Pete Seeger Pete Seeger Now (2-CD)
- Réf. de l’article:CDOMNI125
- Poids en kg: 0.2
Pete Seeger: Pete Seeger Now (2-CD)
Propriétés de l'article:Pete Seeger: Pete Seeger Now (2-CD)
Interpret: Pete Seeger
Titre de l'album: Pete Seeger Now (2-CD)
- Année de publication 2009
Genre Folk
- Preiscode N1
Label OMNI
Artikelart CD
EAN: 9310061462206
- Poids en kg: 0.2
Seeger, Pete - Pete Seeger Now (2-CD) CD 1 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
01 | Last Train To Nuremberg | Pete Seeger | ||
02 | Sailing Down This Golden River | Pete Seeger | ||
03 | Uncle Ho | Pete Seeger | ||
04 | Snow Snow | Pete Seeger | ||
05 | My Rainbow Race | Pete Seeger | ||
06 | Our Generation | Pete Seeger | ||
07 | Old Devil Time | Pete Seeger | ||
08 | The Clearwater | Pete Seeger | ||
09 | Words Words Words | Pete Seeger | ||
10 | Hobo's Lullaby | Pete Seeger | ||
11 | Adam The Inventor | Pete Seeger | ||
12 | Letter To Eve | Pete Seeger | ||
13 | Talking Ben Tre | Pete Seeger | ||
14 | Backlash Blues | Pete Seeger | ||
15 | He's Long Gone | Pete Seeger | ||
16 | The Torn Flag | Pete Seeger | ||
17 | Michael Row The Boat Ashore | Pete Seeger | ||
18 | Taint But Me One | Pete Seeger | ||
19 | False From True | Pete Seeger | ||
20 | Cotton Needed Pickin' So Bad | Pete Seeger | ||
21 | Everybody's Got A Right To Live | Pete Seeger | ||
22 | The Cities Are Burning | Pete Seeger | ||
23 | Water Is Wide (O Waly Waly) | Pete Seeger |
Seeger, Pete - Pete Seeger Now (2-CD) CD 2 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
01 | Who Knows | Pete Seeger | ||
02 | Bring Them Home | Pete Seeger | ||
03 | When I Was Most Beautiful | Pete Seeger | ||
04 | This Old Car | Pete Seeger | ||
05 | Ballad Of The FOrt Hood Three | Pete Seeger | ||
06 | Cumberland Mountain Bear Chase | Pete Seeger | ||
07 | Since You've Been Apart | Pete Seeger | ||
08 | Lolly Todum | Pete Seeger | ||
09 | My Rainbow Man | Pete Seeger | ||
10 | Poisoning The Students' Minds | Pete Seeger | ||
11 | All My Children Of The Sun | Pete Seeger | ||
12 | The Good Boy | Pete Seeger | ||
13 | Be Kind To Your Parents | Pete Seeger | ||
14 | Get Up And Go | Pete Seeger | ||
15 | Declaration Of Independence | Pete Seeger | ||
16 | Both Sides Now | Pete Seeger | ||
17 | Mayrowana | Pete Seeger | ||
18 | I Feel Like I'm Fixin' To Die Rag (prev.unr.) | Pete Seeger |
Pete Seeger
12. Winnsboro Cotton Mill Blues
(traditional)
PETE SEEGER
Pete Seeger never abandoned the original vision of the Almanac Singers. With the war over and now back in civilian life, he dreamed of expanding the Almanacs' ideals into a national movement that would unify singers, performers, choral leaders and labor unions into a force for political and social change. Seeger's model was Great Britain's Workers Music Association, founded in 1939 by members of England's Communist Party.
Reaching out to New York's leftist folk, theatrical and literary communities, Seeger invited potential members to attend the December 31, 1945, organizational meeting of People's Songs. Committees were established to find office space, set up a corporation, establish a regular newsletter, secure financing and recruit new members.
Within a year's time the People's Songs concept spread to other major North American cities. In October 1947, the organization held its first national convention in Chicago. The organization set up a booking office for its members and encouraged aspiring singer-songwriters and established composers to send sheet music or demos of new topical songs for possible publication in the monthly bulletin.
Although some professional composers were among People's Songs' earliest supporters, the most enduring songs to emerge from the movement were penned by non-professionals like Vern Partlow, a Los Angeles journalist and union activist.
Born May 25, 1910, in Bloomington, Illinois, Verneil Partlow moved to California after working for newspapers and radio stations in Wisconsin and Chicago. Hired by the Los Angeles Daily News, he became an early supporter of the American Newspaper Guild, formed in 1933. In the mid-'40s forties he hosted a program covering labor issues for a Los Angeles station.
When Earl Robinson opened the first People's Songs office on the West Coast, Partlow became one of its earliest members. After interviewing scientists on the consequences of a nuclear war, he wrote Old Man Atom, a talking blues using a musical template Woody Guthrie adapted from the recordings of Chris Bouchillon. Laced with irony, the song circulated among other singer-songwriters after its appearance as Atomic Talking Blues in the January 1947 People's Songs Bulletin. Pete Seeger recorded it in 1948 for Irwin Silber and Brownie McGhee's Encore label.
Outside of activists within People's Songs, few people bought Seeger's record. One who did was Sam Hinton, curator of the Thomas Wayland Vaughan Aquarium Museum at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California at San Diego.
Various - Troubadours Troubadours -
Folk And The Roots Of American Music Vol. 1 (3-CD)
Read more at: https://www.bear-family.com/various-troubadours-vol.1-folk-and-the-roots-of-american-music-3-cd.html
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