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Your Shoes, My Shoes

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Download links and information about Your Shoes, My Shoes by Tom Paxton. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist, Kids, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 37:38 minutes.

Artist: Tom Paxton
Release date: 2002
Genre: Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist, Kids, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 15
Duration: 37:38
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Your Shoes, My Shoes 2:41
2. Barney Skit 0:37
3. Barney Ate My Homework 3:02
4. It's Time-Out Time Again 2:22
5. My Giraffe 2:33
6. Boogaloo Bob 2:35
7. It's Arithmetic Baby 3:28
8. C-H-I-C-K-E-N 2:06
9. The Pizza That Ate Chicago 3:00
10. Somebody Burped 2:07
11. The Worms Come Crawling Underground 3:12
12. A Bull Named Bob 2:18
13. I'm a Raisin In a Bowl of Raisin Bran 1:48
14. The Kid Behind the Mirror 2:59
15. Peace Will Come 2:50

Details

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Tom Paxton has a message that he's determined to spread, whether one happens to be three or 80. He's also determined to have a good time doing it. On Your Shoes, My Shoes he zeroes in on the young and young at heart, offering 16 selections that champion a wide range of liberal issues. The title cut takes the listener on a walking tour with Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks through the Civil Rights movement, while "The Kid Behind the Mirror" offers a positive spin on overcoming one's awkward years. Paxton also throws in a good bit of nonsense to keep the right-wingers off guard. "Barney Ate My Homework" may qualify as the worst excuse ever dreamed up for not having one's homework, while "C-H-I-C-K-E-N" lets one know how much fun it is to be a chicken. Things get even more bizarre on "The Pizza That Ate Chicago," a song that will remind one more of a B-horror film than folk music. Parents are sure to love "Somebody Burped" and "The Worms Come Crawling Underground," the first exulting the joys of drinking too much pop, the latter the pleasures that worms have as "they make their dinners, out of those poor sinners." Paxton is joined by a child or a group of children who sing along on most of the album. This works great on nonsensical pieces, but turns cloying on idealistic ones like "Peace Will Come." It isn't that the message is a turn off; just the fact of being beaten over the head with it. Overall, Your Shoes, My Shoes offers fun music, good tunes, and lots of idealism. What more could one wish for in a children's album? ~ Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr., Rovi