Andi Chorley
@ratatosk@mastodonapp.uk
Reader. Gardener. Jazz, psychedelic music and more lover. Hiker. Photographer. Outdoor and indoor swimmer.
mastodonapp.uk
Judy Collins #3 is the third studio album by the American singer and songwriter Judy Collins.
Review by Richie Unterberger
Having established herself as one of the foremost interpreters of traditional material, Collins did the same for contemporary folk songwriters on this album, which mixed standards with pristine covers of compositions by Dylan, Bob Gibson, Pete Seeger, Ewan MacColl, and Shel Silverstein. With Jim (Roger) McGuinn arranging and playing second guitar and banjo, this album, which included a fine version of Seeger's "Turn! Turn! Turn!," had a clear (if overlooked) influence on the folk-rock he pioneered with the Byrds a couple years later.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zHX_1tb3Wck
#JudyCollins #RogerMcGuinn #TheByrds #FolkMusic #BobDylan #EwanMcColl #Music #PeteSeeger
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Andi Chorley
@ratatosk@mastodonapp.uk
Reader. Gardener. Jazz, psychedelic music and more lover. Hiker. Photographer. Outdoor and indoor swimmer.
mastodonapp.uk
The Big Hewer - A Radio Ballad by Ewan MacColl, Charles Parker & Peggy Seeger, released on Argo in 1967 but first broadcast on the BBC Home Service in 1960.
Coalmining presented itself as a natural subject for a radio ballad since Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger had spent part of 1960 working as resident songwriters and music arrangers for the National Coal Board film department. The Big Hewer was the fourth in the series and named after the mythically prodigious miner of coal legend who appears by a different name in each mining locality (a similar figure with superhuman work powers, John Henry, exists in American work gang mythology).
https://ewanmaccoll.bandcamp.com/album/the-radio-ballads-the-big-hewer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mf7LuLSJBLM
#EwanMcColl #PeggySeeger #CharlesParker #RadioBallad #FolkMusic #CoalMining #BBC #Music
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