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Dangerous Songs!?

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Download links and information about Dangerous Songs!? by Pete Seeger. This album was released in 1966 and it belongs to World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Kids, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 21 tracks with total duration of 49:39 minutes.

Artist: Pete Seeger
Release date: 1966
Genre: World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Kids, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 21
Duration: 49:39
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Robin the Bobbin / Mary, Mary Quite Contrary / Little Jack Horner 0:26
2. Die Gedanken sind frei 1:40
3. Jackaro 3:50
4. Never Wed an Old Man 2:24
5. John Brown's Body 1:49
6. Going Across the Mountains 3:06
7. Harry Simms 2:03
8. King Henry 3:26
9. Ode to Joy / Goliath Goliath 1:49
10. Queen Anne Front 3:28
11. Joe Hill's "Casey Jones" 1:57
12. One Grain of Sand 1:48
13. The Pill 2:20
14. The Draft Dodger Rag 2:08
15. Mao Tse Tung 0:34
16. Walking Down Death Row 3:41
17. Two from Shakespeare: Full Fathom Five / Perchance to Win 1:39
18. Beans In My Ears 3:21
19. Equinoxial 3:16
20. Joe Hill's "Casey Jones" 2:27
21. What Next? 2:27

Details

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In 1966, when the topical song movement had gained national attention through the newly written material of Bob Dylan and such compatriots as Tom Paxton and Phil Ochs, Pete Seeger set out to demonstrate that "protest" songs were not a new thing by putting together an album largely made up of traditional material that had its roots in long-since-forgotten political issues, everything from the nursery rhyme "Little Jack Horner" to the Civil War march "John Brown's Body." Further, Seeger suggested that everything is political, whether it's the apparently comic children's song "Beans in My Ears" or that piece of Irish advice "Never Wed an Old Man." ("In the long run, the most truly dangerous songs of all may prove to be love songs and lullabies," he wrote in the liner notes.) And then there were songs that all would agree are political (though humorous), such as "The Pill" and Ochs' "Draft Dodger Rag." The resulting collection is one of Seeger's funniest, and at the same time most pointed albums. It took Columbia Records 32 years to reissue it on CD, with three bonus tracks from the sessions.