Create account Log in

At the Foot of Yonders Mountain (Re-mastered)

[Edit]

Download links and information about At the Foot of Yonders Mountain (Re-mastered) by John Langstaff. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Kids genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 43:44 minutes.

Artist: John Langstaff
Release date: 2002
Genre: World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Kids
Tracks: 14
Duration: 43:44
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Bonnie Wee Thing: (featuring John Powell) 4:10
2. Pretty Sally: (featuring John Powell) 5:28
3. The Two Brothers: (featuring John Powell) 9:41
4. The Deaf Woman's Courtship: (featuring John Powell) 1:24
5. At The Foot of Yonders Mountain: (featuring John Powell) 3:21
6. The Rich Old Lady: (featuring John Powell) 2:18
7. There Was a Man In Our Town: (featuring John Powell) 1:22
8. Baby Bunting: (featuring John Powell) 1:38
9. When I Was a Little Boy: (featuring John Powell) 0:31
10. Rosey Boy, Posey Boy: (featuring John Powell) 1:19
11. The Frog Went Courtin': (featuring John Powell) 6:32
12. The Daemon Lover: (featuring John Powell) 2:30
13. Jockie to the Fair: (featuring John Powell) 1:52
14. Pretty Sally: (featuring John Powell) 1:38

Details

[Edit]

Of the albums of folk songs recorded in the 1950s and 1960s by classically trained baritone John Langstaff, this one blends most seamlessly his classical and traditional talents and inclinations. Consisting mostly of folk songs arranged for voice and piano by the composer John Powell, this album was originally issued in 1961 under Powell's name and with the composer accompanying Langstaff at the piano; for the CD reissue, pianist Judith Gordon added a new recording of three more of Powell's folk song settings for piano alone. The first five tracks were published as "Five Virginia Folk Songs, Op. 34," and on the first two ("Bonnie Wee Thing" and "Pretty Sally") Langstaff seems to be pushing the upper limit of his range a bit, making some passages sound somewhat strained. But he is clearly enjoying himself on the children's songs that follow (even the gruesome "There Was a Man in Our Town"), and on all of them Powell's piano parts are both brilliantly written and beautifully played. The three piano miniatures that end the program are a bit slight, but certainly charming enough. Recommended.