Everybody Hollerin' Goat

[7] Recorded mostly on Turner's north Mississippi farm, the album was produced by Luther Dickinson.

[13] Dickinson first noticed Turner when the fife player appeared on a 1970s episode of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood.

[14] Dickinson sampled Everybody Hollerin' Goat on his North Mississippi Allstars album Shake Hands with Shorty.

[15] Rolling Stone wrote that the band rocks "like a nineteenth-century P-Funk, making exhilarating rhythm poetry out of rudimentary tools and ancient, buoyant soul"; the magazine, in 1999, deemed Everybody Hollerin' Goat one of the best blues albums of the 1990s.

[19] AllMusic called the album "a collection of haunting, authentic Mississippi-born fife and drum blues.