March 2002
It is well worth learning about Pete Seeger’s life and work, but that's a long and magnificent story best told elsewhere. Even The Songs of Pete Seeger series has a long and interesting tale to tell. Following the release of Where Have All the Flowers Gone, Appleseed "received hundreds of letters from people in Japan, India, Russia, Australia and all over the world who wrote how their lives had been touched and enhanced by Pete and his music over the years.… The version of ‘Where Have All the Flowers Gone’ on Volume 1 featured Catholic and Protestant school children singing together, and it became the anthem of peace in Northern Ireland." This CD offers some very engaging songs. In "Guantanamera" Jackson Browne and Joan Baez, two veteran performers with dissimilar repertoires and careers, harmonize beautifully together and add to the life of a classic tune with some surprising chords. Billy Bragg, who in recent years has released two CDs of lyrics penned but never put to music by Seeger’s longtime friend Woody Guthrie, belts out a rousing "If I Had a Hammer" with fine vocal and violin accompaniment by Eliza Carthy. John Wesley Harding provides the album’s best-rocking cut, "Words, Words, Words": "Words, words, words in my old Bible/How much truth remains?/If I only understood them while my lips pronounce them/ Would not my life be changed?" A very tender and melodic, little-known song, "You’ll Sing to Me, Too," which Seeger wrote for his grandchild, features the Nicaraguan brother/sister duo Guardabarranco (named for a bird that dies without freedom) singing prettily and gently, mostly in non-native English: "I don’t know/Where I’ll go/But we’re here/And we’re near/So I’ll sing to you/And someday you’ll sing to me, too." Also masterfully performed and very melodic, though much more haunting, is Eric Andersen’s rendering of "Snow, Snow" -- even barbed wire is beautiful with snow upon it. Far from here on the musical and spiritual spectrum are the powerful songs of conscience. "Walking Down Death Row" sung by Steve Earle and "Last Train to Nuremberg" performed by the Joel Rafael Band both illustrate Seeger’s knack for revealing the universal human accountability for the worst crimes and our possibilities for redemption. The very good, but less-than-superlative, rating I have given this CD in no way means it is not to be treasured, but, like most good tribute albums, it contains some experiments that don’t pan out and some participants who don’t blend well. Both the music and the liner notes will be of special interest to those who find it rewarding to hear and learn about music that fully reflects the human spirit -- desire, wit, aspiration, conscience, playfulness, love, regret -- and to those who wish to learn more about folk music and its extraordinary revival in the second half of the Twentieth Century. GO BACK TO: |