Waratah St/Old Man Emu [Import]
Waratah St/Old Man Emu [Import]
ASIN: B000B66OX0
Track Listings
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1. Songs For My Guitar
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2. Tubbo Station
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3. Winter Green
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4. Waratah Street
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5. A Bushman Can't Survive
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6. Wobbly Boot Hotel (Boggabilla Pub)
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7. Goondiwindi Pork
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8. Will Our Grandchildren Sing
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9. A Flag Of Our Own
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10. The Big Depression
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11. Ami, Take Your Chances!
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12. Georgie
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13. Beachcomber From Wollongong
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14. Millions Of Women
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15. Papa Whisky November
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16. Old Man Emu
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17. Big Country Round
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18. Boyhood Story
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19. Under The Bridge
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20. Heaven's Right Here
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See all 29 tracks on this disc
Editorial Reviews
Product Description
New range of 2CD sets from EMI featuring two studio albums packaged in a slipcase. 2005.
Waratah St/Old Man Emu,John Williamson,EMI,Country,Country/Bluegrass
Average customer rating:
- not to great
- Not so bad, 100 tunes for 4$
- You get what you pay for.
- Now I know why there were no song samples to listen to ...
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100 Favorite Patriotic Songs
Manufacturer: Bci / Eclipse Music
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- United We Stand: Songs for America
- America's Favorite Patriotic Songs
- America's Bugle Calls
- American Pride: Sixteen Stirring Patriotic Themes
- Patriotic Country
ASIN: B0000A1HT8
Release Date: 2003-08-12 |
Tracks:
- America the Beautiful
- All Quiet on the Potomac Tonight
- Ballad of the Green Berets
- On Top of Old Smokey
- Coyote Warrior
- Semper Fidelis
- Breeze from Alabama
- Onward Christian Soldiers
- Come Where My Love Lies Dreaming
- Patriot
- Sweet Betsy from Pike
- Marines' Hymn
- America Is
- When Johnny Comes Marchin' Home
- Happy the Soldier
- American Trilogy
- Home Sweet Home
- Washington Post March
- Enraptured I Gaze
- Jeannie With the Light Brown Hair
- Yellow Rose of Texas
- Over There
- Simple Gifts
- Liberty Bell
- Star Spangled Banner
Tracks:
- God Bless the USA
- Yankee Doodle Dandy
- Katy Cruel
- I Vow to Thee My Country
- King Cotton
- Beautiful Dreamer
- America
- American Patrol
- Mine Eyes Have Seen the Beauty
- Mohican Dream
- Red, White and Blue
- Some Folks
- Liberty Song
- Pomp and Circumstance
- Hail to the Chief
- Bennington Rifles
- Peace on the Battlefield
- I've Been Working on the Railroad
- Under the Double Eagle
- Red River Valley
- My Country 'Tis of Thee
- Camptown Races
- Wild Blue Yonder
- Hands Across the Sea
- Fanfare for the Common Man
Tracks:
- Stars and Stripes Forever
- Living in America
- Home on the Range
- Old Colony Times
- Clementine
- Invincible Eagle
- Ring Ring de Banjo
- Yankee Doodle
- Largo from "The New World"
- To a Wild Rose
- Hail Columbia
- Alexander's Ragtime Band
- Gettysburg
- Carry Me Back to Old Virginny
- Capitan
- Prairie Daughter
- Little Brown Jug
- Marching Through Georgia
- Entertainer
- Steamboat Around the Bend
- Revolutionary Tea
- Cassions Keep Rollin' Along
- Johnny Has Gone for a Soldier
- Amazing Grace
- Grand Old Flag
Tracks:
- God Bless America
- National Emblem
- Soldier, Soldier Won't You Marry Me
- Anchors Away
- Oh, Susannah
- Tramp, Tramp, Tramp
- Toast
- Dixie
- St. Louis Blues
- Appalachian Spring
- Bonnie Blue Flag
- Old Hundreth
- Swanee River
- Battle Cry of Freedom
- U. S Field Artillery
- Sidewalks of New York
- Chester
- Auld Lang Syne
- Kingdom Come
- My Old Kentucky Home
- Hail to the Spirit of Liberty
- Battle Hymn of the Republic
- Shenandoah
- Abraham's Daughter
- This Land Is Your Land
Customer Reviews:
not to great.......2007-04-04
We were disappointed with this CD, but for the price I guess we can't expect much. I didn't care for the new style presentation of the songs. I like a more traditional rendering.
Not so bad, 100 tunes for 4$.......2005-06-22
I red the comments of two other people who have bought this 4 CD BOX SET and it is not really so bad. I will even add that there are some excellent tunes. However, I must agree with the fact that few tunes seem to have been recorded 40 or 50 years ago, mainly when you hear the scratches of an old turntable but it is just 2 or 3 tunes. Furthermore, if you do not know American music, it is a good BOX SET to buy if you consider that you received 4 CD for 4$ including 100 tunes. On these 4 CD, I have heard some orchestration that I have never heard before and I consider that they are different but interesting. Any way, after hearing these 100 tunes, you will say to yourself that you like this tune, this other tune, this other tune and so on and you will be able to buy a more expensive CD with the tunes that you like. However, I have bought many CDs in the last few weeks and as you know, there are always some tunes that you like and some tunes that you do not like on every CD that you will buy. So, don't buy it at 25$ but at 4 or 5$ dollars, it is a very good choice for 100 tunes.
You get what you pay for........2004-07-04
You get what you pay for. The singers put their own spin on the singing of each song. If you didn't hear the words you would not recognize some of them. Even some of the music sounds like a bad recording of music played on a turntable. Definitely not worth the price.
Now I know why there were no song samples to listen to ..........2004-07-04
I wish this review had been here when I was thinking of purchasing it. I guess you get what you pay for. If you are thinking of buying this, you are better off recording your own CDs (or at least buying one that you can listen to a sampling of the songs). This album includes songs that were mere recordings of the songs playing on an old record player. It's almost so unbelievable that it is funny.
Average customer rating:
- Excellent Material for Ms. Upshaw.
- Keeps Getting Better
- The Barber alone is worth five stars
- Buy this disc...twice!
- Dawn Upshaw, vocal actress extraordinaire
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Knoxville Summer of 1915
Manufacturer: Nonesuch
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Barber
| Barber, Samuel
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Similar Items:
- Forgotten Songs: Dawn Upshaw Sings Debussy
- Long Time Ago - Copland / Dawn Upshaw & Thomas Hampson
- Voices of Light
- Angels Hide Their Faces: Dawn Upshaw Sings Bach and Purcell
- Barber: Knoxville Summer of 1915/Dover Beach/Hermit Songs/Adromache's Farewell
ASIN: B000005IZ3
Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Knoxville: Summer Of 1915
- The Old Maid And the Thief: Act I, Scene 6: What A Curse For A Woman Is A Timid Man
- Mirabai Songs: I. It's True, I Went To The Market
- Mirabai Songs: II. All I Was Doing Was Breathing
- Mirabai Songs: III. Why Mira Can't Go Back To Her Old House
- Mirabai Songs: IV. Where Did You Go?
- Mirabai Songs: V. The Clouds
- Mirabai Songs: VI. Don't Go, Don't Go
- The Rake's Progress: Act I, Scene 3: No Word From Tom
Amazon.com essential recording
Barber's Knoxville, Summer of 1915 is a setting of a lovely chunk of prose text by James Agee describing an evening from his childhood. An accomplished singer himself, Barber's vocal writing is expert, and this work must rank as one of the finest examples of the art of word-setting in any language. Barber perfectly captures the conversational quality of the text, while at the same time clothing the words in an atmosphere of gentle nostalgia. It's a masterpiece that Dawn Upshaw sings with keen insight and lovely tone. The remainder of the program is creatively chosen as well, making this one of the finest vocal recitals available by an American singer. --David Hurwitz
Customer Reviews:
Excellent Material for Ms. Upshaw........2006-04-26
'Knoxville: Summer of 1915' is a performance of a selection of operatic pieces by Americans such as Samuel Barber or Europeans transplanted to the United States, such as Igor Stravinsky. Ms. Upshaw shines with material, which is good for her, since she is just slightly out of her league with the material covered by the likes of Renee Flemming on the operatic front and Ute Lemper and Lotte Lenya on the Euro/American popular musical stage.
Like any good sampler, this recording's strongest draw is the fact that it makes one interested in tracking down the complete works by Barber, Menotti, Harbison, and Stravinsky. And, while the package includes all lyrics, everything is in perfectly clear English. A perfect addition to other American classics such as 'Porgy and Bess'.
Keeps Getting Better.......2005-03-02
I have had this disc for years, and I'm more impressed with it as the years roll by. I bought it for Barber's "Knoxville, Summer of 1915" which is a glorious piece of music caught here in a luminous performance. I didn't initially warm up to the Harbison songs, but they have grown on me over the years to the point that I listen to them far more often than the Barber now. I think it just took me a while to absorb Harbison's style and understand how deftly and ingeniously he uses it to take the listener into Mirabai's world. Not to be missed!
The Barber alone is worth five stars.......2004-01-16
People are always saying that they find a particular piece of music is "haunting." For me Barber's "Knoxville: Summer of 1915" is such a work. Dawn Upshaw's reading of this great American masterwork is the best I have yet heard. She won her first Grammy Award for this recording - and deservedly so. If you're a fan of either Upshaw or Barber you'll want to add this beautiful CD to your collection.
Buy this disc...twice!.......2002-07-20
Extraordinary!! This has got to be the definitive Knoxville--rich, touching, elegant and as close to perfect as it can probably ever be. Upshaw has the perfect voice for this work, and she gives it all the loving attention that it requires. This is a performance of Knoxville that will make you weak in the knees. For the Knoxville alone, buy this disc....twice! There is, however, just a little bit of downside here. The other works on this disc just aren't very captivating.
Dawn Upshaw, vocal actress extraordinaire.......2002-01-01
This is the CD that made me fall in love with Dawn Upshaw's singing. I had heard her before and admired her work, but this disc made me a real fan. As it's one of her early recordings, her voice is somewhat "fuller" than on later work; she later started moving the voice "forward," simplifying the sound. Either way, her immense talent for communicating the essence of the text is the outstanding aspect of all her work. It's amazing how she can sound angry, desperate, hopeful, melancholic, all while producing a beautiful sound and tackling all the vocal challenges of the music she's singing. She inhabits the characters, the narrators, of each of the pieces on this disc, and makes it more than just a collection of songs or arias.
I want to make special mention of the Harbison _Mirabai Songs_, as it seems to have been maligned somewhat in other reviews here. This was the work that most kept me coming back to this disc when I first bought it. I think it is a masterpiece, and one of Harbison's best and most important works. (Apparently I'm not alone in my admiration of the piece, because I've heard it on a number of live concerts in recent years, so it seems to be having a successful performance life.) Harbison's song cycle is by turns exciting, sensual, driving, longing, beautiful. The orchestration for the small ensemble is masterful (as Harbison's efforts at scoring always are), and Upshaw expresses all of Mirabai's complex emotions enchantingly.
The _Rake's Progress_ aria also deserves individual comment. In this engrossing example of Stravinsky's neoclassical style, Upshaw assumes Anne's air of fierce determination, and brings the disc to an absolutely thrilling climax on a concluding high C.
All of the music on this terrific CD is very accessible, and the performances are stellar. The recorded sound is very clear and immediate, as one would expect from Nonesuch. It's one of my favorite discs in my entire collection, and would probably be so for the Harbison and Stravinsky alone.
Average customer rating:
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Shall We Gather - American Hymns and Spirituals
Manufacturer: Albany Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Christian & Gospel
| Styles
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Live Recordings
| Christian & Gospel
| Styles
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General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
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General
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Similar Items:
- Wade In The Water, Vol.1:African American Spirituals:The Concert Tradition
- Great American Spirituals, Vol. 9
- Go Down, Moses
- The Shapenote Album
- American Angels
ASIN: B00005QK6L
Release Date: 2001-09-25 |
Tracks:
- Libert Hall (Lord, In Thy Presence)
- Rise, Shine, For Thy Light Is A-Comin'
- Welwyn (O Brother Man)
- Pisgah (The Lord's My Shepherd)
- Poor Rosy
- I've Just Come From The Fountain
- Let Us Cheer The Weary Traveler
- Nettleton (Come, Thou Fount Of Every Blessing)
- Wondrous Love (What Wondrous Love Is This)
- Gospel Train
- Shining Shore (My Days Are Gliding By Swiftly)
- More Love
- In Mercy, Lord (In Mercy, Lord, Incline Thine Ear)
- Beautiful River (Shall We Gather At The River)
- Some Of These Days
- The Old Ship Of Zion
- St. Peter (In Christ There Is No East Or West)
- Missionary Chant (Awake, Our Souls)
- Old Ship Of Zion (What Ship Is This?)
- Inching Along
- Watchman (Watchman, Tell Us Of The Night)
- Hurry, On My Weary Soul
- Morning Trumpet (O When Shall I See Jesus)
- He's A Mighty Good Leader
- Hold On
- Resignation (My Shepherd Will Supply My Need)
- We Shall Walk Through The Valley
Customer Reviews:
Excellent.......2007-05-09
The best "Sacred Harp" or "Shape Note" type singing that I've heard. The various renditons are clear and harmonious.
None of that tuning up, barking, la-la's or other cacophonous sounds here.
Brilliant.......2003-09-22
I couldn't recommend a CD more highly. As a musician I was amazed at the variety of the music here and the truly exceptional performances. It's seems we can always rely on Albany to put out the most interesting and highest quality recordings.
Average customer rating:
- F.A.N.T.A.S.T.I.C.!
- At LAST the complete series ORIGINAL soundtrack, the wait is over!
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The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
Manufacturer: Film Score Monthly
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Schifrin
| Schifrin, Lalo
| ( S )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
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Film Scores
| Theatrical, Incidental & Program Music
| Forms & Genres
| Classical
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| Soundtracks
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| Soundtracks
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Similar Items:
- The Man From U.N.C.L.E., Vol. 2
- The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Vol. 3
- The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Book: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of a Television Classic
- In Like Flint / Our Man Flint: Original Motion Picture Soundtracks
- Man from U.N.C.L.E.
ASIN: B0006SSQ8E
Release Date: 2005-01-04 |
Tracks:
- First Season Main Title
- Vulcan Affair
- Deadly Games Affair
- Double Affair
- Project Strigas Affair
- King of Knaves Affair
- Fiddlesticks Affair
- Meet Mr. Solo
- First Season End Title
- Second Season End Title
- Alexander the Greater Affair
Tracks:
- Foxes and Hounds Affair
- Discotheque Affair
- Re-Collectors Affair
- Arabian Affair
- Tigers Are Coming Affair
- Cherry Blossom Affair
- Dippy Blonde Affair
- Third Season End Title
- Her Master's Voice Affair
- Monks of St. Thomas Affair
- Pop Art Affair
- Fourth Season (Main Title)
- Summit-Five Affair
- "J" for Judas Affair
Customer Reviews:
F.A.N.T.A.S.T.I.C.!.......2006-02-02
I've got the original music (including v2 and v3), the books (the best is Heitland's The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Book; still in print);
the 22 VHS tapes issued in the early 1990's (a haphazard collection issued in no particular order of episodes that boasted famous guest stars). Can I please get the whole series on DVD? I have not seen Mother Fear toying with Illya (The Children's Day Affair) in over 40 years.
At LAST the complete series ORIGINAL soundtrack, the wait is over!.......2005-07-12
Many of us have always thought The Man From UNCLE had the best music for a TV series ever, and this three double CD release confirms this. Wow! I'd be just happy with one CD, but having SIX (three double CDs packages) is absolutely out of this world, I mean, a lifetime wait come true.
Indeed, this is an unbelievable collection of three double CDs packages with the complete series soundtrack, and I mean the complete music, not a tune is missing.
And this is the ORIGINAL Man From Uncle music. Let me stress the point: this is the four years ORIGINAL soundtrack with the original recordings as they were heard throughout the series, not a no-name orchestra doing personal versions of the stuff. The audio transfer is very, very good, the music from late episodes is even in stereo.
Each individual CD carries over 70 minutes of music. All in all there you have the four TV seasons main titles and all, absolutely all of TMFU unforgetable music.
This is not a chronological release, meaning, all CDs have a mix of music from all four TV seasons. Volume 1 is heavier on early TV seasons stuff, fans of Jerry Goldsmith will love it. Those of us who prefer what Gerald Fried and later Richard Shores did with TMFU music, then volume 2 is mandatory. If you are a fan, you can't miss any of these six CDs. However if buying all three double packages is too much for you, you must go with Volume 2, no questions asked. Volume three is the weakest of them as it brings "suites" and a whole CD with "The Girl From Uncle" soundtrack, but you have a bonus "Open Channel D" beeper.
Each package is gorgeous, each with a glossy color booklet with extensive liner notes with details on how each tune was written to a specific TV series episode and how it was used onwards. You have bios on the composers, on how the recordings were made, even an overview on how many instruments were available in each of the years the music was recorded.
So, throw away your Hugo Montenegro Man From Uncle CD, this is the REAL thing.
Average customer rating:
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Shakespeare's Songbook, Vols. 1 & 2
Manufacturer: Azica
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Shakespeare's Songbook
- Songs and Dances from Shakespeare
- Shakespeare Songs
- Shakespeare's Musick (Songs & Dances from Shakespeare's Plays) / Pickett, Musicians of the Globe
- William Shakespeare's Hamlet (Two-Disc Special Edition)
ASIN: B0002IQL08
Release Date: 2004-07-06 |
Tracks:
- Ah Robin (Round)
- And Let Me The Cannikin Clink
- And Will He Not Come Again
- Be Merry, Be Merry
- Black Spirits
- Blow, Blow Thou Winter Wind
- Bonny Sweet Robin
- But Shall I Go Mourn
- Can'st Thou Not Hit It
- Come Away
- Come Away, Hecate
- Come Live With Me
- Come O'er The Burn
- Come Thou Monarch (Version 2)(Round)
- Come Unto These Yellow Sands
- A Cup Of Wine
- Farewell, Dear Heart
- Fathers That Wear Rags
- Fear No More
- Fie On Sinful Fantasy
- Fill The Cup (Round)
- Flout 'Em And Cout 'Em (Round)
- Fools Had Ne'er Less Grace
- For I'll Cut My Green Coat
- The Friar And The Nun
- Full Fathom Five
- The George Alow (Version 1)
- Get You Hence
- The God Of Love
- Hark, Hark The Lark
- Have I Caught My Heavenly Jewel
- Heart's Ease
- Hold Thy Peace (Version 2)(Round)
- Honor, Riches
- I Am Gone Sir
- I Loathe The I Did Love
- It Was A Lover And His Lass
- Jepha
- Jog On
- Jolly Shepherd (Round)
- King Stephen Was A Worthy Peer
- Lawn As White
- Love, Love, Nothing But Love (Version 2)
- The Master, The Swabber (Version 2)
- No More Dams
- An Old Hare Hoar (Version 1)
- O Mistress Mine (Version 1)
- Orpheus With His Lute
- O Sweet Oliver
- Pardon Goddess Of The Night
- Roses Their Sharp Spines
- Sigh No More, Ladies
- Some Men For Sudden Joy (Version 1)
- Take, O Take Those Lips
- Tell Me, Where Is Fancy Bred
- That Sir Which Serves
- There Dwelt A Man In Babylon (Version 1)
- There Was Three Fools
- Three Merry Men (Round)
- Tomorrow Is St. Valentine's Day
- Under The Greenwood Tree
- Up And Down (Round)
- Urns And Odours Bring Away
- Walsingham
- Was This Fair Face
- Wedding Is Great Juno's Crown
- What Shall He Have (Round)
- When Arthur First In Court
- When Daffodils Begin To Peer
- When Daisies Pied
- When Griping Grief
- When Icicles Hang By The Wall
- When That I Was And A Little Tyne Boy
- Where The Bee Sucks
- While You Here Do Snoring Lie
- Who Is Silvia
- Why Let The Strucken Deer
- Willow, Willow (Version 1)
- Will You Buy Any Tape
- The Woosel Cock
- You Spotted Snakes
Tracks:
- Awake, Awake
- Battle Of Agincourt
- Bride's Goodmorrow
- Broom
- Callino
- Carmen's Whitle
- Chi Passa
- Come Kiss Me, Kate (Round)
- Come Thou Monarch (Version 1)
- Cup Of Wine (Version 1)
- Damon
- Daphne
- Diana (2 Versions)
- Dulcina
- Eglamore
- Eighty-Eight
- Fortune My Foe
- George Alow (Version 2)
- Glass Doth Run
- Goddesses
- Go From My Window
- Greensleeves (2 Versions)
- Guy Of Warwick
- Hem Boys (2 Versions)
- Hey Ho for A Husband (2 Versions)
- Hobbyhorse
- Hold Thy Peace (Versions 1 & 3)
- Hunt's Up
- I Cannot Come Every Day (2 Versions)
- In Crete
- In Peascod Time
- Jack Boy (Round)
- King Cophetua
- King Lear
- King Solomon
- Light O Love
- Loath To Depart (2 Versions)
- Love, Love (Version 1)
- Master, Swabber (Version 1)
- Mounsier Mingo
- Mounsieur's Almaine
- My Mind To Me
- Nutmegs (Of All The Birds)
- Nutmegs (Wooing Of The Baker's Daughter)
- O Death (2 Versions)
- Old Hare Hoar (Version 2)
- O Mistress Mine (Version 2)
- O' The Twelfth Day Of December
- Oyster Pie
- Peg A Ramsey (2 Versions)
- Phillida (3 Versions)
- Please One
- Pyramus
- Queen Dido (2 Versions)
- Ratcatcher
- Rich Jew
- Robin Goodfellow
- Robin Hood
- Rogero
- Rowland
- Sellenger's Round
- Shore's Wife (2 Versions)
- Sick, Sick (3 Vesions)
- Some Men For Sudden Joy (Round)
- There Dwelt A Man (Version 2)
- Titus Andronicus
- Tom A Bedlam (2 Versions)
- Troilus
- Troy Town
- Wellady
- Whenas We Sat In Babylon
- Where Is The Life
- Whoop
- Why Let The Strucken (If Care Do Cause)
- Willow, Willow (Version 2)
- Will Ye Buy A Fine Dog
- With A Fading
Average customer rating:
- What ??
- Nice Voice, but not a nice person...(read on, pls.)
- A let down
- The definitive Paul Robeson compilation
|
The Essential Paul Robeson
Manufacturer: Asv Living Era
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Foster, Stephen
| ( F )
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| Classical
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All Works by Gershwin
| Gershwin, George
| ( G )
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Film Scores
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Robeson, Paul
| ( R )
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Similar Items:
- Ballad for Americans
- Paul Robeson Live at Carnegie Hall
- Paul Robeson Sings "Ol' Man River" & Other Favorites
- Songs of Free Men/ A Paul Robeson Recital
- Ol' Man River: His 25 Greatest
ASIN: B00005B15R
Release Date: 2001-05-22 |
Tracks:
- Ol' Man River
- Steal Away
- Joshua Fit De Battle Ob Jericho
- Water Boy
- Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
- Deep River
- Lonesome Road
- Mighty Lak' A Rose
- Rockin' Chair
- When It's Sleepy-time Down South
- Mah Lindy Lou
- My Curly Headed Baby
- Carry Me Back To Green Pastures
- Lazy Bones
- St. Louis Blues
- Congo Lullaby
- Canoe Song
- Shenandoah
- I Still Suits Me
- Summertime
- It Ain't Necessarily So
- Just A-Wearyin' For you
- Song Of The Volga Boatmen
- Little Man, You've Had A Busy Day
Tracks:
- Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child/Minstrel Man
- Git On Board, Li'l Children/Dere's No Hidin' Place
- Go Down, Moses
- Bear De Burden/All God's Chillun Got Wings
- Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen
- Got The South In My Soul
- Blue Prelude
- Fat Li'l Feller Wid His Mammy's Eyes/Shortnin' Bread
- Wagon Wheels
- The Banjo Song
- Love Song
- Climbing Up (Mountain Song)
- All Through The Night
- Mood Indigo
- At Dawning
- An Eriskay Love Lilt
- Trees
- Jerusalem
- The Cobbler's Song
- A Perfect Day
- Sylvia
- Sea Fever
- King Joe (The Joe Louis Blues)
- The Old Folks At Home (Swanee River)
- My Old Kentucky Home
Customer Reviews:
What ??.......2006-12-10
The idiot from Virginia thought it a bit strange that an American black man would give the communists a chance. Looking back from modern perspective is easier than what he had to go on in the thirtes. Gee, I wonder why a black man would do that after all that southern hospitality, segregation, and steady work you gave the "black folk". Not to mention all those nighttime campfires you had going in their honor.
While I might be from New York I certainly would not be called a bleeding heart liberal but I can certainly understand why the poor soul was looking elsewhere. You are either ignorant of history and its influences on people or you are a totally unsympathetic jackass!!
Nice Voice, but not a nice person...(read on, pls.).......2006-01-07
Paul Robeson, who was brainwashed into
beleiving Communist rhetoric (which is
strange as hell for an Amer-I-can black
man). A good singing voice but all cover
songs! Come on, Paul!
A let down.......2004-09-24
I own several Robeson recordings and purchased this one with high hopes as it has a great selection of tracks. Unfortunately given the excellent recording quality of "Songs for Free Men" and "The Paul Robeson Oddyssey", the remasters from what I assume are 78's and possibly radio are a let down and mar what could have been an excellent album.
The definitive Paul Robeson compilation.......2003-09-19
This 2 CD set of Paul Robeson is the definitive collection providing a decent overview of his work in 50 tracks all wonderfully restored from 78s as usual for ASV, with spirituals, show tunes, Shakespeare-like readings, and more done with a trademark bass voice and orchestration that backs up Paul perfectly and he would later be one of the first civil rights activists. The first disc is a reissue of the single disc "Ol' Man River-His 25 Greatest" on ASV containing "Ol' Man River," "Mighty Like a Rose," "Joshua Fit De Battle Ob Jericho," "Carry Me Back To Green Pastures," "Lazy Bones," and many more classics which is also available here at Amazon for those who only want a single disc of Paul's work and the 2nd disc contains 25 more classics including "Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen," "The Old Folks At Home," "My Old Kentucky Home," "Wagon Wheels," "Git On Board, Little Children," and many more. In other words, all 50 of these tracks are essential to any early pop, folk, gospel, blues, etc. music fan and this is the set to introduce yourself to his work in a convenient 2 CD package with the usual great liner notes and details on the original 78s ASV provides with each CD released in their Living Era series.
Average customer rating:
|
John Langstaff Sings Archival Folk Collection
Manufacturer: Revels Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Britten
| Britten, Sir Benjamin
| ( B )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Vaughan Williams, Ralph
| ( V )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
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| Music
General
| Vaughan Williams, Ralph
| Composers
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
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| Renaissance (c.1450-1600)
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ASIN: B00068CUQS
Release Date: 2004-11-02 |
Tracks:
- O Waly, Waly/The Water Is Wide, I Cannot Get O'er
- Carrion Crow
- All 'Round My Had I Will Wear a Green Willow
- Cruel Mother
- Farmer's Curst Wife
- Riddle Song/I Will Give My Love an Apple
- Lord Rendal
- Billy Boy
- Croodin' Doo
- John Barleycorn
- Lover's Tasks
- Green Wedding
- She's Like the Swallow
- John Riley
Tracks:
- Bonnie Wee Thing
- Pretty Sally
- Two Brothers
- Teh Deaf Woman's Courtship
- At the Foot of Yonders Mountain
- Rich Old Lady
- There Was a Man in Our Town
- Baby Bunting
- When I Was a Little Boy
- Rosey Boy, Posey Boy
- Frog Went Courtin'
- Dn Lover
- Jockie to the Fair
- Pretty Sally
Tracks:
- False Knight Upon the Road
- Little Turtle Dove
- Seventeen Come Sunday
- Sir Patrick Spens
- Blow Away the Morning Dew
- Trees They Do Grow High
- Crawfish Man's Street City
- She Moved Through the Fair
- Golden Vanity
- Rich Old Lady
- Nottamun Town
- John Barleycorn
- Jolly Ploughboy
- St. James Hospital
- Brisk Young Widow
- Six Dukes Went A-Fishing
Tracks:
- Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair
- Bingo
- I Wish I Was a Child Again
- Hares on the Mountain
- Two Magicians
- Trees They Do Grow High
- Lady Maisry
- Edward
- As I Walked Through the Meadows
- Lark in the Morn
- Gypsy Laddie
- Go and Tell Aunt Nancy
- Soldier, Soldier, Won't You Marry Me?
- Cripple Creek Girls
- Tottenham Toad
- Frog in the Well
- Dance to Your Daddy
- As I Was Going to Banbury
- Swapping Song
- Dashing Away With the Smoothing Iron
- O My Love, Will You Wear Red?
- Frog and the Mouse
- Cocky Robin
- What'll We Do With the Baby?
- Mocking Bird (Hush Up, Baby)
- Bye, Bye Baby
- Tiny Man
- Weekdays and Sundays
- Oh Jacky, Stand Still
- Turn Round, Turn Round
- Basket Full of Nuts
- Our Baby Prince
- All the Ducks
- Polly Perkin
- Follow the Leader
- Poor Doggie
- Baby's Song
Album Description
John Langstaff, now 83 years of age, is the founder and director emeritus of Revels, the non-profit performing arts company that produces Revels Records as well as 'The Christmas Revels' annual winter solstice celebrations in 12 cities across the country. This is the complete collection of Langstaff's disc, featuring all four acclaimed previously re-released CDs originally recorded in England. The recordings have been digitally re-mastered at London's famed Abbey Road Studios. Included are many traditional British and American folk songs and ballads, most with simple, art song settings. Legendary pianists Sir Gerald Moore, Sam Mason and John Powell, as well as guitarist Martin Best, are featured.
Average customer rating:
- A Collection of the Original Oz Stage Productions
- Ain't it a Shame!
- Why the 1903 "Wizard" was forgotten
- A long overdue revisit to a classic American musical
- Long-Forgotten Broadway Hit Gets First Rate Revival
|
The Wizard of Oz - Vintage Recordings from the 1903 Broadway Musical
Manufacturer: Original Cast Record
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General Modern
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Similar Items:
- The Shirley Temple Storybook Collection: Land of Oz/The Reluctant Dragon
- The Wizard of Oz (1988 London Cast)
- Before the Rainbow : The Original Music of Oz
- Shock Treatment (1981)
- Into the Woods (Original Broadway Cast)
ASIN: B00009MPYQ |
Tracks:
- Wizard of OzSelection (Arthur Pryor's Band)
- The Bullfrog and the Coon (Ada Jones)
- Pocahontas (Edward M. Favor)
- Daisy Donohue (Harry Tally)
- Down on the Brandywine (Collins & Harlan)
- Come Take a Skate with Me Sung (Collins & Harlan)
- I Love You All the Time (Harry Macdonough)
- The Moon Has His Eyes on You (Ada Jones)
- When You Love, Love, Love (Thomas E. Whitbred)
- When We Get Whats a-Comin to Us
- Mister Dooley Sung (Edward M. Favor)
- Julie Dooley (J. W. Myers)
- Meet Me Down at the Corner (Jones & Spencer)
- Budweisers a Friend of Mine (Billy Murray)
- Theres a Lot of Things You Never Learn at School (Bob Roberts)
- Under a Panama (Billy Murray)
- Good Bye Fedora (Collins & Harlan)
- Sitting Bull (Collins & Harlan)
- I Love Only One Girl in this Wide Wide World (Harry Macdonough)
- Sammy (Harry Macdonough)
- The Tale of a Stroll (Morgan & Stanley)
- Cant You See Im Lonely? (Ada Jones)
- Are You Sincere? (Byron G. Harlan)
- Hurrah for Baffins Bay (Collins & Harlan)
- Football (Dan W. Quinn)
- Id Like to Go Halves in That (Burt Shepard)
- Rejoice!The Wizard is No Longer King
- The Traveler and the Pie
- Must You? (Dan W. Quinn)
- Thats Where She Sits All Day (Dan W. Quinn)
- The Sweetest Girl in Dixie (Henry Burr)
- Scarecrow Laugh (Fred Stone)
Tracks:
- Sammy Mira (Music Box Disc)
- Must You? (Mira Music Box Disc)
- Opening Prayer
- Phantom Patrol
- Just a Simple Girl from the Prairie
- Poppy Song
- Love is Love
- When We Get What's A-Comin' to Us
- The Traveler and the Pie
- When You Love, Love, Love
- Rejoice! The Wizard is No Longer King
- Phantom Patrol (Aeolian Piano Roll)
- My Little Maid of Oz Aeolian Piano Roll
- The Tik-Tok Man of OzSelection (Rythmodik Piano Roll)
- The Tik-Tok Man of OzSelection (Piano Roll)
- Ask the Flowers to Tell You (Macdonough & Dunlap)
- My Beautiful Dream Girl (John Barnes Wells)
- My Pretty Little Piece of Dresden China (Bessie Wynn)
- Gay Paree (Montgomery & Stone)
- Travel Travel Little Star (Montgomery & Stone)
- A Scotch Moriah (Montgomery & Stone)
- Hurrah for Baffins Bay (Dan W. Quinn)
- Daisy Donohue (Trombone Solo by Arthur Pryor)
- Mr. DooleyMedley (Xylophone Solo J. Frank Hopkins)
- Down on the BrandywineMedley (Edison Military Band)
- The Bullfrog and the CoonMedley (Six Brown Brothers)
- Ill Take You Back to Italy (Ada Jones & Billy Murray)
- Father Goose Songs (Sallie Osbourne)
Album Description
The Wizard of Oz a musical with book and lyrics by L. Frank Baum and music by Paul Tietjens premiered on June 16, 1902, at the Grand Opera House in Chicago. It was an instant hit and made stars of David Montgomery (the Tin Woodman) and Fred Stone (the Scarecrow). On January 21, 1903 the show opened at the Majestic Theatre in New York. It ran for nine months and set out on the road with a second company right on its heels. The show toured, came back to New York, toured, and returned to New York again many times until finally disbanding around 1911. Stock and amateur companies continued to present it into the 1930s when it was overshadowed by the classic MGM film starring Judy Garland.
The show was legendary for its success and its impact on American culture. It was the Cats or Les Mis of the early 1900s--but the show has been swallowed by history. What made audiences of the early 1900s devour the show and return for more again and again? In this unprecedented 2-CD setfeaturing over 145 minutes of vintage recordings and 64 pages of lyrics, photos, notes and synopsisyou can discover how The Wizard of Oz entertained the American public for the first two decades of the 20th century. And like the audiences of nearly a hundred years ago, you can hum along to "Budweiser," "Sammy," and "Hurrah for Baffin's Bay"everyone's favorite songs from The Wizard of Oz! Also included in this comprehensive collection are recordings from later Oz musicals, The Woggle-Bug and The Tik-Tok Man of Oz written by Oz creator L. Frank Baum, as well as vintage non-Oz recordings by original "Wizard of Oz stars" Montgomery & Stone and Bessie Wynn
Customer Reviews:
A Collection of the Original Oz Stage Productions.......2006-12-07
This Double-Disk Collection contains music from the original and varied Oz Stage Productions: "the Wizard of Oz", "the Woggle-Bug" (based on 'Marvelous Land of Oz) and "the Tik-Tok Man of Oz" (based on 'Ozma of Oz'). There are plenty of "Wizard" songs and music, but there isn't a lot of "Woggle-Bug" and/or "Tik-Tok Man".
I often wondered how different the 1st & Original Production of 'Oz Wizard' was different to the book, and thanks to Mark Evan Schwartz's book "Oz: Before the Rainbow" I found out for myself (WORTH A READ!!). Later I got this CD to go along with the book's stage telling (more or less) and I listened in interest to the songs which, I read, were entirely different to the future Musicals of Oz. The songs are good, but not all of them are actually completely restored to perfection, so the singing may/will sound somewhat muffled. Also, due to the time it was made (for some reason), the songs don't actually fit into the story (even the stage's rewritten story) and sound distant/unrelated. But there are songs that sound similar to the original story ("Rejoice! The Wizard is No Longer King"). CD 2's Track 3 has music played during Silent Oz Film "His Majesty, Scarecrow" on the MGM 3-Disk DVD.
The best thing about this CD Collection is the two booklets packaged along with the disks: the first (entitled "The Records") has writing on "What the Wizard Was" with a synopsis of the stage production story and "About the Recordings", a listing of all the songs on CD 1 (which are helpful for "Selection" Tracks not specifically named on the back) and notes on the songs like their origins and background. Booklet 2 (entitled "The Lyrics") has the words to the songs (in case you can't make out the words/want to sing-along). BOTH CDs include b&w photos of the actors, performance (few of which can be seen in "Oz: Before the Rainbow" book) and even reprints of a few illustrations made for the stage. The pictures are the best part of this purchase.
The Entirely Different Songs may not fit with the story, original or rewritten, but there's nothing really wrong with the music when one enjoys to what they're listening to.
I know that there is also another 'Oz on Stage' CD Collection called "Before the Rainbow" . . . hmmm, I wonder if I should get that too?
Ain't it a Shame!.......2006-05-20
I think that this is a wonderful album of HISTORICAL value. Not too many people know this, but "the wizard of oz" was made into a smash hit in 1903, but because all the history was BARELY in obscurity, hungry tiger press wanted to educate the blockheads in the world about this remarkable piece of history. that being said, david maxine collected all of the old material, such as Piano rolls (my especial favorite of all of them is "the poppy song", i LOVE the bass notes: "nnn-ded-deh mmmm-ded-deh"), and music boxes, and cylinders, and records!
however, it is quite a shame that that CRAPPY movie with judy garland pushed this lovely musical into obscurity. i would have liked to see it in my day, but it was already lost in darkness, but thanks to the highly DIGNIFIED people in the world, this cd is available!! BUY IT!!!! I *ORDER* YOU!!! YOU CANNOT BE DIGNIFIED WITHOUT THIS REPLACING YOUR "RAP" GARBAGE WITH THIS JEWEL!!!!
Why the 1903 "Wizard" was forgotten.......2004-03-20
This truly remarkable 2-disc collection of old cylinders, discs, music boxes and piano rolls explains why the 1903 musical version of "The Wizard of Oz" did not survive the early thirties. It wasn't because it was before its time or even of its time, but simply because it was way behind the times. Its producers resisted composer's Paul Tietjens' attempts to write plot-driven numbers. His contribution survives only in the incidental music preserved on piano rolls (and the most interesting element on this collection) linking very disparate and even incongruous vaudeville acts by various authors and performers that graced the stage during the musical's multi-decade run. In other words, Baum was telling a story and the songs were telling another... As fascinating as they are for historical reasons, those numbers are commonplace, mostly uninspired flash-in-the-tin-pan ditties, with timid syncopation and a stong reliance on musical clichés. There is not a single standard among them and not even a decent lyric where "fine" doesn't rhyme with "mine" and "love you" doesn't rhyme with "I do"- or even "I know you know I know you do", as happens more than once. As an assemblage of shtick pieces and ephemeral sentimental or nonsensical ditties, this collection cannot be topped and it represents a monumental effort. Without it and its very generous and informative liner notes, I would not have the same appreciation for the absolute genius of Victor Herbert's operettas ("Babes in Toyland" came out the same year) where the more memorable songs are plot-driven and introduced and linked by the most luscious, inventive and varied incidental music ever heard outside an opera house. This sort of unified concept would culminate in Jerome Kern's "Show Boat" and it remains a truth today that the integration of plot and music - reminiscent of opera - is the true secret of successful and perennial musicals, whatever the current idiom. This collection also makes one appreciate the complete originality of the Hollywood film for actually going back to Baum's books, entrusting the songs, lyrics and music to Harold Arlen, Yip Harburg and Herbert Stothart and scrapping the musical's colourful but checkered history (except for casting ex-vaudevillians as the main characters, of course!). Highly recommended for its nostalgia value, its irreplaceable rarities and a better understanding of the history of American popular music.
A long overdue revisit to a classic American musical.......2003-09-30
Although it was one of the most financially successful stage musicals of the early 1900's, very little information is presently available on the 1903 production of THE WIZARD OF OZ. In what was obviously a labor of love, David Maxine has done much to correct this oversight by releasing a 2-CD set with over 145 minutes worth of extremely rare recordings of music from this and other OZ-themed musicals dating back to before World War I. Recorded materials include vintage acoustical disc and cylinder phonograph records, piano rolls, and music box discs, many of which go back almost a century. In addition, he has included two booklets worth of historical background information on the 1903 WIZARD OF OZ production, its stars, the individual musical numbers, and lyrics for the songs included on the CDs. (Lavishly illustrated with rare old black and white photos and artwork, these booklets, and the information they contain, are themselves worth the price of the set!) Several bonus CD tracks are included that offer rare recordings by Montgomery & Stone (the original Tin Woodsman and Scarecrow) and Bessie Wynn, who was also in the 1903 cast. Not just for dedicated Oz fans, this set is a "must have" for anyone interested in the history of American musical theater and American popular culture of the early 1900's.
Long-Forgotten Broadway Hit Gets First Rate Revival.......2003-09-17
One hundred and three years ago, author L. Frank Baum published the best-selling children's book of the 20th century, THE WIZARD OF OZ. Although the book was adapted several times as plays, silent motion pictures, animated cartoons, and radio shows in the next few decades, it is the 1939 MGM film that most people think of as THE WIZARD OF OZ. The success and popularity of that film completely eclipsed the memories of previous incarnations and even the book itself in popular culture. However, prior to the film's release, there was a successful stage version which premiered on Broadway in 1903 and delighted audiences for many years, making stars of Fred Stone and David Montgomery, the original Scarecrow and Tinman. As with the MGM film, chilren who saw THE WIZARD OF OZ on stage carried fond memories of the production into adulthood. Ray Bolger was so impressed with the Fred Stone's Scarecrow, that he remembered it vividly as an adult and based his own protrayal of the character in the movie on Mr. Stone's stage version.
Unfortunately, time and Judy Garland have pushed the once popular Broadway Smash into history. It has been all but forgotten...until now.
As the show moved from theater to theater and casts changed, so did the songs. Many of these were recorded on the primative equipment of the day: Wax cylinders, 78-RPM records, piano rolls, and music Boxes, and surprisingly many of these still exist. Now, thanks to those hard-working gents at HUNGRY TIGER PRESS, you can own these historic recordings on this awesome 2-CD set. THE WIZARD OF OZ: Vintage Recordings From The 1903 Broadway Musical contains over 145 minutes of terrific early 20th century music. You won't find "Over the Rainbow" or "Ding! Dong! The Witch Is Dead!" here. Instead, this WIZARD OF OZ contains tracks like "Budweiser's a Friend of Mine", "Sammy", "Hurrah for Baffin's Bay", and "Rejoice! The Wizard is No Longer King", each one a portal over the rainbow to the Broadway stage of a century ago.
Obviously the play was quite different in plot from the movie--Dorothy travelled to Oz with her cow Imogene instead of Toto, for starters--, but the songs represent the style of popular music of 100 years ago and are collected here in a beautiful compilation. The set contains two booklets of liner notes which contain credits, lyrics, a written history of the production, and are extensively illustrated with photos and illustrations. Although the sound quality of the source material is not always up to today's standards, the songs are presented in the best versions possible, and the music is highly enjoyable. With 60 tracks and the wealth of information contained here, both written and photographic, this 2-CD set is good value for the money. A must-have for all collectors of WIZARD OF OZ memorabilia, an insightful look at popular music and Broadway history from a century ago, a glimpse into ethnic and racial stereotypes that were accepted at the time, and a curiosity for fans of the 1939 film, this set is big on appeal. Kudos to the Hungry Tiger Press for rescuing this treasure trove of musical history from obscurity!
Average customer rating:
|
Monk: Volcano Songs
Manufacturer: Ecm Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Baroque (c.1600-1750)
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Chamber Music
| Forms & Genres
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Vocal & Song
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Modern & 20th Century
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ECM Classical
| ECM Records
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| Stores
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ECM Jazz & World
| ECM Records
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ASIN: B0000031ZV
Release Date: 1997-03-11 |
Tracks:
- Volcano Songs: Duets: Walking Song
- Volcano Songs: Duets: Lost Wind
- Volcano Songs: Duets: Hips Dance
- Volcano Songs: Duets: Cry #1
- New York Requiem
- Volcano Songs: Solos: Offering
- Volcano Songs: Solos: Boat Man
- Volcano Songs: Solos: Skip Song
- Volcano Songs: Solos: Old Lava
- Volcano Songs: Solos: Cry #2
- St Petersburg Waltz
- Three Heavens and Hells
- Light Songs: Click Song #1
- Light Songs: Click Song #2
Customer Reviews:
experimental minimalism.......2006-09-04
Often I find that a particular kind of facial expression goes with the mention of Meredith Monk.
I would be hard-put to describe that expression from others as `sour,' or in any other way resentful (assuming, of course, they know who she is), but perhaps more a look of recognition, of compliance almost, for as many people I have found who do not care for her, and as many as I have found are quite fond of her, she seems to demand respect.
And why not?
Who else can easily be named who exhibits such unique work?
Who else creates music and vocal works that would take someone at all familiar with her only seconds to recognize it?
Am I mostly to ask questions in talking about her latest release?
Am I to keep to the form I have thus presented to the present moment--one sentence a paragraph?
We'll see.
The main question, I find, is this:
How is it that Meredith Monk has persisted in the traditions of the experimental yet not faded to art history or another type of death?
How is it that she continues as a fresh, alive presence in music?
Those were two questions, weren't they?
Meredith Monk's "American maverick tradition" continues with her latest release off ECM New Series, Volcano Songs.
("American maverick tradition" being, of course, her own term.)
Other `mavericks' (by her own standards): John Cage, Henry Cowell, Harry Partch, Edgard Varèse.
Another `maverick,' by my own: Gertrude Stein.
Allow me to explain.
Perhaps an understanding of Meredith Monk's work may be helped along with a discussion of Gertrude Stein, for the works of these two I find more integrally linked than Monk with the random compositions of Cage, the out-and-out destruction and rebuilding of tonal scale and instrumentation of Partch, the 4th dimensional music of Varèse, the recapitulation of American folk music into classical tradition of Cowell.
Granted, there are startling similarities inside them all (in ways I am not bothering to note here), but I find that Monk and Stein orbit around the same American sphere, a sphere of American influence that to this day is debated and debunked.
The sphere of American language.
We Americans have always been castigated for our language.
Yes, `our' language.
We are accused of not speaking proper English.
When we want to add words like `grunge' and `nerd' to such tomes as the Oxford English Dictionary, Harvard linguists shake their heads mournfully.
When others find their own forms of language (i.e., ebonics), we get outraged that this is not an official language, and thus we want to name our own.
We hold language before us, as if it were the universal way of expressing ourselves, a common denominator.
The point is--we all speak the same language, yet we don't understand each other.
Watch any talk show--you'll see my point.
What does this have to do with Meredith Monk?
Could I say quite simply at this point that Meredith Monk does not hold the language before her as a banner, as something she must mold her ideas to, but behind her, as a tool to bend and shape and mold and crucify and desecrate and love to fit the concepts she is to express?
Would that make any sense at this point?
What about Gertrude Stein?
Have I even really talked about Gertrude Stein?
Is the English language even used in Meredith Monk's works?
It can be hard to tell at times.
In "Walking Song," the first of her duets labeled as "Volcano Songs" (1993), we hear a lot of controlled breathing, a lot of swoops in the voices of the two singers, reminiscent almost of sashaying arms, a body bobbing up and down to the rhythm of a power walk, but is there a libretto?
In other words: are there words?
Listen more carefully--the swoops are o's, the bobs are hi's, back to the o's.
Ohio.
`Ohio?' we may ask.
`Walking in Ohio?
`Is that what the song is about?'
My response:
No.
Ohio has nothing to do with this song.
Ohio has everything to do with this song.
What the hell is Ohio doing in there, anyway?
Musically, you could say Ohio is like the notes in Philip Glass, or Steve Reich.
The point there is not the notes.
The point is the rhythm of the notes.
In Glass and Reich, the notes do not vary much--they repeat.
Thus, minimalism.
The point is the configurations those notes get into, the patterns, how those patterns change, how they relate to each other.
Thus, Ohio has nothing to do with "Walking Song."
The point has to do with the breaths, the singers, the swoops and bobs.
Ohio is not a state in "Walking Song."
Ohio is a sound, a pleasing sound if you will let go of it and let the singers do with it what they are doing.
One of those singers, by the way, being Meredith herself.
The same goes for Gertrude Stein.
Listen to this:
Lena was very sick on the voyage. She thought surely before it was over that she would die. She was so sick she could not even wish that she had not started. She could not eat, she could not moan, she was just blank and scared, and sure that every minute she would die. She could not hold herself in, nor help herself in trouble. She just staid where she had been put, pale, and scared, and weak, and sick, and sure that she was going to die.
--Gertrude Stein, "The Gentle Lena"
How many times needed you hear that Lena knew she was going to die?
How many and's are truly needed in this passage?
By others' terms, we surely don't `need' all that repetition.
But listen to it.
Really listen to it...
...and you will hear that every time it happens it is perfect, needed, necessary.
Same goes for Meredith Monk.
Ohio means nothing in "Walking Song" but how it sounds.
Could other words have been used in "Walking Song"?
Of course: she could have used antelope, blueberry.
She could have used Gertrude Stein.
She could have used no words at all--`fleg,' `huggumph' and the like.
She used Ohio--that's all that matters.
This is why she exacts such a sour note in many ears: she requires you to listen anew to her work, to put aside what words `mean,' what notes need to happen in what places, what we are used to.
But if you listen, you can get along, get used to, accept.
This step is yours.
Any form is adjustable, if you are willing to work with it.
What happened to my questions?
Does this form I've been using still annoy you?
Or have you gotten used to it somewhat?
Maybe, sometimes, it has surprised you.
Like when the paragraph wasn't quite a sentence,
or when it went incomplete into another paragraph.
Maybe you actually expected it, because maybe you thought, "He can't keep too rigid to this form. He has to experiment with it a little to keep it interesting."
I think you're right.
The making of this essay was a process.
I tried some things, went back and took some things out, changed things around, sometimes changed order to see how things looked.
This is what I like best about Meredith Monk--her process.
Her releases are more like compilations--different things she's experimented with over the years, her experiments.
Her pieces are labeled by year--not so much, for me, to chart her progress, but to show that these pieces were not all in one string, that she is still at work, trying things out.
In "The Tale," off Dolmen Music, all she does is laugh.
She laughs rhythmically, but indeed, all it is is laughter.
One day, I was listening to her opera Atlas while playing a board game with my eldest brother; suddenly, after a lot of nonsensical hey-yo's and ya's an such (I think even an occasional watta), a voice struck out, as clear as anything: "I own my own equipment."
"What?" my brother asked.
"He said he owns his own equipment," I responded.
My brother shook his head.
In "Turtle Dreams," Meredith has a long sequence of variations on the line, "I went to the store."
Oddly enough, I did not really think about this until I sat down to write this essay.
Why worry about it?
Every time I listen to "Three Heavens and Hells" (1992) off Volcano Songs, I always seem to lose when the singers explain the third heaven and hell.
The first is People Heaven and Hell.
The second is Animal Heaven and Hell.
Somehow, by that point, I'm not listening for the third.
There's far more at stake by then.
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