Create account Log in

The Travelling People (Re-mastered)

[Edit]

Download links and information about The Travelling People (Re-mastered) by Charlie Parker, Peggy Seeger, Ewan MacColl. This album was released in 1968 and it belongs to World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk, Celtic genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 58:11 minutes.

Artist: Charlie Parker, Peggy Seeger, Ewan MacColl
Release date: 1968
Genre: World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk, Celtic
Tracks: 14
Duration: 58:11
Buy on iTunes $7.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. My Mother Said I Never Should... 1:33
2. I Am Tired of Always Having to Shift... 1:25
3. Born In the Middle of the Afternoon... 7:20
4. If You Took a Traveller... 4:01
5. Don't I Wish the Old Times Would Come Back Again... 10:13
6. I Like to Settle In the Wintertime... 5:02
7. We Never Did Travel Much In the Wintertime... 2:24
8. The Auld Ways Are Changing... 3:16
9. These Days Have Gone... 1:11
10. I Mean, We're Fed Up With Gypsies Living In Our Area... 3:17
11. People Get the Impression, O These Gypsies, They're Rogues... 3:17
12. Thy Can't Read or Write... 4:02
13. Bloody Isn't It... 7:39
14. Can't See No Way Out... 3:31

Details

[Edit]

The last of the radio ballads that Ewan MacColl, Peggy Seeger, and Charles Parker devised, The Travelling People is also the most accomplished, both in form and content. An examination of the Romany people in Britain, it serves mostly as a condemnation of attitudes toward them and their nomadic lifestyle — which, as reflected in many of the soundbites, were not complimentary. People simply didn't want them around, calling them "tinkers" and things much worse, as "I Mean, We're Fed Up With Gypsies Living in Our Area" highlights, with the incident of a woman about to give birth being moved on by the police. The attitudes were reflected in other ways too, like the boy who spent several years in the same grade without being taught to read or write, because, the teacher explained, "he's the best message boy I've ever had." But this does more than simply look at the negatives. It examines the life of the gypsies, the way they'd settle in the winter time, or how traveling was part of their nature. MacColl's songs are among the finest he wrote for the radio ballad series, and the accompaniment is richer and fuller than before, and the singers — people like Belle Stewart, Joe Heaney, and Jane Stewart — serve the material brilliantly. They become integrated into a whole program — which is what each of the radio ballads was, of course — that's intelligently fashioned to bring out a whole picture, one which is sympathetic to the travelers, but also allows for opposing views. The listener comes away educated, and also humbled by the quiet pride of these people. It's nothing less than a remarkable achievement.