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Music > Folk
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Stroll on
(CD)
Steve Ashley
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R1,180
Discovery Miles 11 800
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Out of stock
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Electric
(CD)
Richard Thompson
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R483
Discovery Miles 4 830
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Out of stock
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If I Was CD (2015)
(CD)
Staves; Contributions by Zach Hanson; Produced by Justin Vernon; Performed by Staves
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R370
Discovery Miles 3 700
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Out of stock
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Poetman
(CD)
Michael Johnathon
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R352
Discovery Miles 3 520
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Out of stock
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There are few vintage concert recordings that capture the spirit of
an artist and the audience as aptly as Carolyn Hester at the Town
Hall. Although the infusion of rock & roll would take Hester's
chosen brand of traditional folk to the proverbial next level.
Unlike many around her, she remains faithful to the core-governing
principles of the genre. She never complicated the already involved
tales with unnecessary instrumentation or oblique lyrical
references, âĶ la the direction that Bob Dylan moved the genre.
Along with George Tomsco (acoustic guitar), Hester also accompanies
herself with her own intimately lyrical acoustic six-string
fretwork. The repertoire is packed with traditional renderings of
folk standards such as "Water Is Wide," "Buckeye Jim," and the
Scottish "Jute Mill Song." There are also a fair number of
modernized classics, including "Come on In," "High Flying Bird,"
and a languidly picked reading of the Gershwin pop standard
"Summertime." Perhaps the most noteworthy cover is an adaptation of
Walt Whitman's "Captain, My Captain," which conjures the memories
of Jawaharlal Nehru, John F. Kennedy, and Winston Churchill. Her
slight Texan drawl contrasts her clear, chiming vocals. Undoubtedly
the simple recording procedures and productions of Norman Petty
likewise have a great deal to do with the enveloping atmosphere
that not only accurately reproduces the stage performers, but also
captures the enthusiastic audience. The audience is particularly
vocal and participatory on "Sing Hallelujah" as the hosannas ring
with overwhelming, if not slightly intimidating solidarity. When
this title was issued on CD in 1990 by the German Bear Family
label, the contents of her two volumes of Town Hall material were
augmented with an additional four sides from a different
performance from the mid-'60s with Stanley Lark on acoustic upright
bass. ~ Lindsay Planer
Wally Whyton's albums It's Me Mum and Leave Them a Flower appeared
in 1968 and 1969 respectively, and this import CD collects both
albums on one CD (although, as the title indicates, one song was
omitted from Leave Them a Flower to fit the albums on one disc).
These tracks find Whyton's dedication to American folk music
keeping with the times on a set of protest songs, folk chestnuts
and folk-rock covers. He tackles Bob Dylan, John Denver, Tom
Paxton, Woody Guthrie and the like, rendering all with that chunky
12-string guitar sound and some surprisingly "modern" arrangements.
Some of Whyton's self-penned protest numbers seem heavy-handed, but
so did much of the protest folk of the period. Whyton's song "Leave
Them a Flower" is said to be an international conservation anthem,
but mostly this package is directed toward Brits who remember
Whyton's Country Meets Folk radio program and television
appearances, and of course his tenure in the Vipers Skiffle Group.
~ Greg Adams
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Trouble And Love CD (2015)
(CD)
Mary Gauthier; Contributions by Patrick Granado, Lee Groitzsch; Produced by Patrick Granado, Mary Gauthier; Performed by …
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R470
Discovery Miles 4 700
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Out of stock
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