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Artist
Allan Thomas "Tom" Paley (March 19, 1928 - September 30, 2017 ) was an American guitarist, banjo and fiddle player. He was best known for his work with the New Lost City Ramblers in the 1950s and 1960s. Paley was born and raised in New York City. His parents were left-wing activists, and he grew up hearing spirituals and political songs. After moving with his mother to California for several years in his early teens, he returned to New York and began learning the guitar and banjo, and visiting clubs where singers such as Lead Belly and Josh White performed. He also began performing, both solo and with other musicians including Woody Guthrie, and booking performances for others. From September 1950 to May 1951 he was a graduate student in the mathematics department of Yale University. After one year he decided to be a musician rather than a mathematician. In 1953 he recorded his first album Folk Songs of the Southern Appalachian Mountains, for Jac Holzman's then-new Elektra Records. On May 25, 1958, Paley, John Cohen and Mike Seeger played together live on air for John Dildine's weekly folk music radio show on WASH-FM: this was the first appearance of what later became the New Lost City Ramblers. Paley later said: "When we formed The New Lost City Ramblers it was the kind of thing I'd been doing for quite a few years.... It didn't feel particularly revolutionary to me but I understood we had quite an impact on young people like Dylan." Paley, both as a solo artist and as
Hard Luck Papa
Blues Guitar Workshop

Beware young ladies!
Courtin's a Pleasure & Other Folk Songs of the Southern Appalachians
Shivaree! - A Folk Wedding Party

Acoustic Guitar Scene
Folk Banjo Styles
Who's Going to Shoe Your Pretty Little Foot?

Courtin's A Pleasure
Folk Roots - The Sound Of Americana
Greatest Folk Songs You've Never Heard
Old Grey Goose