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Burl Ives - Return of the Wayfaring Stranger (Expanded Edition) (1960/2019)

Burl Ives - Return of the Wayfaring Stranger (Expanded Edition) (1960/2019)

BAND/ARTIST: Burl Ives

  • Title: Return of the Wayfaring Stranger (Expanded Edition)
  • Year Of Release: 1960/2019
  • Label: Columbia/Legacy
  • Genre: Folk
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 00:56:35
  • Total Size: 183 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. John Henry
02. Billy the Kid
03. Fare Thee Well, O Honey
04. Mah Lindy Lou
05. Mule Train
06. The Worried Man Blues
07. Greer County Bachelor
08. Lilly Munroe
09. Old Blue
10. Ballanderie
11. Lord Randall
12. Riders In the Sky (Cowboy Legend)
13. Wayfaring Stranger
14. Wollie Boogie Bee
15. I Got a Fever In My Bones
16. River of Smoke
17. The Doughnut Song
18. (O-Lee-O) The Bachelor's Life
19. Lady from Laramie
20. Jolie Jacqueline
21. Pig Pig (So I Can Get Home Tonight)
22. Last Night the Nightingale Woke Me
23. What Shall I Do with the Baby-O

This follow-up to The Wayfaring Stranger is, if anything, livelier and more bracing than its predecessor, released five years earlier. In contrast to The Wayfaring Stranger, which was aimed at younger folk listeners (especially children) and purists, Return of the Wayfaring Stranger came out in the midst of the folk revival; in that regard, it seems a little archaic for a 1960 release. Burl Ives didn't change his sound which remained soft and lyrical so much as extend his repertoire to encompass two contemporary hits inspired by folk themes, "Riders in the Sky" and "Mule Train," the latter done with elements that are more familiar from the song "Fast Freight," and also intersect with the Kingston Trio on "The Worried Man Blues." The singing is beautifully intoned in the restrained manner of the previous generation of performers, a fact that appealed to the purists who Ives still counted in his audience, and to parents looking for material that was safe for their children. It was records like this, as much as his classic Decca sides, that kept his reputation as a folksinger for children alive into the 1960s, even amid his burgeoning acting career. Return of the Wayfaring Stranger was reissued in 2000 by Collectables Records with almost a dozen bonus tracks dating from his early days at Columbia Records the latter, mostly done with a light pop orchestra backing, are pleasant enough but don't readily fit together well with the later material off the actual album, which is done in a more authentic folk style.


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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 20:44
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Many Thanks
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 17:50
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