Thursday, March 26, 2026

The Spoken Word Project: Old Country Prison Work Death Song (The Existential Hoedown)

by G. Jack Urso

From the Aeolus 13 Umbra YouTube channel. Use full-screen mode to better view the lyric captions or click here for the transcription.

“Old Country Prison Work Death Song (The Existential Hoedown),” is a tribute of sorts to Depression-era songs about the impact of a collapsed economy on the most vulnerable among us. The start of the Depression was time with few government social services, no welfare, no food stamps, and no health insurance for the unemployed (and barely any for the employed), so the broken often only had themselves and other broken people to rely on for hope. This resulted in poverty, misery, and disease for millions, but provided those who survived with a keen understanding of the human condition — we are only as human as the humanity we extend to others.

This project is an attempt at creating “found artifact” of the past. As though someone found an old radio and instead of picking up a one of today’s channels it reaches into the past and picks up a low-power AM transmitter with a broadcast not of Nashville’s finest, but rather a couple old guys scrounging up a few bucks for performing on the local radio station. The sound is raw, the vocals a bit off-key and not always in synch with the clanging washboard, yet the lyrics speak their truth with wisdom that came from great suffering.

The recording was completed with a Shure SM58 microphone connected to a TASCAM digital audio recorder. Audacity was used to edit the recording and add some reverb. A low-volume amplifier sound was added in the background to emulate the hiss often accompanying these old radios and gives the audio some texture. The final version was assembled on Filmora.

Special thanks to Monty Von along with Poorer Richard on the washboard for their patient participation in the performance.


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