The song was recorded for the
American folk music revival market by
Bascom Lamar Lunsford (1953) and by the traditional singer Ruby Vass on a 1959
field recording made by
Alan Lomax and issued on the LP (and subsequent CD) series
Southern Journey. It was recorded several times by
Joan Baez: in 1959 as the opening track for the album ''
Folksingers 'Round Harvard Square; in 1961 in her album Joan Baez, Vol. 2; on the 1968 Newport Folk Festival album; and other recordings. It was included on the 2011 CD compilation Voice of the People''. Lomax made a further field recording, in 1961, at his New York City apartment, featuring veteran singer
Clarence Ashley, accompanied by Fred Price (fiddle), and Clint Howard and
Doc Watson (guitars). The recording, filmed by George Pickow and with sound by Jean Ritchie, was later used by
Anna Lomax Wood for the short film
Ballads, Blues and Bluegrass. Another recording by this group was issued on ''Old Time Music at Clarence Ashley's'' reissued as
Original Folkways Recordings: 1960–1962 (1994). Also for Folkways, Doc Watson performed the song as a duet with
Bill Monroe in 1963. Tony Rice recorded the song on his
eponymous 1977 album. A
Swedish version, recorded by
Ann-Louise Hanson, is entitled "Tag emot en utsträckt hand". Other folk revival artists who recorded the song included the
New Lost City Ramblers and
Pete Seeger. Artists who returned the song to country music audiences included
Johnny Cash with
The Carter Family and
Porter Wagoner. Other recordings were made by
The Wolfe Tones,
Arlo Guthrie (as "Arloff Boguslavaki", on the 1972
Earl Scruggs album
I Saw the Light),
Dave Guard and the
Whiskeyhill Singers, Mike Ireland and Holler,
Gangstagrass featuring Alexa Dirks also giving a faithful rendition on their 2014 album
Broken Hearts and Stolen Money.
Dolly Parton recorded the song in 2013, for her album
Blue Smoke. The song appears in, and gives the title for, the 2013 album
Oh, Willie, Please... a collection of folk murder ballads, by
alt-folk musical project
Vandaveer. The band made a live
78 acetate recording in 2011. A
Czech version, entitled "Náklaďák", was recorded by
Petra Černocká, as a single in 1975 and was later recorded as the title track for her 1994 album. A
German version, titled "Das Haus am Rhein" was released in
Michael Holm's 1981 album "Im Jahr der Liebe". A
Slovenian version, titled "Dravski most" (The Drava Bridge) was recorder by
Neca Falk in 1994. The lyrics were adapted by a well known Slovenian singer-songwriter
Tomaž Domicelj. ==Legacy==