J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Yodeling' Mountaineer 02:51 Tools
John Henry Was a Little Boy 03:13 Tools
Satisfied 02:42 Tools
Concord Rag 02:31 Tools
Yodelin' Mountaineer 02:50 Tools
Kiss Me Cindy 02:06 Tools
New Lost Train Blues 02:49 Tools
The Fatal Wreck of the Bus 02:48 Tools
Number 111 02:49 Tools
The Longest Train 03:07 Tools
Drunkard's Hiccoughs 02:46 Tools
Don't Get Trouble In Your Mind 02:33 Tools
Seven And A Half 03:06 Tools
Maple On The Hill 02:33 Tools
Miss Me When I'm Gone 02:45 Tools
Train 111 02:59 Tools
Blue Ridge Mountain Blues 02:33 Tools
This World Is Not My Home 02:49 Tools
Goin' Down to the River of Jordan 03:09 Tools
Lights In The Valley 03:11 Tools
Train 111 (Remastered) 02:59 Tools
Johnson's Old Grey Mule 02:50 Tools
Train 111 - Remastered 02:50 Tools
Lonely Tombs 02:36 Tools
In A Little Village Churchyard 02:09 Tools
Just Over In The Gloryland 02:09 Tools
Run Mountain 02:09 Tools
Just Over In The Glory Land 02:45 Tools
Answer to Greenback Dollar 02:40 Tools
Greenback Dollar 02:40 Tools
Carry Your Cross With A Smile 02:13 Tools
Don't Go Out 03:17 Tools
Great Reaping Day 02:50 Tools
Blue Ridge Mountain Blue 02:31 Tools
New Curly Headed Baby 03:11 Tools
Hop Along Peter 02:50 Tools
Ramshackle Shack 02:50 Tools
Fatal Wreck Of The Bus 02:50 Tools
Crying Holy 02:33 Tools
City On The Hill 02:50 Tools
Mississippi Sawyer 02:50 Tools
Swing The Door Of Your Heart Open Wide 02:07 Tools
Goin' Back West In the Fall 02:07 Tools
Short Life of Trouble 04:13 Tools
If I Lose, Let Me Lose 04:13 Tools
I Once Loved A Young Man 02:51 Tools
Floating Down the Stream of Time 03:20 Tools
Lamp Lighting Time in Heaven 03:22 Tools
There's A Green Hill Far Away 02:17 Tools
Your Best Friend is Always Near 02:44 Tools
Let Her Go God Bless Her 03:15 Tools
Wild Bill Jones 03:15 Tools
Two Little Rosebuds 04:13 Tools
Back To Johnson City 02:20 Tools
Sally Goodin' 03:22 Tools
Man In The Woodpile 01:15 Tools
I'm Living the Right Life Now 02:36 Tools
Write A Letter To Mother 02:20 Tools
Jim-Boy's Breakdown 01:15 Tools
Lost Indian 02:51 Tools
He's Coming To Us Dead 01:15 Tools
Oh Those Tombs 01:15 Tools
Don't Go Out Little Darling 02:20 Tools
Somebody Cares 02:21 Tools
I'm In The Gloryland Way 02:28 Tools
Over In The Gloryland 02:20 Tools
Ship Sailing Now 02:36 Tools
Watermelon On the Vine 02:20 Tools
Rhythm Blues 02:28 Tools
Mama Don't Allow 02:28 Tools
Shake My Mother's Hand for Me 02:28 Tools
I Am Walking in the Light 02:28 Tools
The Country Blues 02:28 Tools
Take Me In The Lifeboat 02:21 Tools
If I Lose Let Me Lose 02:21 Tools
Country Blues 02:41 Tools
When The Light's Gone Out In Your Soul 02:59 Tools
Three Nights Drunk 02:28 Tools
When I Reach My Home Eternal 02:28 Tools
Don't Cause Mother's Hair to Turn Grey 02:28 Tools
New Lost Train Blues [1936] 02:50 Tools
On a Cold Winter Night 02:53 Tools
Ship's Sailing Now 02:53 Tools
Just Over In Gloryland 02:50 Tools
Shoot the Turkey Buzzard 02:27 Tools
Drunkard's Hiccups 02:27 Tools
Searching For A Pair Of Blue Eyes 02:50 Tools
Chicken Reel 02:27 Tools
Behind the Parlor Door 02:27 Tools
One To Love Me 02:27 Tools
John Henery Was A Little Boy 02:59 Tools
My Homes In Louisiana 02:27 Tools
Oh Why Did I Ever Get Married 02:34 Tools
Broken Hearted Blues 02:27 Tools
My Home's in Louisiana 02:27 Tools
Won't Be Worried Long 02:27 Tools
The Old And Faded Picture 02:27 Tools
Take Me Into The Lifeboat 02:27 Tools
John Henry 02:27 Tools
Gathering Flowers From The Hillside 02:27 Tools
Mother's Only Sleeping 02:27 Tools
What'll I Do With the Baby-O 02:27 Tools
Take Me Home to the Sweet Sunny South 02:34 Tools
Big Ball's In Town 02:34 Tools
Walk That Lonesome Valley 02:34 Tools
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J.E. Mainer (July 20, 1898 – June 12, 1971) was an American old time fiddler. Joseph Emmett Mainer grew up on a farm in the mountains near Weaverville, North Carolina and learned to play the banjo and fiddle from an early age. Since Wade, his brother, also was interested in learning to play the banjo, he left that to Wade and concentrated on the fiddle. Soon, Mainer began performing at local country barn dances. He found work at a textile mill in Knoxville, Tennessee but moved to Concord, North Carolina in 1922 for another work in a mill. Mainer's fame as a fiddler rose and sponsored by the Crazy Water Crystals in 1933, he and his newly formed band consisting of J. E. on fiddle, Wade Mainer on banjo, and Zeke Morris on guitar, made their radio debut on WBT in Charlotte, North Carolina calling themselves "J.E.Mainer and his Crazy Mountaineers" who followed in the wake of Gid Tanner and his Skillet Lickers. The band appeared on several radio stations in the following years until 1935, when they received a recording contract on. In August the same year, the Mountaineers, with the addition of "Daddy" John Love, recorded for Bluebird Records. Wade Mainer and Zeke Morris temporarily left the band in the early 1936 to form a duo. In the meantime Ollie Bunn, Howard Bumgardner and Clarence Todd replaced Wade, Zeke and "Daddy" John Love on the next recording session. In the summer of 1936, Wade and Zeke returned to record with "the mountaineers". The next year, in 1937, Wade Mainer formed the "Sons of the Mountaineers". Shortly, a new change of personnel occurred when Leonard "Lester" Stokes and George Morris became members of "the mountaineers" calling themselves "Handsome and Sambo". They added Snuffy Jenkins on banjo on the following recording session. In late 1938, Stokes and Morris were once more replaced by Clyde Moody and Jay Hugh Hall. The band continued to perform on radio stations in both North and South Carolina. The Mountaineers disbanded at the outbreak of World War II, but Mainer continued to record in the late 1940s, together with his sons, Glenn and Curly, for King Records. Between 1967 and 1971, the year of his death, literally hundreds of post-war recordings were released on Rural Rhythm Records. Mainer will be inducted into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame on October 11, 2012. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.