It's richly ironic that Pete Seeger threatened to ax the wires when Bob Dylan went electric at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival. Dylan, after all, was doing the same thing Seeger had done 15 years earlier with the Weavers: lending contemporary pop arrangements to folk music. Back in 1950, going pop didn't mean plugging in electric guitars but adding big-band charts by Frank Sinatra's future arranger Gordon Jenkins. And it worked. The quartet took songs by a black Louisiana convict, a Dust Bowl socialist, and an anonymous Zulu troubador and turned them into pop hits between 1950 and 1952. The Weavers' four-CD box set, Wasn't That a Time, begins with eight of those early 78s for Decca Records and then offers 79 more songs from their later recordings for Vanguard. Weavers' songs like "Wimoweh," "If I Had a Hammer," "Guantanamera," and "Kisses Sweeter Than Wine" have been recorded by everyone from R.E.M. to Aretha Franklin. If only for their historical impact, the songs on this box set are important. --Geoffrey Himes
Wasn't That a Time: The Best Of,The Weavers,Universal Int'l,Folk,Folk & Traditional,Folk Revival,Folksongs,Political Folk,Pop,Traditional Folk,United States of America
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Wasn't That a Time?: The Best of the Weavers
The Weavers Manufacturer: Umvd Import ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000024SZ4 Release Date: 1997-06-27 |
Tracks:
- On Top Of Old Smokey
- Hard, Ain't It Hard
- Goodnight Irene
- Around The Corner (Beneath The Berry Tree)
- Old Paint (Ride Around Little Dogies)
- (The Wreck Of The) John B.
- The Roving Kind
- Tzena, Tzena, Tzena
- Wimoweh
- Kisses Sweeter Than Wine
- So Long (It's Been Good To Know You)
- Midnight Special
- Rock Island Line
- Sylvie
- Lonesome Traveller
- When The Saints Go Marching In
- Bay Of Mexico
- Hush Little Baby
- I Know Where I'm Going
- Suliram
- Along The Colorado Trail
- Greensleeves (Instrumental)
Amazon.com
It's richly ironic that Pete Seeger threatened to ax the wires when Bob Dylan went electric at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival. Dylan, after all, was doing the same thing Seeger had done 15 years earlier with the Weavers: lending contemporary pop arrangements to folk music. Back in 1950, going pop didn't mean plugging in electric guitars but adding big-band charts by Frank Sinatra's future arranger Gordon Jenkins. And it worked. The quartet took songs by a black Louisiana convict, a Dust Bowl socialist, and an anonymous Zulu troubador and turned them into pop hits between 1950 and 1952. The Weavers' four-CD box set, Wasn't That a Time, begins with eight of those early 78s for Decca Records and then offers 79 more songs from their later recordings for Vanguard. Weavers' songs like "Wimoweh," "If I Had a Hammer," "Guantanamera," and "Kisses Sweeter Than Wine" have been recorded by everyone from R.E.M. to Aretha Franklin. If only for their historical impact, the songs on this box set are important. --Geoffrey HimesCustomer Reviews:
Another solid collection of the best of the Weavers.......2005-08-03
The Weavers were Pete Seeger, tenor and banjo; Ronnie Gilbert, alto; Lee Hays, baritone and bass; and Fred Hellerman, baritone and guitar. "Wasn't That a Time: The Best of the Weavers" is one of several solid collections of the songs this seminal folk group made popular. This 22-track collection should not be confused with the larger box set also entitled "Wasn't That a Time." Still, this has the core songs that are on anybody's short list of Weavers songs, which would be the ones mentioned above plus "On the Top of Old Smokey," "Goodnight Irene," "Kisses Sweeter Than Wine," "The Midnight Special," "Rock Island Line," "Lonesome Traveler," and "When the Saints Go Marching In." Really, the only song that I can say is missing that would be on my list is "Follow the Drinking Gourd," but that is not enough to quibble and if that song is high up on your list keep looking because it is out there to be found.
The other part of the equation is that this collection offers some other songs by the Weavers that do not pop up as often, such as "Around The Corner (Beneath The Berry Tree)," "Old Paint (Ride Around Little Dogies)," and "Along the Colorado Trail," all of which serve to remind you how subversive this group was and why they were denounced as Communist sympathizers (I find it interesting that the Weavers were also denounced by the left for being sellouts at the same time they were being viewed with suspicion by the right because of their politics). Unfortunately, if you are hoping to hear what all the fuss was about in terms of the political controversy, forget about it. For that you probably have to check out the solo recordings of Seeger, who would continue to be political thorn in the side of the system for some time to come.
You can't go wrong with this set!.......2000-10-06
If you already know that you like (or love) the Weavers, than I would say Go for It!
Music Album:
- What If a Day...
- When God's Love Is Real
- Where This Road Leads
- Why I'm Here
- Winterfolk XV: A Benefit for Sisters of the Road
- With Luke Kelly [Import]
- With Strings Attached [Live] [Import]
- Work and Pray: Historic Negro Spirituals and Work Songs From West Virginia
- Yogi in My House [Import]
- Acoustic Years 1993-97 [Import]
