Create account Log in

Battle Cry Of Freedom

[Edit]

Download links and information about Battle Cry Of Freedom by Robert Shaw. This album was released in 1991 and it belongs to Jazz, Classical, Choral, Smooth Jazz genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 49:56 minutes.

Artist: Robert Shaw
Release date: 1991
Genre: Jazz, Classical, Choral, Smooth Jazz
Tracks: 18
Duration: 49:56
Buy on Amazon $9.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. The Battle Hymn of the Republic (featuring Thomas Pyle) 5:24
2. America 4:22
3. America, the Beautiful (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Russell Bennett, Florence Kopleff) 4:31
4. Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale) 4:08
5. God Bless America (featuring Robert Russell Bennett, Florence Kopleff) 4:21
6. Yankee Doodle (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale) 2:34
7. Chester (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale, James Stover) 2:15
8. The Bonnie Blue Flag (The South) (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale) 1:22
9. Lorena (The South) (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale, James Wainner) 3:54
10. Dixie (The South) (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale) 1:30
11. The Battle Cry of Freedom (The North (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale) 1:48
12. Tenting on the Old Camp Ground (The North) (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale, Leonard Kranendonk) 4:31
13. When Johnny Comes Marching Home (The North) (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale) 1:08
14. From the Halls of Montezuma: Marines' Hymn (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale) 1:24
15. Anchors Aweigh (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale) 0:34
16. The Wild Blue Yonder: U.S. Air Force (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale) 1:02
17. The Caissons Go Rolling Along (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale) 1:11
18. The Star-Spangled Banner (1991 Remastered) (featuring Robert Shaw Chorale) 3:57

Details

[Edit]

While most folks in the 1960s were being consumed by the unholy flames of rock & roll, a somewhat smaller sect was experiencing the wonders of stereo through the soft baton of Robert Shaw. Unlike Mantovani, Herb Alpert, and the Ray Conniff Singers, who saw the mining of the rock movement as a tool of survival, the Robert Shaw Chorale found inspiration in the songs of Robert Foster and in the increasingly popular realm of sea shanties and spirituals. Essentially, Shaw did for easy listening what Martin Denny and Esquivel did for exotica. Battle Cry of Freedom is exactly what you'd think it is. Eighteen hammy and meticulously arranged songs of patriotism, from "the Battle Hymn of the Republic" to "Dixie," are impeccably performed and often quite poignantly by the heavenly voices of the R.S.C. As the decades have progressed, 20th century easy listening has acquired a definite "kitsch" tag, however, nestled amid the soft polyphony of Robert Shaw and his Chorale is a hint of "coolness." After all, in the '60s, easy listening was the equivalent of 21st century indie pop.