Emry Arthur
50 top tracks
Emry Arthur
50 top tracks
Albums

Songs Before Other Acts Made Them Famous
Emry Arthur

Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?
Emry Arthur

The Music Of Kentucky: Early American Rural Classics 1927-37, Vol. 2
Emry Arthur

Man of Constant Sorrow (and Other Timeless Mountain Ballads)
Emry Arthur

Before The Blues Vol. 2
Emry Arthur

Man of Constant Sorrow and Other Timeless Mountain Ballads
Emry Arthur
![Music Inspired By Oh! Brother, Where Art Thou? [Disc 1] — cover art by Emry Arthur](/frogtoon_logo.png)
Music Inspired By Oh! Brother, Where Art Thou? [Disc 1]
Emry Arthur

A Short Life of Trouble: Popular American Ballads 1927-1943
Emry Arthur

Appalachian Heart: The Original Bluegrass Classics
Emry Arthur

Constant Sorrow: Bluegrass From Root To Flower
Emry Arthur

Man Of Constant Sorrow And Other Timeless Moun
Emry Arthur

Paramount Old Time Recordings - Disc A
Emry Arthur
Biography
Emry Arthur...Read more on Last.fm
Read more
Emry Arthur
(Vocals, Guitar, Songwriter)
* Date of Death: August 22, 1967
* Place of Birth: Elk Spring Valley (Wayne County), Kentucky
* Place of Death: Indianapolis, Indiana
Emry's father was a collector of songs and his musical brothers Henry and Sam, as well as neighbors Richard Burnett, Leonard Rutherford, and William Rexroat
-- who also made recordings -- inspired him to become a musician. The loss of a finger in a hunting accident forced him to play with a simpler, more percussive guitar style. After a move to Indianapolis to find work in 1925, Emry and his brother Henry recorded initially for Vocalion in Chicago on January 17, 1928.
In 1929, his wife divorced him and he lost his Vocalion recording contract. Ironically, he relocated to Port Washington, Wisconsin, on the lake shore north of Milwaukee
-- and the home of the Wisconsin Chair Company, the parent of Paramount Records -- and Emry found a job at the furniture factory. Eventually, his superiors found
out who he was and induced him to record again for Paramount. Emry played guitar on "False Hearted Lover's Blues" with Doc Boggs (which was also released on the rare and arcane "Lonesome Ace (Without A Yodel)" label out of Richlands, Virginia). Emry recorded again for Decca in 1935, but the recordings did not sell well. Discouraged, he left the music business and returned to Indianapolis, where he died in 1967. Emry Arthur left a recorded legacy of nearly 80 sides.
Recordings include:
The Little Black Train Is Coming (1928)
I Am The Man Of Constant Sorrow (1928)
Nobody's Business (1928)
Empty Pocket Blues (1928)
Train Whistle Blues (1928)
Mouth Harp Blues(1929)
Frankie Baker Pts 1 & 2 (1929)
Prison Bound Blues (1929)
I Got Drunk And I Got Married (1929)
The Bluefield Murder (1929)
The Bloodstained Dress (1929)
I Tickled Her Under The Chin (1931)
Short Life Of Trouble (1931)
Six Months In Jail Ain't Long (1935) <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Emry+Arthur">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Similar Artists

Grayson & Whitter

Fiddlin' John Carson and Moonshine Kate

The Alabama Barnstormers

B.F. Shelton

Alley Boys Of Abbeville

Riley Puckett

Vernon Dalhart

Hayes Shepherd

Charlie Poole

Woody Guthrie, Sonny Terry And Leadbelly

Fiddlin' John Carson & His Virginia Reelers

The Blue Sky Boys

Girls Of The Golden West

Kentucky Ramblers

The Bently Boys
