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Pete Remembers Woody

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Download links and information about Pete Remembers Woody by Pete Seeger. This album was released in 2012 and it belongs to Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Kids, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 48 tracks with total duration of 01:51:09 minutes.

Artist: Pete Seeger
Release date: 2012
Genre: Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Kids, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 48
Duration: 01:51:09
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Buy on Amazon $17.98

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Woody's Ghost, Pt. 1 (featuring David Bernz) 2:44
2. Pete Meets Woody (Spoken Word) 2:34
3. Are There Any Mountains Near Here? (Spoken Word) 1:10
4. Woody Writes "This Land Is Your Land" (Spoken Word) 1:52
5. America Learns "This Land Is Your Land" (Spoken Word) 1:15
6. My Big Education (Spoken Word) 1:28
7. 66 Highway Blues 2:13
8. How to Sing In Saloons (Spoken Word) 1:10
9. Riding the Freights (Spoken Word) 1:25
10. Rambling the Appalachians (Spoken Word) 3:12
11. Which Side Are You On? (featuring Work O' The Weavers) 2:58
12. You'd Better Get Them Singing (Spoken Word) 1:45
13. Union Maid (featuring Vanaver Caravan) 2:06
14. Songs Woody Liked (Spoken Word) 1:59
15. New York Town (featuring Woody Guthrie) 2:35
16. Reading and Writing (Spoken Word) 3:30
17. The Minstrel Song (Spoken Word) 1:46
18. On the Radio, Tom Mooney and Will Geer (Spoken Word) 3:02
19. Do Re Mi (featuring Vanaver Caravan) 3:25
20. Woody Sez (Spoken Word) 1:08
21. Why Do You Stand There In the Rain? (Spoken Word) 1:25
22. The Flip-flop (Spoken Word) 1:10
23. The Almanacs Go West (Spoken Word) 2:53
24. The Sinking of the Reuben James (featuring The Almanac Singers) 3:24
25. The Folk Process (Spoken Word) 0:20
26. Woody Trilogy: Hard Travelin' / This Train / There's a Better World A-coming (featuring Work O' The Weavers) 1:25
27. Fighting Fascism Starts Right Here (Spoken Word) 1:13
28. If I Had a Hammer (featuring Work O' The Weavers) 2:18
29. Woody's Ghost, Pt. 2 (featuring David Bernz) 1:31
30. from Wwii to the Weavers (Spoken Word) 2:43
31. Just Make It a General Song (Spoken Word) 0:52
32. So Long It's Been Good to Know Yuh! (featuring Work O' The Weavers) 3:15
33. The Last Time I Heard Woody Sing (Spoken Word) 1:44
34. Pastures of Plenty (featuring Bill Vanaver) 4:32
35. The Freest Place On Earth (Spoken Word) 1:40
36. This Machine Kills Fascists (Spoken Word) 1:03
37. Little Arlo Writes Things Down (Spoken Word) 1:24
38. Woody In the Balcony (Spoken Word) 1:47
39. This Land is Your Land (featuring Work O' The Weavers) 5:03
40. The Last Visit (Spoken Word) 1:07
41. My Peace (featuring Work O' The Weavers) 2:34
42. Woody Lives On (Spoken Word) 0:41
43. I Ain't Got No Home (featuring Fred Gillen Jr) 4:51
44. Howdy Little Newlycome (featuring Cathy Fink) 4:14
45. Peace Pin Boogie (featuring Amy Fradon) 3:37
46. Woody's "Rulin's" (featuring David Bernz) 4:01
47. I've Got to Know (featuring Steve Kirkman) 5:43
48. Woody's Ghost, Pt. 3 (featuring David Bernz) 1:22

Details

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This set is exactly what the title says it is — Pete Seeger remembering his friend and sometimes musical collaborator Woody Guthrie. What it isn't is a collection of Pete Seeger singing Woody Guthrie songs, although there are a few performances of Seeger doing that here — one also gets Arlo Guthrie and others presenting Woody Guthrie songs. Seeger's main role in this release is to reminisce, which he does. Now 93 years of age, the 21-year-old Seeger met Guthrie at a benefit concert in 1940 when Guthrie was 27 and, falling under the spell of Guthrie's songs, music, and charisma, Seeger began traveling and playing music with him, most notably in the Almanac Singers (there's a version of the Almanac Singers' "Reuben James" included here). Seeger talks about what it was like to travel with Guthrie and the genesis of songs like "This Land Is Your Land," "New York Town," and "Do Re Mi." In the second half of this set, Seeger talks about Guthrie's legacy, the folk boom he godfathered, and his influence on Seeger's own journeys and struggles. Versions of Guthrie's songs are scattered through these remembrances, giving them added grace and lift. Guthrie himself makes an appearance, and is heard playing and singing "New York Town" with Cisco Houston on a recording the two made in 1940. There really isn't anything new in this package, but the way it's fit together, arranged, and sequenced makes it more than just an archival sort of release. Seeger has his own legacy, and to hear him talk about his friend and mentor is worth the price of admission, and with the songs laced all through the story, it becomes an even bigger story, one that is still unfolding in influence a decade or more into the 21st century.