Biography
This West Virginia singer/songwriter and fiddler was one of Ralph Peer's discoveries on the legendary 1927 Bristol field trip that unearthed both the Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers. Reed was one of those uniquely Southern contradictions, both reactionary and progressive in his songs. How Can a Poor Man Stand Such Times and Live? echoed the sentiments of the rural poor (who tasted none of the Roaring Twenties prosperity), while Why Do You Bob Your Hair, Girls? invoked Biblical sanctions against flappers. Topical commentary of this sort was rare in early hillbilly recordings: Reed's contemporaries usually pruned a branch from the folk tree or swiped a page from Mom's Victorian songbook. Incongruously, Reed was a protest singer/songwriter out of time and place. Ry Cooder revived a couple of his songs in the '70s, the decade of Rounder's reissue of several Reed performances, How Can a Poor Man Stand Such Times and Live? ~ Mark A. Humphrey, Rovi



 
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Blind Alfred Reed - How Can a Poor Man Stand Such Times and Live?
Blind Alfred Reed Always Lift Him Up And Never Knock Him Down
Blind Alfred Reed - Woman's Been After Man Ever Since
Blind Alfred Reed-Why Do You Bob Your Hair Girls?
Blind Alfred Reed
A Tribute to Blind Alfred Reed
Blind Alfred Reed-The Prayer Of The Drunkard's Little Girl
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