Urban Folksongs

Urban Folksongs

Urban Folksongs

Track Listings
 
1. Ashes to Dust
2. Photograph
3. Urban Girl
4. Broke and Hungry
5. Clock
6. Father to Son
7. My Gold Mine
8. Jester Fool
9. Raven and Scarecrow
10. The Love Remains
11. Worn Out Pretention
12. Lonely Man

Editorial Reviews
Product Description
This was my first batch of songs from early days back in 1989...I was just a kid, about 23 or so, with a headful of Bob Dylan dreams and Joni Mitchell aspirations...I released these songs on cassette, and sold them at the coffee-houses around Boston, Passim, The Nameless, The Old Vienna...I can hear the old me in them, and looking back, I see the long path that has been walked on since those days-I've come a long way, and have a long way yet to go! I hope you like it, and thanks for coming along...-Ellis Paul

Urban Folksongs,Ellis Paul,Black Wolf Records,"Ellis Paul is now a national folk star and to many the quintessential Boston songwriter: literate, provocative, urbanely romantic." - The Boston Globe
If I Had a Song: The Songs of Pete Seeger, Vol. 2
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • The Working Class We Have With Us Always. . .
If I Had a Song: The Songs of Pete Seeger, Vol. 2
Various Artists
Manufacturer: Appleseed Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Seeds - The Songs Of Pete Seeger: Volume 3
  2. Where Have All The Flowers Gone: The Songs of Pete Seeger
  3. We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions
  4. American Favorite Ballads, Vol. 3
  5. American Favorite Ballads, Vol. 4

ASIN: B00005Q6OF
Release Date: 2001-10-09

Tracks:

  1. Guntanamera - Jackson Browne & Joan Baez
  2. If I Had A Hammer - Billy Bragg with Eliza Carthy
  3. Words, Words, Words - John Wesley Harding & The Minus 5
  4. Walking Down Death Row - Steve Earle
  5. Oh, I Had A Golden Thread - Dar Williams & Toshi Reagon
  6. 66 Highway Blues - Arlo Guthrie & Pete Seeger
  7. Talking Union - John McCutcheon & Corey Harris
  8. Maple Syrup Time - Moxy Fruvous
  9. Snow, Snow - Eric Andersen
  10. Little Boxes (Petites Boites) - Kate & Anna McGarrigle
  11. Last Train To Nuremberg - Joel Rafael Band
  12. You'll Sing To Me Too - Guardabarranco
  13. This Old Car - Pete Seeger & Arlo Guthrie
  14. Old Devil Time - Kim & Reggie Harris with Magpie
  15. The Emperor Is Naked Today-O - Dave Carter & Tracy Grammer
  16. Well May The World Go - Larry Long & Pete Seeger

Amazon.com

Political militancy so rarely results in more than topical art; thus it's amazing how well Pete Seeger's talking blues, kiddie jingles, angry anthems, and fragile adages to peace have aged. This single-disc successor to Appleseed's double disc Where Have All the Flowers Gone boasts a finer musical diversity, but is ultimately as uneven as the previous tribute. Even after 50 years, performers haven't begun to exhaust Seeger's catalog, and so it's puzzling that Moxy Früvous would waste tape on the forgettable "Maple Syrup Time," that Billy Bragg and Eliza Carthy would see any point to another version of "If I Had a Hammer," or that Kim and Reggie Harris (with Magpie) would push the sing-along folksiness of "Old Devil Time" to the point of parody. The better the song, however, the better the performance. John Wesley Harding (backed by Peter Buck and Scott McCaughey) rocks "Words, Words, Words" straight into the psychedelic garage, Jackson Browne and Joan Baez surround themselves with Cuban musicians for a memorable "Guantanamera," Steve Earle casts his bitter, bloodshot eye deep into the heart of "Walking Down Death Row," and Eric Andersen, his voice an icy whisper, turns the pure lyricism of "Snow Snow" into the album's most harrowing and memorable moment. --Roy Kasten

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars The Working Class We Have With Us Always. . ........2001-12-30

Townes Van Zandt once said that there's two kinds of music: blues and zippety-doo-dah. Pete Seeger's music never was zippety-doo-dah.

Seeger's finely-tuned sensibilities for the endless complications of the lives of the poor and near-poor, as well as for the trades- and craftspeople of America, has given us some of the most lyrically powerful music of our time. If this album contained certain different songs it would be an easy five star work.

It's still very good. Steve Earle's version of "Walking Down Death Row", Dar Williams' and Toshi Reagon's rendering of "Oh Had I a Golden Thread", Eric Andersen's "Snow, Snow", the McGarrigle Sisters' "Little Boxes", and "You Sing It to Me Too" by Guardabarranco are all outstanding interpretations of Seeger's work.

For 45 years I've loaded a lunch bucket and hauled myself off to work at one job or another. Most of that time I've had a Pete Seeger song or two running around my brain, helping me remember who the good guys are. Pete Seeger somehow knows what that's like.

This album is a fine tribute to a good man, one who never wavered in the good but futile fight for social and economic justice. Carry it on, Pete.
Urban Folksongs
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • A classic
Urban Folksongs

Manufacturer: Black Wolf Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Folk | Styles | Music
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ASIN: B000055WEZ
Release Date: 2000-10-21

Tracks:

  1. Ashes to Dust
  2. Photograph
  3. Urban Girl
  4. Broke and Hungry
  5. Clock
  6. Father to Son
  7. My Gold Mine
  8. Jester Fool
  9. Raven and Scarecrow
  10. The Love Remains
  11. Worn Out Pretention
  12. Lonely Man

Album Description

This was my first batch of songs from early days back in 1989...I was just a kid, about 23 or so, with a headful of Bob Dylan dreams and Joni Mitchell aspirations...I released these songs on cassette, and sold them at the coffee-houses around Boston, Passim, The Nameless, The Old Vienna...I can hear the old me in them, and looking back, I see the long path that has been walked on since those days-I've come a long way, and have a long way yet to go! I hope you like it, and thanks for coming along...-Ellis Paul

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars A classic.......2000-12-23

I have this album on the orginal cassette tape, and enjoy it immensely. I can recall the days of hearing Ellis Paul sing these songs live at Passim's in Harvard Square and around the New England coffee houses and thinking what a talented writer and great singer. After 10 years, I picked his voice off the soundtrack of Me, Myself & Irene. I am very pleased to find on the Amazon website that Ellis Paul has written more albums over the years. Time to start collecting!
Washington Square Memoirs: The Great Urban Folk Boom
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • The BEST Folk Revival Collection PERIOD
  • Best folk revival anthology ever!!
  • A Satisfying Compendium
  • Boomer nostalgia trip
  • Was it that long ago?
Washington Square Memoirs: The Great Urban Folk Boom
Various Artists
Manufacturer: Rhino / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B00005JG9A
Release Date: 2001-06-05

Tracks:

  1. Hard Travelin' - Woody Guthrie
  2. Old Man Atom (Talking Atomic Blues) - Sam Hinton
  3. Black, Brown And White - Big Bill Broonzy
  4. Nottamun Town - Jean Ritchie
  5. Darlin' Cory - Ed McCurdy
  6. One Meat Ball - Josh White
  7. Little Boxes - Malvina Reynolds
  8. I Was Born 10,000 Years Ago - Oscar Brand
  9. Midnight Special - Cisco Houston
  10. Wasn't That A Time - The Weavers
  11. Spanish Is A Loving Tongue - Glenn Yarbrough
  12. Swannanonoa Tunnel - Erik Darling
  13. Sportin' Life - Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee
  14. South Coast - Randy Sparks
  15. Molly Dee - The Kingston Trio
  16. I've Been Driving On Bald Mountain/Water Boy (live) - Odetta
  17. Raspberries, Strawberries - Bud & Travis
  18. The Hammer Song (live) - Pete Seeger
  19. Chase The Rising Son - The Journeymen
  20. Don't Let Your Deal Go Down - The New Lost City Ramblers
  21. Betty And Dupree (live) - Bob Gibson & Bob Camp
  22. Coplas De Amor - Cynthia Gooding
  23. San Francisco Bay Blues - Ramblin' Jack Elliott
  24. The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face - Peggy Seeger
  25. Greenback Dollar - Hoyt Axton
  26. Swing And Turn Jubilee - Carolyn Hester
  27. Another Man - Barry & Barry

Tracks:

  1. Walk Right In - The Rooftop Singers
  2. He Was A Friend Of Mine - Dave Van Ronk
  3. Last Night I Had The Strangest Dream 0 The Chad Mitchell Trio
  4. Nora's Dove (Dink's Song) - The Big Three
  5. 500 Miles - Hedy West
  6. Four Strong Winds - Ian & Sylvia
  7. I Can't Help But Wonder Where I'm Bound - Tom Paxton
  8. Blowin' In The Wind - Peter, Paul & Mary
  9. Fog Horn - Bob Gibson
  10. High Flying Bird - Judy Henske
  11. Boots Of Spanish Leather - Bob Dylan
  12. You'se A Viper - Dave Van Ronk & The Ragtime Jug Stompers
  13. Four In The Morning - Jesse Colin Young
  14. Euphoria - The Holy Modal Rounders
  15. There But For Fortune - Joan Baez
  16. Take Your Fingers Off It - The Even Dozen Jug Band
  17. Brother, Can You Spare A Dime? - Judy Roderick
  18. Tear Down The Walls - Martin & Neil
  19. Morning Dew (live) - Bonnie Dobson
  20. Jordan's River - The Modern Folk Quartet
  21. What's The Matter With The Mill - Koerner, Ray & Glover
  22. Cod'ine - Buffy Sainte-Marie
  23. Joshua Gone Barbados - Eric Von Schmidt
  24. Take A Whiff On Me - The Greenbriar Boys
  25. Get Together - Hamilton Camp

Tracks:

  1. The Wabash Cannonball (live) - The Limeliters
  2. I Ain't Marching Anymore - Phil Ochs
  3. Pack Up Your Sorrows - Richard & Mimi Farina
  4. Drop Down Mama - John Hammons
  5. Rag Mama - Jim Kweskin & The Jug Band
  6. Bells Of Rhymney - John Denver
  7. Early Morning Rain - Gordon Lightfoot
  8. Thirsty Boots - Eric Andersen
  9. Reason To Believe - Tim Hardin
  10. Just Like A Woman - Richie Havens
  11. The Motorcycle Song (live) - Arlo Guthrie
  12. The Dolphins - Fred Neil
  13. Wondrous Love - Kathy & Carol
  14. Once I Was - Tim Buckley
  15. The Circle Game - Tom Rush
  16. These 23 Days In Semptember - David Blue
  17. Candy Man - Taj Mahal
  18. Then Came The Children - Paul Siebel
  19. School Days - Loudon Wainwright III

Amazon.com

It was distinctly ironic: at the very zenith of America's postwar space-age love affair with TV, 3-D, and rock & roll (and other disposable cultural ephemera), a grassroots movement set out to recapture the country's lost musical heritage. These curious minds not only found it in a wealth of seemingly forgotten protest songs, spiritual blues, and country laments, but also forged new songs in its image. That this crusade sprang from lower Manhattan's Washington Square and the doorstep of New York University made the paradox all the sweeter. Ted Myers, the producer of this triple-disc anthology, grew up just blocks from the epicenter of that folk-quake, and his generous sense of place and time permeates this rich collection. Generally misunderstood and historically pigeonholed, the era finally gets its due, chronicled here by 72 tracks that extend far beyond the roots-conscious work of Woody Guthrie, the Weavers, Ramblin' Jack Elliott, and Pete Seeger on one hand, and the more popular material by the Kingston Trio, Limeliters, Joan Baez, and Bob Dylan on the other. Culturally, the Folk movement was the alt-rock of its day--if eminently more conscious of history and politically committed. Musically, it encompassed an ethos that enthusiastically blurred the boundaries between blues, Appalachian ballads, jug music, pure country, honky-tonk, work songs, and even unbridled novelty; this set explores them all, often with a palpable sense of discovery. Historically, the movement championed preservation at the same time it gleefully tweaked old sensibilities in pursuit of new inspiration. Listen and you'll hear music that became touchstones for artists as diverse as the Byrds, Roberta Flack, Rod Stewart, and--wittingly or not--every passionate coffeehouse minstrel who's strode on stage with a guitar ever since. --Jerry McCulley

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The BEST Folk Revival Collection PERIOD.......2005-01-12

I'm not one who is too fast to gush about a slick cd set but even after owning it for a couple years I can't say enough about this one.

First and foremost is the varied and intelligent song selection that blends, in chronological order, traditional, folk-blues, Cambridge jug band revival, early and later protest songs, and the birth of the singer-songwriter era. The selections seem to have been chosen for their musical integrity, not just to represent a certain sub-genre or for sentimental value. Out of 72 cuts, there's only about 5 that I don't like, often because they were performed with an earnestness seems silly today. Mericfully, there is no Kumbaya.

This set also mixes the best known icons of the era (Dylan, Baez, PP&M) with those who are well known to fans of the music but perhaps less so by the public (Ochs, Paxton, Odetta, Brand, von Ronk) and greater performers and writers who may be unknown to younger audiences because they've mostly been undeservedly out of print the last few decades (Hamilton Camp, Carolyn Hester, "Rick" (ha!) Von Schmidt, Hedy West, Judy Henske, Rounders).

Best of all, unlike pretty much all the other sets out there, this one has very few pop-folk songs mixed in. No doo-wop Wimoweh, Coca Cola commercials, or Gordon Jenkins string sections, not that those recordings can't be enjoyed on other terms. There is just so much more meat here than in the larger sets you may have seen on TV that it this set is worth the premium prices used copies are starting to sell for.

The booklet has intersting notes on the songs and performers, although some seem to be recylced and not original to this set. And there are sine pictures that melted my heart. A teenage Mary Travers with friends in WSP in 1955 (may she have a speedy recovery from her health challenges)!

Finally, the sound quality is mostly very good. I have several of the original pressings and generally the versions on this set sound better.

Oh yeah, The Motorcyle Song is the hard to find long talking verion!

5 out of 5 stars Best folk revival anthology ever!!.......2001-11-10

Since CDs started predominating the form in which music is available to the consumer, there have been many folk reissues. But this one is by far, the best collection of reissues I've seen or heard. It's only problem -- if it's even a problem -- is that after you've listened to all 72 tracks, you're left wanting more. The sound quality too is excellent. Go for it!

4 out of 5 stars A Satisfying Compendium.......2001-07-20

About 6 years ago, I bought Rhino's "Troubadours of the Folk Era" CD's. They introduced me to many folk singers whom I now know intimately. Taking that one better, Rhino now has this 3 CD set with pictures, liner notes and personal essays. Buyer beware, if you do have the Troubadours CD's, you may be disappointed to learn that many of the same recordings do pop up here. The good news is that there is a wealth of other material here to select from. Joni Mitchell is explained as not appearing due to licensing restrictions in this collection, yet oddly, she appeared on the Troubadour series. Conversely, Dylan appears here although he was not on Troubadours. The times are a'changin' I guess. I do have some minor quibbles with the material selected... "There but for Fortune" is not, in my opinion, the best Joan Baez choice for this collection, as it was released later in the 60's and doesn't have as much of that Washington Square flavor as say, "We Shall Overcome" or any of her broadside ballads do. Also, why do they select "Codine" from Buffy Sainte Marie, which is one of the hardest songs of hers to appreciate at first listening? Also, with lesser known artists such as Judy henske whose older material is NOT available on CD, why do we have "High Flying Bird" yet again, as on Troubadours? It's an amazing song, but for those of us starved for Henske, another selection would have been adequate.

That said, this is still worth having, for its historical impact and musical pleasure. Enjoy!

5 out of 5 stars Boomer nostalgia trip.......2001-07-07

I can't write about this CD in the third person as the other reviewers have because many of the songs bring up vivid memories of the singers and other events happening at the time that were related to those songs. I'm listening to this CD at work, and I would have gotten through all three CDs if I didn't keep repeating some of the songs endlessly. As one who owned about half of these songs on LP, if I were to create a CD with representative songs of the era, many of the same songs would be on it.

Some of my all time favoritesongs are included like "Pack up your sorrows," "Thirsty boots," and "I can't help but wonder where I'm bound." These are on CDs I've already bought, but it is still great to have them all in one place. Other's enter my CD collection for the first time. Finally "Reason to believe," "Suzanne," "Hard Traveling," "Euphoria," "Sing and turn Jubilee" and "The motorcycle song" can be played in the car.

If you are new to this music or this era, this is just a sampling. Some of these artists you will probably want in more depth. When they play "Cod'ine," I want to run home to also hear Buffy Sainte-Marie sing "Pineywood hills" and "Until it's time for me to go." But start here, it's a great introduction. It's hard for me to listen to "Four strong winds" without also hearing "Early morning rain," but if you've never heard Ian & Sylvia, this is one of the two best songs to start with.

If you grew up/old with this music too, how can you resist?

4 out of 5 stars Was it that long ago?.......2001-06-28

It is encouraging that this set may have been prompted by success of "The Best of Braodside" out on Folkways last year. In this case you get a pretty panoramic look at folk based music in the early 60s and people are certain to disagree on what is good or bad, should be in or should be out. The bottom line is that no matter what your point of view there is a lot of high quality music here and a good look at how folk music planted seeds for a lot of what is still happening in contemporary music. It was a great time, it was (and is) great music and one thing that can be agreed upon is that having Judy Henske's "High Flying Bird" back in print is a real important plus.

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  5. A Brief History... [Live] [Import]
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  7. Antiquities [Import]
  8. Arnish Light
  9. At the Little Theatre
  10. At This Stage [Import]

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