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The Cambridge Tapes

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Download links and information about The Cambridge Tapes by The Highwaymen. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to World Music, Country, Outlaw Country, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 30 tracks with total duration of 01:29:33 minutes.

Artist: The Highwaymen
Release date: 2009
Genre: World Music, Country, Outlaw Country, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 30
Duration: 01:29:33
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. March On Brothers 2:21
2. I'll Fly Away 2:16
3. Introductions and The Gypsy Rover 5:23
4. Marching to Pretoria 2:06
5. Marianne 3:40
6. Shaggy Dog Stories 5:04
7. Roll On Columbia, Roll On 3:19
8. Portland County Jail 2:09
9. El Humauaqueno 3:39
10. La Bamba 2:55
11. Well, Well, Well 3:31
12. Intrduction of the guitarron 0:55
13. The Ladybug and the Centipede 2:40
14. The Sinking of the Reuben James 3:08
15. Michael 3:02
16. Cotton Fields 2:55
17. John 2:18
18. I Know Where I'm Going 2:14
19. Sourwood Mountain 1:59
20. Little Boy 3:54
21. Mr. Noah 4:38
22. Canzone del Vino 2:22
23. Abilene 4:52
24. Passin' Through 3:12
25. Aunt Rhody 0:28
26. I Never Will Marry 3:02
27. So Fare Ye Well 2:45
28. You're Always Welcome at Our House 3:14
29. Midnight Train 2:30
30. The Universal Soldier 3:02

Details

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A folk quintet who had huge hits with heavily sanitized versions of folk-gospel tunes "Michael Row the Boat Ashore" and "Cotton Fields" in the early 1960s, the Highwaymen could be poster boys for all that was great about the commercial folk revival and for all that wasn't so great about it, as well. They, like the countless other collegiate folk groups from the era, certainly rescued dozens of folk songs and gave them new exposure and utility, but they also watered them down for the greatest commercial effect, which essentially turned songs with long historical time lines into pop commodities. That said, the Highwaymen were professional about it, and in concert their good-time, hootenanny, harmony-laden approach was crowd-approved. This two-disc set catches the Highwaymen at a college gig at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from October 26, 1963. The audience knew most of songs — they had probably even sung them at parties back in the dorms — so the good will and community feel of the Highwaymen's show, its very accessibility, makes it a perfect timepiece for the era. "Michael," a fun romp through "The Gypsy Rover," a bluesy "Abilene," and a version of Buffy Sainte-Marie's "The Universal Soldier" are among the highlights of the show.