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Pete Seeger - American Industrial Ballads (2009)

Pete Seeger - American Industrial Ballads (2009)

BAND/ARTIST: Pete Seeger

  • Title: American Industrial Ballads
  • Year Of Release: 2009
  • Label: Not Now Music
  • Genre: Folk
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)/320 kbps
  • Total Time: 01:37:10
  • Total Size: 476/227 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

CD 1
01. Peg & Awl [0:02:21.05]
02. The Blind Fiddler [0:01:12.14]
03. Buffalo Skinners [0:02:35.68]
04. Eight Hour Day [0:01:00.14]
05. Hard Times In The Mill [0:02:15.34]
06. Roll Down The Line [0:03:06.17]
07. Hayseed Like Me [0:01:13.56]
08. The Farmer Is The Man [0:01:41.67]
09. Come All You Hardy Miners [0:02:00.36]
10. He Lies In The American Land [0:01:55.06]
11. Casey Jones [0:02:12.29]
12. Let Them Wear Their Watches Fine [0:03:41.38]
13. Cotton Mill Colic [0:01:40.40]
14. Seven Cent Cotton & Forty Cent Meat [0:01:58.15]
15. Mill Mother's Lament [0:01:36.70]
16. Fare Ye Well Old Ely Branch [0:02:10.50]
17. Beans Bacon & Gravy [0:02:46.66]
18. The Death Of Harry Simms [0:02:06.63]
19. Winnsboro Cotton Mills Blues [0:01:05.44]
20. Ballad Of Barney Graham [0:01:41.71]
21. My Children Are Seven In Number [0:03:46.59]
22. Raggedy [0:02:25.12]
23. Pittsburgh Town [0:01:25.45]
24. Sixty Per Cent [0:01:01.58]

CD 2
01. Down In The Valley [0:03:44.67]
02. Mary Don't You Weep [0:02:30.17]
03. The Blue Tail Fly [0:02:34.39]
04. Yankee Doodle [0:01:38.30]
05. Cielito Lindo [0:02:33.18]
06. Wabash Cannonball [0:03:03.31]
07. So Long It's Been Good To Know You [0:03:21.31]
08. Skip To My Lou [0:03:09.53]
09. The Wagoner's Lad [0:01:25.43]
10. The Wreck Of The Old '97 [0:01:52.72]
11. Old Dan Tucker [0:02:15.00]
12. I Ride An Old Paint [0:03:23.67]
13. Frankie & Johnny [0:04:25.66]
14. On Top Of Old Smokey [0:02:17.12]
15. The Big Rock Candy Mountain [0:03:06.31]
16. Home On The Range [0:01:51.07]
17. Kisses Sweeter Than Wine [0:02:59.21]
18. She'll Be Comin' Round The Mountain [0:01:54.03]

Pete Seeger presents a history of the Industrial Revolution and its impact on working people on American Industrial Ballads, a collection of 24 songs (over half of them shorter than two minutes each) sequenced in chronological order by date of composition, to the extent that this can be determined, from the early-1800s appearance of "Peg and Awl," in which a worker struggles to keep up with a machine, to songs written by Woody Guthrie and Les Rice in the 1940s. Only a couple of songs are well known, and those don't fit the concept perfectly. "The Buffalo Skinners," an account of cowboys who kill their overseer after he refuses to pay them, and "Casey Jones," the famous tale of a train wreck, are both somewhat tangential to industrial concerns, though they do fit themes heard throughout the album: first, employers' abuse of workers, who then must fight back (although usually by starting unions and going out on strike); and second, the relationship between an individual worker and the system of machinery he encounters. As the album goes on, the workers' complaints about ill treatment and low pay become more extreme, and eventually the need for unions to represent them seems overwhelming. Even then, the bosses respond with violence, as Seeger documents in such songs as Jim Garland's "The Death of Harry Simms" and Della Mae Graham's "Ballad of Barney Graham," both true stories of murdered union men. Accompanying himself mostly on banjo and sometimes guitar, Seeger presents the songs straightforwardly with only occasional flourishes, intent on getting the meanings across, although occasionally his desire to lead singalongs comes out, such as in "Raggedy," when he provides cues to sing each verse, even though he's performing alone in a recording studio. Many of these songs are too harrowing to sing along to, though. Taken together, they chronicle a century and a half of the efforts of farmers, textile workers, and miners, primarily, to get what they deserve from increasingly rich and powerful captains of industry.


Pete Seeger - American Industrial Ballads (2009)



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  • User offline
  • nilesh65
  •  wrote in 15:27
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Thank you so much!!!!
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 20:35
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Many thanks for lossless.
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 20:53
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Many Thanks