| Arkansas Traveler |
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| Released | April 1992 |
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| Studio |
- Trax Recording (Chicago, IL)
- Ocean Way Recording (Hollywood, CA)
- Dreamland Studios (Woodstock, NY)
- Jack's House (Chapel Hill, NC)
- Windmill Lane Studios (Dublin, Ireland)
- The Spirit of St. Charles Riverboat (St. Charles, MO)
- Bill Schnee Studios (Los Angeles, CA)
- Sun Studio (Memphis, TN)
- Merle Watson Memorial Festival (Wilkesboro, NC)
- Bennett House Studios (Franklin, TN)
- Commissary Antique Store (Rising Fawn, GA)
- Trafalgar Studios (Annandale, Australia)
- Driftwood Barn (Mountain View, AR)
- The Piney Woods Pickin' Parlor (Mineola, TX)
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| Genre | Americana |
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| Length | 58:47 |
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| Label | Mercury |
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| Producer |
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- "Come a Long Way"
Released: 1992
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Arkansas Traveler is an alternative folk album released by American singer-songwriter Michelle Shocked in 1992. Her fourth album for Mercury Records, the songs focused around the roots of her music. The album included collaborations with several other artists, including Taj Mahal, Alison Krauss, Tony Levin and Norman Blake. Jack Irons plays drums at the beginning of track 6. Uncle Tupelo plays on track 6. The album name may have been derived from the folklore of the Arkansas Traveler.