to view a 4-minute YouTube teaser, CLICK HERE!

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

This Week from The Flood Jam Sessions


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features a little known Bob Dylan tune performed by one of our favorite jam session guests.

Many of us think we know a lot of Dylan tunes. And then we think again of our good friend Rob McNurlin, who really knows a lot of Dylan tunes.

One night last summer when Rob was home from Nashville and sitting in with us, our old buddy Zoe Brewer was in the room and she said, "Hey, Rob, do that Willie McTell song!" Rob thought for a moment and then out came this beautiful, little-known song that Dylan wrote in the early 1980s and didn't release until almost a decade later. Rob's rendition of "Blind Willie McTell" was the hit of the evening. Hear the audio.

By the way, if you'd like see video of Rob doing this and other songs at the Flood jam sessions, CLICK HERE!

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a version of a blues standard that we learned from vinyl: a 1961 Folkways recording by the late giant Eric Von Schmidt.

The jam session's always better when there's a harmonica in the room. Twice the fun when there's two of them! Last night The Flood's regular harmonicat, Sam St. Clair, was joined by Flood buddy Jim Rumbaugh, happily a frequent visitor to our Wednesday nights.

Here we turned Sam and Jim loose on Eric's version of "Make Me a Pallet on Your Floor." Hear the audio.

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a revisit with a wonderful jazz standard.

It's always a sweeter evening when The Chick Singer's on hand. We'd not seen our Michelle Walker for a month or more. She's been busy with personal, non-musical business. But last night she rolled into town and cranked Wednesday night up a couple of notches.

You know, there are tunes we never play except when Michelle is in the room, like this great old Duke Ellington number. Hear the audio.

In other news, be sure to check out our new web page at http://www.1937flood.com/pages/aa-guestvideos.html where you can see videos of guest performers at our weekly jam sessions. The videos feature Rob McNurlin, Phyllis Dale, Jesse Smith, Wendell Dobbs, Bill Hoke, Doug Imbrogno, Dale Jones, Rob and Judy Jones, Nerf Brown, Paul Martin, Jim Rumbaugh, Roger Samples, Kathy Castner, Randy Brown, Mike Smith and more. And watch this space -- we'll be regularly adding to this new spin on our ongoing digital jam session. Enjoy!

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

This Week from The Flood Jam Sessions


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features a special moment with a tune from 1978.

Our old buddy Paul Martin doesn't join us on Wednesday night nearly often enough, but when he does, he makes memories. Recently Paul came with his mandolin and sat in for the entire evening, producing smiles all around the room.

Here he and his old Sheldon Road bandmate Randy Hamilton team up on the 1978 tune, "Ready for the Times to Get Better." The song was originally recorded by country crooner Crystal Gayle, but it's perhaps better known in the folkie world for the Doc Watson version of a few years back. Hear the audio.

In other news, be sure to check out our new web page at http://www.1937flood.com/pages/aa-guestvideos.html where you can see videos of guest performers at our weekly jam sessions. The videos feature Rob McNurlin, Phyllis Dale, Jesse Smith, Wendell Dobbs, Bill Hoke, Doug Imbrogno, Dale Jones, Rob and Judy Jones, Nerf Brown, Paul Martin, Jim Rumbaugh, Roger Samples, Kathy Castner, Randy Brown, Mike Smith and more. Enjoy!

Also, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

This Week from The Flood Jam Sessions


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features the guys kicking back on a comfortable old blues standard.

Pamela, The Flood's manager, occasionally reminds us that the weekly jam session is social as well as musical, a gathering of friends, regular listeners as well as players. We thought of that again as we listened to this track, which seems to capture the feeling of this particular evening. The end of a long, hot summer. Folks coming in happy … happy to be out of the heat, happy to see old friends again, happy to settle into this old Mississippi Sheiks tune that's as comfortable as a soft hat and a cool breeze… Hear the audio. (Incidentally, we're posting this week's podcast a day earlier than usual, because the Bowens are leaving on vacation tomorrow.)

In other news, be sure to check out our new web page at http://www.1937flood.com/pages/aa-guestvideos.html where you can see videos of guest performers at our weekly jam sessions. The videos feature Rob McNurlin, Phyllis Dale, Jesse Smith, Wendell Dobbs, Bill Hoke, Doug Imbrogno, Dale Jones, Rob and Judy Jones, Nerf Brown, Paul Martin, Jim Rumbaugh, Roger Samples, Kathy Castner, Randy Brown, Mike Smith and more. And watch this space -- we'll be regularly adding to this new spin on our ongoing digital jam session. Enjoy!

Finally, remember that the tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011


The Flood loves it when friends come to sit in at the weekly jam sessions. Pamela has made hours of videos and we've now created a special section of the web site for them.

Check out the new page at http://www.1937flood.com/pages/aa-guestvideos.html where you can see videos featuring Rob McNurlin, Phyllis Dale, Jesse Smith, Wendell Dobbs, Bill Hoke, Doug Imbrogno, Dale Jones, Rob and Judy Jones, Nerf Brown, Paul Martin, Jim Rumbaugh, Roger Samples, Kathy Castner, Randy Brown, Mike Smith and more.

And watch this space -- we'll be regularly adding to this new spin on our ongoing digital jam session. Enjoy!

Thursday, September 8, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features the guys kicking off with an old swing tune.

What we love about the Wednesday night jam sessions is that each one's different, depending on who's in the mix. It's like a good soup made from whatever ingredients just happen to be in the kitchen at the time. Some Wednesdays are all about blues, others are country or folk.

Last night was a swinging evening, with the main ingredients being Doug Chaffin on bass, Joe Dobbs on fiddle, Jim Rumbaugh on harmonica, Randy Brown on guitar, and the rest of us just reaching out and holding on for the ride… Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a couple of fiddle and guitar duets.

Randy Brown is a jazz guitar player who regularly sits in with us and just classes up the joint! And whenever he starts playing great handfuls of what our Doug Chaffin calls "those Louisville chords," it's fun to watch the jaws drop around the room.

Randy has known Joe Dobbs almost as long as The Flood has, with shared musical memories reaching back to the 1970s. These days, our Wednesday night jam sessions have become all the richer now that Randy has become a regular. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a funny ballad from old friend, along with some storytelling!

We've not seen our great friend, Mike Smith, for months and months. In fact, since our last get-together, Mike went back home to England to visit with family and friends for three weeks or so. But now he's back in the States and last night he came back to his Flood family.

Mike's quite a musician. In addition to playing a lyrical fiddle, he also stops us in our tracks with his a cappella ballads. Here he takes along on Christy Moore's wonderful song, "A Stitch in Time."

Oh, and stay tuned when the singing's done, because the lyrics inspire Doug Chaffin to tell us a story. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

This Week from The Flood Jam Sessions



This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features the legendary Phyllis Dale with an original composition dedicated to the beautiful Ohio River.

Regular listeners know that a few weeks ago, our dear friend Phyllis came by for a long-overdue visit with The Flood, and on the podcast the next day, we featured a couple of Phyllis's good-time tunes, the kind of numbers with which she used to rock The Delta Queen steamboat, where she was an on-board entertainer for 10 years.

But there's another side to Phyllis Dale too -- the ballad singer and songwriter. Here's another track from that evening. This time Phyllis does her wonderful composition, "She's the Ohio." And listen closely -- that's our good friend Wendell Dobbs sitting in on flute for a lovely solo. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

This Week from The Flood Jam Sessions


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features a great old Mississippi John Hurt standard, "Payday."

The Flood has been doing this song for years now. In fact, it's featured on the first CD we recorded a decade ago this summer. But it is still a favorite at the weekly jam sessions, where the tune takes on a different personality, depending on who's sitting in that night.

On this version, we were especially energized because the great guitarist Jesse Smith was on hand, and his stellar finger-pickin' solos took "Payday" to a whole 'nother level! Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features two hot tunes from a wild and wonderful jam session with the legendary Phyllis Dale, the original Red Hot Mama of the Delta Queen riverboat.

It was more than 15 years ago when we met singer/pianist Phyllis Dale. For more than a decade, every night Phyllis played whatever the crowd wanted when the passengers gathered for the after-hour parties in the Delta Queen steamboat' great old Texas Lounge. Phyllis is an original, a born entertainer and we've been waiting for years to get her up here for one of our Wednesday night jam sessions. Well, last night was our night, and The Flood's own crowd was enthralled.

These days Phyllis is a world-class travel agent and consultant, on the road all the time with tour groups and adventures. We don't know when we'll get her back this way. But hey, girl -- you've got a standing invitation with party with The Flood. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a wonderful duet on a beautiful ballad from the British Isles.

Joe Dobbs and Dr. Wendell Dobbs are not related, but when you hear Joe's fiddle and Wendell's flute together, you'd swear these Dobbses were brothers. Or at least, they ought to be.

Wendell, a music professor at Marshall University and a section leader of the Huntington Symphony Orchestra, is an old friend. (And he and his wife, Linda, live only a few blocks from where The Flood has its weekly jam session, so, honestly, Wendell, you have very little excuse for not dropping in more often!)

Here, he and Joe put their special touch on "The Water is Wide." Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features several tunes from our friend Jesse Smith, the phenomenal, nationally known fingerpicker.

Jesse came down from his home in Wadsworth, Ohio, near Akron, to sit in with us last night for one sweet evening. Jesse makes everything sing -- just listen to his solo near the end of our trot through a 1918 Leo Wood standard, "Somebody Stole My Gal." Then stayed tuned as Jesse leads the guys on a tear through "Little Rock Getaway." Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a grand tune in the tradition of 1920s and '30 stringbands.

It's always a good summer when our friends Rod and Judy Jones arrive on one of their regular visits from their native Australia. And now 2011 is officially a good summer. The Aussies have landed again!

The Flood first met Rod and Judy, expert players of old-time stringband music of the 1920s and '30s, more than three decades ago, during the couple's first visit to The States. Then, as now, whenever they sit in with us, we all get back to our roots. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a favorite tune from old friend.

One of our favorite local bands used to be Sheldon Road, a trio of great singers and pickers named Paul Martin, Randy Hamilton and Kenny Adams. Alas, the group disbanded a few years ago, but we've stayed in touch with all the guys. In fact, Randy Hamilton has been sitting in with us on bass for several weeks now.

And last night, Randy's old compatriot Paul Martin dropped in with his sweet mandolin. We even got Paul singing some -- here he leads us through a great old Bob Dylan standard. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features three tracks from last night's special reunion with one of The Flood's first members.

When someone says The Flood is an eclectic string band, they're actually paying tribute to one of our founders, Roger Samples. And whenever Roger stops by to sit in again with his old partners, as he did recently, we're reminded all over again of just how wide and deep our dear friend's musical tastes run, from folk and blues and The Beatles to a sweet old Jimmy Rodgers tune.

Here are three tracks from Roger's Flood Homecoming. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a great old Jean Ritchie composition.

Doug Chaffin has played with us for more than a dozen years now. Most nights he's busy driving the band on his big upright bass, but last night our buddy Randy Hamilton came by to sit in with his sweet acoustic electric bass, so Doug switched off to other instruments -- and he plays a bunch of them.

On this tune, you hear him take the first solo on guitar, but by the end of the song, Doug's switched to his fiddle. Oh, and if you listen closely, you'll hear Randy also singing that high harmony with us on the choruses. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a couple of gospel tunes from our old friend Rob McNurlin.

We don't get to see Rob nearly often enough. But last night the Ashland, Ky., singer-songwriter was home from Nashville and waiting on the doorstep before the jam session even got started. The whole evening was shaped around Rob's tunes, and our favorite part was when we got him into a mood for some of his gospel tunes. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a couple of tunes from a special going-away party.

Jacob Scarr started sitting in with us when he was 14 years old, and has played lead guitar as a regular member of The Flood for the past three years. Well, now Jacob's 18 and at the end of this summer, he'll be heading off to college in Colorado.

Last night we moved the regular Wednesday night jam session to Jacob's house, where neighbors, family, friends and Flood fans all came together for a huge send-off party in Jacob's honor. And of course, on this, the morning-after, we've got to share with our podcast family a couple of tunes from that special night. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features an old jug band standard, but with lots of new contributors.

One of the things we love about our Wednesday nights is that the weekly jam session is a kind of crossroads where old and new friends get to meet.

Last night, our old buddy percussionist Dan Trout dropped by on a trip from Athens, Ohio, and got to meet fellow drummer John Smith, who lately has been sitting in with us with his brushes and snare. Meanwhile, it was the first jam session for Paula Stewart, a talented member of Jim Rumbaugh's wonderful Huntington Harmonica Club. Here's a tune that features all our visitors. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features our take on a great 1933 Ethel Waters standard.

Michelle Walker, the chick singer, can't make it to the jam session every week, but it's always a special night when she arrives early and stays late. Last night was such a night. Michelle came in out of the rain with a song in mind that we could do as a little anthem for the stormy week we've had here in the valley. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, May 12, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a little history lesson, hokum style.

Every May, The Flood plays one of its favorite gigs of the year. It's the annual Coon Sanders Nighthawks Fans Bash, a gathering here in our hometown of Huntington, West Virginia, that celebrates the early days of jazz and Dixieland.

For seven or eight years now, The Flood has come to the bash's Saturday morning session with a "Jug Band Breakfast," an hour or so of bacon and eggs with a liberal side of hokum tunes. In preparation for the day, we focused on our jug band repertoire at last night's jam session. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a tune from fiddler Joe Dobbs' diverse musical background.

Spending his early years in Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas, Joe was exposed a wide variety of musical styles, from Cajun to country, blues to bluegrass, pop to polka. Forty years ago when he came north and east and helped us form The Flood, Joe brought us a huge song bag.

Here's one that was always popular with the sizable German population of Joe's old stomping grounds. And incidentally, this also is a substantial answer to anyone who thinks traditional fiddlers just want to plop down in plain D and stay there. "Clarinet Polka" makes three key changes each time through the melody. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

This Week from The Flood Jam Sessions


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a late-night ride in the neighborhood of "The House of the Rising Sun."

Sometimes the magic happens at the tail-end of the evening, after the voices are strained and the fingers are tender from all that picking. On this particular track, half the band had already packed gone home. Jacob Scarr and Joe Dobbs were fixing to do same, when our buddy Jim Rumbaugh came in late from the cold and limbered up his harmonicas, so they decided to stick around for a couple more tunes. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a newcomer with an old tune. One of our favorite parts of the weekly confabs is getting to sit in with musicians from all over the country who stop in for one of our Wednesday nights.

Last night was the first time for fiddler Susan Staton of the Central-Florida-based Streak of Lean old-time string band. Susan grew up in our area, but went to work for the railroad and transferred to various cities, from Richmond to Jacksonville. But she obviously never forgot her Appalachian roots. Here Susan leads us on a raucous romp through "Soldier Joy."

And if you listen closely, you'll hear that Joe Dobbs, the Flood's regular fiddler, switches to mandolin for the occasion. And Dave Peyton does some nice Autoharp work before passing it back to the visiting violinist. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features an old tune from a new friend.

From Chesapeake, Ohio, N.F. Brown -- everybody calls him "Nerf" -- first dropped by the jam session a few weeks ago and for most of that evening, he just sat quietly in the corner strumming his Taylor guitar. It was only near the end of the night, after many of the regulars had already gone home, that Nerf offered a tune -- and blew the doors off the place with his big, beautiful voice.

Right then and there we told him he had to come back and next time sing earlier so more folks would get to hear him. Well, last night was the night -- here Mr. Brown leads The Flood through a great old Josh White standard. Good times, Nerf -- come back any time, buddy! Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features an old Charlie Poole standard, "Don't Let Your Deal Go Down."

We had so many pickers at the jam session last night, it was more like The 1937 Flood orchestra, with guest artists.

Jim Rumbaugh came in with a belt full of harmonicas. Randy Brown was there with his big beautiful f-cut Gibson and Floodster emeritus Chuck Romine dropped by with that sweet little tenor guitar that we've always loved so much. With all that extra string and wind power, we rocked the neighborhood Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a typical Wednesday night moment.

If you've ever been to one of our Wednesday night jam sessions, you know that people -- players and listeners -- are always coming and going. The music evolves, depending on who's on hand at the time that a particular tune is being played.

Here's a case in point. Last night, our lead guitarist, Jacob Scarr, had just arrived and tuned up as we were launching into this old Sonny Terry-Brownie McGhee number. Then midway through, harmonicat Sam St. Clair came in, took his seat, grabbed a harp and hopped onboard before the song was done. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Picking with Rog


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features a couple of tunes with one of The Flood's earliest members.

Roger Samples, one of the founders of The Flood, is a bit under the weather these days, so yesterday The Flood made a house call. Joe Dobbs and Charlie Bowen hit the road, hooking up with Buddy Griffin and Rog's brother Mack for a few hours of music in Roger's Mount Sterling, Ky., home.

During the more than 10 years he played regularly with The Flood, Rog brought in so many tunes for us to do, from beautiful Michael Peter Smith ballads to crazy jugband numbers. Click to hear two tunes from the visit.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

This Week from The Flood Jam Sessions


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam sessions features a couple of rounds on the great old tune, "Dinah."

Folks who regularly drop in to our Wednesday night jam sessions are privy to a pretty badly kept secret: namely, that we don't really have arrangements for our music. A tune for The Flood is like a pair of comfortable old shoes that's been worn in just right by slipping them and dancing around.

Jam session regulars listen as new tunes come into the mix and get softened up by repetition each week. Here's a case in point -- we've just started playing with this great old 1926 Ethel Waters standard and in this track, you can hear we're still experimenting with it. Click to hear the tune.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Come See the New Flood Videos!


We've got a little something different this week. Instead of our regular audio podcast, we're inviting you to come over to our website and check out a few new videos.

Our good friends Norman and Shirley Davis invited us to a party last night at The Wyngate, their new retirement home in Barboursville, West Virginia -- just us and 30 or 40 of their closest friends. We had a ball playing for this bunch, and Pamela captured some cool video.

Come take a look -- visit our web site at www.1937flood.com and click the banner at the top of the front page.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features some fancy picking by a visitor to our Wednesday night gathering.

Joe Dobbs has been knowing guitar player Jesse Smith of Wadsworth, Ohio, near Akron, for five or six years now, but last night was the first time some of the rest of us got to meet him. On his way to the Cabin Fever Pickin' Party in Hampton, Va., Jesse came with Joe to sit with us and the finger-picking phenom sweetened up everything we played.

Here are a couple of samples, starting with one of The Flood's jugband standards. Then, later in the evening, Joe and Jesse launched into an especially fine version of "When You're Smiling." Hey, you had us smiling all evening, Jesse. Hurry back! Hear the two tunes.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session reaches way back for a tune from the group's earliest days.

It was a mainstay for The Flood when the band started back in the mid-1970s, but until last night's jam session, we'd not played it in literally several decades. It's a blues standard from the 1920s by the great Leroy Carr. Hear the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features some fancy fiddling on an old tune called "Rachel."

Norman and Shirley Davis have become our most loyal Wednesday night listeners. Lately they've been little disappointed that one of their favorites -- fiddler Joe Dobbs -- couldn't make the jam sessions.

Well, last night, when Joe blew back in on a warm spring-like February evening, one look at the Davises told you how pleased they were to see and hear him again. And Joe played a couple of special fiddle tunes just for Shirley and Norman. Here's a sample.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a new sound from Randy Brown.

We never really know what direction our Wednesday night jam sessions will take. It all depends on who shows up and what they bring to play.

Jazz guitarist Randy Brown has been sitting in with us most Wednesdays for more than a year now, playing great solos on his Gibson L5. But last night, Randy came to the door with his plectrum banjo, a beautiful 50-year-old Vega, and suddenly an evening of quiet folk songs took a decidedly raucous turn. Here's a sample.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a bit of our birthday celebration for our youngest Floodster, guitarist Jacob Scarr.

Jacob turned 18 last night, and that struck us as a pretty darn good reason to celebrate. Our gift to him? Multiple solos on just about every tune we played, including all the solos on this little blues number. And Jacob's gift to us? Well, besides years of tasty music every Wednesday night, last night his mom, P.J., sent over cannoli, making it a pretty sweet evening all the way around! Click here for the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Freebie from The Flood


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood features a tune for last weekend's reunion with our buddy Roger Samples, one of the founding members of The Flood.

From its first days in the 1970s through the mid-1980s, Rog played and sang with us, and his guitar styling, vocals and song selection have set the standard for The Flood ever since. Even after Roger and his family moved to Kentucky, we stayed in touch.

Last weekend, on a bright, crisp January day, a bunch of us headed to Mount Sterling, Ky., for a little reunion with Roger and his brothers, Mack and Ted, who form the legendary Samples Brothers Band. Here's a tune for that grand day, with Mack and Rog doing the vocals and that's Ted on the five-string. Click here for the audio. Oh, and there's video of this tune and others from the session on our web site. Click here for the moving pictures.

By the way, tunes like this make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

From This Week's Flood Jam Session


This week's freebie from The 1937 Flood jam session features a Tin Pan Alley special from more than nine decades ago.

1919 was an amazing year in music. With The Great War over, Tin Pan Alley was pumping out the hits again. "12th Street Rag" and "Royal Garden Blues," "Swanee" and "I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate."

Meanwhile, on the other end of the block, a trio of composers -- Charles McCarron, Casey Morgan and Arthur Swanstrom -- were writing "The Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives to Me" ... just so The Flood could flirt with it 90 years later. Click here for the audio.

By the way, tunes from the jam sessions make up our weekly Flood podcasts. You can subscribe for free and get the music automatically delivered to your computer each Thursday. For details on that, click here.