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Land Of Giants

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Download links and information about Land Of Giants by The New Christy Minstrels. This album was released in 2013 and it belongs to Folk Rock, World Music, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 35:32 minutes.

Artist: The New Christy Minstrels
Release date: 2013
Genre: Folk Rock, World Music, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 13
Duration: 35:32
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Land of Giants 1:03
2. Joe Magarac 2:50
3. John Henry and the Steam Drill (featuring Barry Mcguire) 4:43
4. Paul Bunyan 2:55
5. Casey Jones 2:04
6. Stormy 2:51
7. Mighty Big Ways 2:22
8. Mount Rushmore 3:30
9. Blacksmith of Brandywine 2:17
10. Natural Man (featuring Nick Woods) 2:19
11. Appleseed John 2:33
12. El Camino Real 3:30
13. My Name Is Liberty (featuring Gayle Caldwell) 2:35

Details

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American folk heroes are the focus of this album from the New Christy Minstrels, with special emphasis on the working men who connected the coasts with railroad tracks and forged the steel girders to erect skyscrapers. While these subjects might sound tailor-made for a little lefty political tweaking, the Minstrels, as was their wont, reject any possible editorializing in favor of rousing, joyful arrangements suitable for any audience (except perhaps a coffeehouse full of folk purists). So instead of the likes of Joe Hill, the Minstrels celebrate fictional or mythologized figures like John Henry, Paul Bunyan, and Casey Jones, portraying the laborer as a strong-willed, yet stoic hero who usually works himself to death. Regardless of the material's surface-level patriotism, the arrangements are clever and the melodies are undeniable. The vigorous title track introduces the Minstrels' patented "Greenwich Village meets Broadway" style, then segues nicely into the album's best cut, the relatively rough-hewn "Joe Magarac." Other highlights include a pensive a cappella tribute to the mythical sailor Old Stormalong ("Stormy") and the bluesy "Natural Man." Land of Giants was recorded during the tenure of celebrated future Byrd Gene Clark, though for fans of the late singer/songwriter this amounts to little more than trivia, as no sonic hint of his involvement is evident. Shortly after the sessions that produced this LP (the group's seventh in three years), Clark moved on, as did bandmate Barry McGuire, who soon found himself charting solo with his big protest hit "Eve of Destruction."