Smoke & Oakum The Longest Johns

Album info

Album-Release:
2021

HRA-Release:
28.01.2022

Label: Decca (UMO)

Genre: Folk

Subgenre: Vocal

Artist: The Longest Johns

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Hard Times Come Again No More 04:43
  • 2 Don't Forget Your Old Shipmate 02:39
  • 3 Nantucket 03:44
  • 4 The Workers Song 03:16
  • 5 Hog Eye Man 03:06
  • 6 Wayfaring Stranger 04:12
  • 7 Pride Of The White Star Line 03:14
  • 8 The Mary Ellen Carter 04:38
  • 9 Hammer And The Anvil 02:48
  • 10 Johnny Come Down To Hilo 01:36
  • 11 Downed And Drowned 03:16
  • 12 Thousands Or More 02:54
  • 13 Rolling Along 03:02
  • 14 Beer Is Great 01:50
  • Total Runtime 44:58

Info for Smoke & Oakum



The Longest Johns, the trailblazing band at the forefront of the recent transatlantic resurgence of sea shanties – being the instigators of the TikTok phenomenon and chart hit, Wellerman – release their highly anticipated fourth album, and first with Decca Records: Smoke & Oakum.

Featuring the legendary folk songs that fuel the band’s passion for the genre, alongside thrilling original offerings, Smoke & Oakum is a treasure chest, each song a jewel collected along the way. Representing and paying homage to protest singers and folk luminaries through the years, The Longest Johns shine new light through old windows with songs that hold a torch up to the truth.

Describing the energy behind their irresistible sound, the band explain: “The experience of singing these songs in a group is very similar to people dancing at a club. Whether or not you’ve heard the song before, you innately know what to do and feel part of something bigger than yourself. It’s as if something is missing, until you join in.”

Moving fluently from powerful a capella arrangements to traditional accompanying instrumentation (banjo, whistle, harmonium), encompassing rousing numbers that make it impossible not to sing along – such as Don’t Forget Your Old Shipmate and Hog Eye Man to the melancholy Wayfaring Stranger and Downed and Drowned – here, The Longest Johns demonstrate their authenticity and unfailing allure once again.

The band’s compelling treatment of Hard Times Come Again No More as their opening single, previously recorded by heavy weights such as Mavis Staples, Dolly Parton and Bob Dylan, make the American Parlour song as poignant now as when it was first published 167 years ago, as it asks the more fortunate to consider the plight of those with less. Also central to the new record is the heartfelt Workers’ Song which identifies the struggle of working people in the past, present and, sadly, the future.

Over the past decade the four friends from Bristol have gone from singing sea shanties and folk songs in pubs to raising the roof to a jam-packed tent of adoring fans at Latitude 2021, appearing on the prestigious BBC Sounds Stage, and garnering 250 million combined streams. The Longest Johns will bring an incredible year to a close with a sell-out UK tour in December, taking their electrifying live show across the country and beyond, as they tour the US in March 2022, due to unprecedented demand. Find tour dates below.

The world-renowned musicians’ innovative approach to communicating with the public, and ever-increasing popularity, reaches far beyond the stage. They have shaken up the music world by utilising their entrepreneurial skills, sharing these traditional songs in a completely new way – via gaming and social media platforms – and cementing their position as protest singers of the 21st century. The world is, quite literally, their oyster.

The Longest Johns



The Longest Johns
are a Bristol based, a capella folk music band, born out of a mutual love of traditional folk songs and shanties. They rock maritime songs alongside the more unusual and less traditional folk tunes.

I doubt any of Bristol’s The Longest Johns ever imagined they would be able to get so far on just four voices.

In a few short years they have gone from singing sea shanties in a kitchen to International folk festivals, tours, TV appearances and gained a huge online following.

As the face of the 2021 sea shanty revival with their track Wellerman, the Johns are reaching millions of new fans all across the globe and showing them just how great these songs can be.

This album contains no booklet.

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