Create account Log in

Travelling On With the Weavers

[Edit]

Download links and information about Travelling On With the Weavers by The Weavers. This album was released in 1959 and it belongs to World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 47:45 minutes.

Artist: The Weavers
Release date: 1959
Genre: World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 16
Duration: 47:45
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Songswave €1.21

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Twelve Gates to the City 2:47
2. Erie Canal 2:28
3. I Never Will Marry 3:15
4. Old Riley 2:39
5. Sinner Man 2:32
6. House of the Rising Sun 4:00
7. The Keeper 2:30
8. You Made Me a Pallet On the Floor 2:51
9. Mi Caballo 3:21
10. Kumbaya 2:59
11. Hopsha-Diri 2:41
12. Si Mi Quieres 3:14
13. State of Arkansas 3:23
14. Greenland Whale Fisheries 3:40
15. Eddystone Light 1:29
16. Gotta Travel On 3:56

Details

[Edit]

Traveling on With the Weavers was recorded during a transitional time when Erik Darling was taking the place of longtime member Pete Seeger. Five of the album's 16 tracks feature Seeger and, tellingly, four of those were the only cuts from the album to be included on the 1987 anthology The Weavers Classics. It is tempting to compare Seeger and Darling, but suffice it to say that Seeger's presence is strongly felt where he appears, and his songs are the standouts on the album. "Old Riley" is a variation of Grandpa Jones' signature song "Old Rattler," and "Gotta Travel On" is a variation of the song with which Billy Grammer enjoyed a hit in 1959. The Weavers go ethnic on side two, where the first four cuts are sung in foreign languages and nearly half of the songs overall are folk standards that would shortly become ubiquitous on commercial folk albums by the Kingston Trio and their imitators. The album is a tentative step in that Darling was only beginning to find his way as a Weaver, but the group's sound and approach is so consistent that casual listeners might not notice that anything unusual is afoot.