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Children's Concert At Town Hall (Live)

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Download links and information about Children's Concert At Town Hall (Live) by Pete Seeger. This album was released in 1963 and it belongs to World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Kids, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 26 tracks with total duration of 01:02:11 minutes.

Artist: Pete Seeger
Release date: 1963
Genre: World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Kids, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 26
Duration: 01:02:11
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Applause (Live) 0:18
2. Little Birdie (Live) 3:01
3. Henry My Son (Live) 3:51
4. Here's to Cheshire - Here's to Cheese (Froggy) [Live] 6:27
5. Oh Shenadoah (Live) 1:40
6. Skip to My Lou (Live) 2:16
7. Git Along, Little Dogies (Live) 1:43
8. Didn' Ol' John Cross the Water On His Knees (Live) 1:46
9. Fifteen Miles On the Erie Canal (Live) 2:25
10. I've Been Working On the Railroad (Live) 1:53
11. Riding In My Car (Live) 1:21
12. Put Your Finger In the Air (Live) 2:18
13. The Foolish Frog (Live) 8:34
14. Ilka's Bedouin Tune (Live) 1:30
15. Frere Jacques (Live) 1:58
16. Fisherman's Song (Live) 0:58
17. It Could Be a Wonderful World (Live) 2:27
18. Abi Yoyo (Live) 5:54
19. Let Everyone Clap Hands Like Me (Live) 2:00
20. Michael Row the Boat Ashore (Live) 2:04
21. Ha, Ha Thisaway (Live) 0:42
22. De Grey Goose (Live) 3:25
23. Be Kind to Your Parents (Live) 1:09
24. Applause (Live) 0:31
25. This Land Is Your Land (Live) 1:31
26. Applause (Live) 0:29

Details

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There have been no shortage of memorable live albums by Pete Seeger across the decades — and, in fact, the Carnegie Hall concert from this same era has tended to eclipse a lot of the other performance documents of Seeger's work from the '60s. But this album has a special charm, showing Seeger directing his appeal at a younger audience which he treats with surprising sophistication — perhaps some of what he says is aimed at parents in the audience, but the mere fact that he enunciates such political sentiments in this setting could not have been lost on the young ones. In other words, this was an album that one could grow up on, and it sold well enough on vinyl across the decades so that was absolutely the case with many thousands of kindred spirits of the next generation. Musically, Seeger is in excellent voice as he carries us through a mix of lighter political fare — and some topical and consciousness-raising songs aimed specifically at kids, and the kid in all of us — and children's songs such as "Skip to My Lou" and "I've Been Working on the Railroad." He doesn't do "Where Have All the Flowers Gone," but he does close with "This Land Is Your Land," and includes a few songs he learned from Leadbelly (and mentions him as well — clearly a nod to the parents in the audience). The sound is excellent, state-of-the-art in its time and still crisp and vivid, and the Columbia/Legacy DVD keeps the originally jacket notes as well.