MP3 Burns & Warshaw - Livin´ The Dream (Burns & Warshaw Live)
Price: 8.99 USD
Add to cart
Instant Download from music, digital version
Instant Download from music, digital version
|
Musicians use tradebit: Learn how to make music Pick up cool karaoke downloads Search for sheet music! |
File Data:
| Contact Seller: |
music,
|
| URL: |
|
| Embed: |
|
Description:
(ID 158603106)
in partnership with CDbaby
User tags: folk: traditional folk, folk: urban folk, type: live recordings, dave van ronk, the seeger family, woody guthrie, mp3 album
Passionate, all acoustic live concert of traditional and original folksongs by two veterans with a hundred years of experience between them, with special guests.
15 MP3 Songs in this album (71:19) !
Related styles: Folk: Traditional Folk, Folk: Urban Folk, Type: Live Recordings
People who are interested in Dave Van Ronk The Seeger family Woody Guthrie should consider this download.
Details:
They were raised on the East Coast of America. Met in the Midwest. Half a century ago. The Great Folksong Revival was on. They met and learned from real originals and fine interpreters. Built up a broad repertoire. Acquired social conscience. Performed in bars and clubs, concerts and festivals. Attracted beautiful women, other followers, musicians. Started writing own songs. Jack moved to England. Separated by the Vietnam War, they didnât meet again for 12 years. Meanwhile, both worked at other jobs. Raised families. The Great Folksong Revival died. Jackâs UK mystique lived. Stuartâs US mystique did the same.
That was then. This is now. Several reunions later, they performed together in Texas. In 2010 they did a UK club and concert tour. Audiences came. Tumultuous receptions. The live album that emerged bears the learning, energy, passion, fun, and musicianship that comes only with live performance, warts and all. Two guys who never gave up. Songs from the American grass roots. They have the Ring of Truth. They donât pull punches. They will be remembered.
Song notes by Jack and Stuart
Hello Stranger - Few Americans can be unfamiliar with the Carter Familyâs collected and original songs. Maybelle and Sarah alternated lines on this one. Jack and Stuart work up a similar approach with a few harmonies, paying homage but making it their own too.
Erika - comes closest to my definition of a proper folk song about the travails of real working people written while they are still alive. I havenât been back to that bar in years but imagine Erika still hustling beers. The decline of the shrimp industry was the sad consequence of good intentions: we saved the green sea turtles but lost whole Gulf Coast communities.
Last Payday at Coal Creek - I sat at the feet of Pete Steele, then of Hamilton Ohio in 1960 and watched him play this, his most famous piece together with the instrumental Coal Creek March. The following year I invited Pete and his wife Lillie to play at the university folk festival which I had organized. The audience wouldnât let them off the stage after their set. I think Pete Seeger, working at the Library of Congress heard it and played it for many thousands.
Got my own Rainbow - I love this optimistic song from Dave Botting, a young(ish) singer songwriter from nearby. We met at a club called Backporch, organized by Martin Wood.
Road Song - When the price of gasoline went over a dollar we who were the stuff of the Great American Road Trip thought it was all over. Well maybe not quite yet after all, but what about the next generation?
Junk Food Junkie - I guess this is all you can expect from a sell out, sell off, sell out, care for no one, junk pile government. Almost as soon as they took office they began to speak with forked tongue- preaching to the masses about how obese theyâre getting, at the same time as giving their junk food industry pals free reign. The chorus is inspired by a kids street rhyme that I first heard from my daughter.
Bee Cave - The little settlement near Austin was made into the most hideous shopping mall imaginable. Traffic is always jammed. Somebody made a fortune out of raping the place. Isaiah 40:4: âEvery valley shall be exalted and every mountain and hill shall be made low; and the crooked shall be made straight and the rough places plainâ inspires that ironic verse. What price jobs? Couldnât we just fix the old roads and bridges?
Freight Train Blues - Who could have predicted that a Black teenagerâs song would be known over the world and that its author would rise to fame in her seventh decade? Jack learned it almost 50 years ago and saw Elizabeth Cotton play it. A tribute to her and to Mike and Peggy Seeger who discovered and got it out there. Peggy would slip Wilson Rag into it too, which I think works great
Tijuana Groove - Martin Wood and his Rag and Moan Man are regular performers around my neck of the woods. Martin is a consummate slide guitar man, loves Delta Blues and Mississippi John Hurt in equal measure, and occasionally writes one. He explains that Tijuana was never like this
Pancho and Lefty - Sitting on Rolf Cahnâs front porch in Berkeley one day in the mid 70s when an MGB pulled up carrying a skinny girl from Oklahoma. She sang the song. I knew Iâd have to go to Austin and meet the writer. Townes Van Zandtâs songs, loved in Texas now gain fans eveywhere.
First Unto This Country - Originally collected in Texas, then refined and performed by the Seegers, to whom it can be traced back from all modern recordings. Mike and Peggy sang it together, more or less the way we do, but itâs pretty good as a solo too. I only changed Jacobâs coat of many colors to Josephâs for Biblical accuracy.
Long Time Gone - I wrote this within days of my homecoming search to find Stuart and his family and have tinkered with a few words since. A story common to many separated by The War. Who knows what might have happened had it been different?
Chardonnay Honey - If you could smell the air in spring in the Hill Country, you might believe that there is actually something called by that name.
Frankie was a Good Girl - No one who was at Newport in 1963, including Stuart and me could forget Mississippi John Hurtâs performance. Next morning I spotted him and had to pay my respects. He smiled and shook my hand. Ever since, Iâve been trying to do justice to him.
This Land is Your Land - Possibly the greatest song by the greatest songmaker, introduced by one of his many impassioned speeches. A fitting ending to an uplifting evening. An antidote to âGod Bless Americaâ and commentary on the state of the nation. Itâs nice to do all Woodyâs verses.
15 MP3 Songs in this album (71:19) !
Related styles: Folk: Traditional Folk, Folk: Urban Folk, Type: Live Recordings
People who are interested in Dave Van Ronk The Seeger family Woody Guthrie should consider this download.
Details:
They were raised on the East Coast of America. Met in the Midwest. Half a century ago. The Great Folksong Revival was on. They met and learned from real originals and fine interpreters. Built up a broad repertoire. Acquired social conscience. Performed in bars and clubs, concerts and festivals. Attracted beautiful women, other followers, musicians. Started writing own songs. Jack moved to England. Separated by the Vietnam War, they didnât meet again for 12 years. Meanwhile, both worked at other jobs. Raised families. The Great Folksong Revival died. Jackâs UK mystique lived. Stuartâs US mystique did the same.
That was then. This is now. Several reunions later, they performed together in Texas. In 2010 they did a UK club and concert tour. Audiences came. Tumultuous receptions. The live album that emerged bears the learning, energy, passion, fun, and musicianship that comes only with live performance, warts and all. Two guys who never gave up. Songs from the American grass roots. They have the Ring of Truth. They donât pull punches. They will be remembered.
Song notes by Jack and Stuart
Hello Stranger - Few Americans can be unfamiliar with the Carter Familyâs collected and original songs. Maybelle and Sarah alternated lines on this one. Jack and Stuart work up a similar approach with a few harmonies, paying homage but making it their own too.
Erika - comes closest to my definition of a proper folk song about the travails of real working people written while they are still alive. I havenât been back to that bar in years but imagine Erika still hustling beers. The decline of the shrimp industry was the sad consequence of good intentions: we saved the green sea turtles but lost whole Gulf Coast communities.
Last Payday at Coal Creek - I sat at the feet of Pete Steele, then of Hamilton Ohio in 1960 and watched him play this, his most famous piece together with the instrumental Coal Creek March. The following year I invited Pete and his wife Lillie to play at the university folk festival which I had organized. The audience wouldnât let them off the stage after their set. I think Pete Seeger, working at the Library of Congress heard it and played it for many thousands.
Got my own Rainbow - I love this optimistic song from Dave Botting, a young(ish) singer songwriter from nearby. We met at a club called Backporch, organized by Martin Wood.
Road Song - When the price of gasoline went over a dollar we who were the stuff of the Great American Road Trip thought it was all over. Well maybe not quite yet after all, but what about the next generation?
Junk Food Junkie - I guess this is all you can expect from a sell out, sell off, sell out, care for no one, junk pile government. Almost as soon as they took office they began to speak with forked tongue- preaching to the masses about how obese theyâre getting, at the same time as giving their junk food industry pals free reign. The chorus is inspired by a kids street rhyme that I first heard from my daughter.
Bee Cave - The little settlement near Austin was made into the most hideous shopping mall imaginable. Traffic is always jammed. Somebody made a fortune out of raping the place. Isaiah 40:4: âEvery valley shall be exalted and every mountain and hill shall be made low; and the crooked shall be made straight and the rough places plainâ inspires that ironic verse. What price jobs? Couldnât we just fix the old roads and bridges?
Freight Train Blues - Who could have predicted that a Black teenagerâs song would be known over the world and that its author would rise to fame in her seventh decade? Jack learned it almost 50 years ago and saw Elizabeth Cotton play it. A tribute to her and to Mike and Peggy Seeger who discovered and got it out there. Peggy would slip Wilson Rag into it too, which I think works great
Tijuana Groove - Martin Wood and his Rag and Moan Man are regular performers around my neck of the woods. Martin is a consummate slide guitar man, loves Delta Blues and Mississippi John Hurt in equal measure, and occasionally writes one. He explains that Tijuana was never like this
Pancho and Lefty - Sitting on Rolf Cahnâs front porch in Berkeley one day in the mid 70s when an MGB pulled up carrying a skinny girl from Oklahoma. She sang the song. I knew Iâd have to go to Austin and meet the writer. Townes Van Zandtâs songs, loved in Texas now gain fans eveywhere.
First Unto This Country - Originally collected in Texas, then refined and performed by the Seegers, to whom it can be traced back from all modern recordings. Mike and Peggy sang it together, more or less the way we do, but itâs pretty good as a solo too. I only changed Jacobâs coat of many colors to Josephâs for Biblical accuracy.
Long Time Gone - I wrote this within days of my homecoming search to find Stuart and his family and have tinkered with a few words since. A story common to many separated by The War. Who knows what might have happened had it been different?
Chardonnay Honey - If you could smell the air in spring in the Hill Country, you might believe that there is actually something called by that name.
Frankie was a Good Girl - No one who was at Newport in 1963, including Stuart and me could forget Mississippi John Hurtâs performance. Next morning I spotted him and had to pay my respects. He smiled and shook my hand. Ever since, Iâve been trying to do justice to him.
This Land is Your Land - Possibly the greatest song by the greatest songmaker, introduced by one of his many impassioned speeches. A fitting ending to an uplifting evening. An antidote to âGod Bless Americaâ and commentary on the state of the nation. Itâs nice to do all Woodyâs verses.
in partnership with CDbaby
User tags: folk: traditional folk, folk: urban folk, type: live recordings, dave van ronk, the seeger family, woody guthrie, mp3 album
More Files From This User
Related Files
Mp3 Sharon And Brian Howard - New England Homeland
Acoustic folk and blues with hints of jazz and traditional music thrown in. The swing and personality of early jazz meets the warmth of current folk pop tren......
Mp3 Harbor Collective - The Monday Ep
Old-timey Americana duo. 7 MP3 Songs in this album (24:02) ! Related styles: FOLK: Appalachian Folk, FOLK: Traditional Folk People who are interested in Gi......
Mp3 Sassanach - Kittens And Cannonballs
Energetic Celtic pub music 15 MP3 Songs WORLD: Celtic, FOLK: Traditional Folk Details: Irish, Scottish, and Newfoundland songs and traditional dance inst......
Mp3 Ellis Paul - A Summer Night In Georgia: Live From Eddie's Attic
âEllis Paul is now a national folk star and to many the quintessential Boston songwriter: literate, provocative, urbanely romantic.â - The Boston Globe 25 M......


